2025-07-03, 03:24 PM
1. I would look at the Jellyfin server logs to see if it's currently doing any server-intensive thing that happens on a new server.
2. I would also look at if the Synology NAS isn't doing something else like data scrubbing or SMART tests on the HDDs. Since Synology forces everything to run off of the HDDs, having other things running apart from Jellyfin will lower the already limited I/O of the HDDs.
2. I would also look at if the Synology NAS isn't doing something else like data scrubbing or SMART tests on the HDDs. Since Synology forces everything to run off of the HDDs, having other things running apart from Jellyfin will lower the already limited I/O of the HDDs.