Eletriarnation posted:Neither of us know why these drives are being sold as consumer drives instead of enterprise drives. The difference is I'm admitting it, and you're saying "well, I can't think of any reason other than them being inferior so that must be it." No manufacturer discloses their QA process, because doing so would open them to liabilities, so I'm not sure what you're trying to prove by bringing that up. I'm not saying people shouldn't be shucking drives, I'm saying that if you buy them you should be prepared to deal with them failing more often. The manufacturers seem to agree with this because the warranties for them aren't as high as they are on other equivalent consumer product lines - they range between 1-3 years for external drives and 3-5 for desktop drives. Unfortunately Backblaze hasn't really been making note of drives sourced via shucking vs internal drives, and the one time they explicitly go into it there's a much bigger confounding variable. It's possible they do keep track of it in the raw data, but I can't be arsed to go through it. Corb3t posted:You’re assuming a lot of things. Maybe Western Digital doesn’t want to spin up a new manufacturing line for different external drives, and it’s actually cheaper to just manufacture and use enterprise drives in external enclosures as well. My point is that the drives that failed-QA drives can either be recycled or stuffed in external enclosures - and that they're going to do the latter over the former. They've been selling external enclosures with white-labeled disks and 3.3V lines for a lot longer than since 2019, so I'm not sure what COVID has to do with anything. The availability issues during and after COVID have plenty of other reasons why, up to and including first the production lines in China and Thailand being shut down and then not having enough shipping containers because they got stuck on shores due to nobody being able to load them onto the freight ships that weren't sailing. I already said I don't know, but I'm not seeing any other explanation. IOwnCalculus posted:RPM isn't the only factor in power draw; platter count seems to matter as much if not more. Check out the datasheet for the WD Red Plus: https://documents.westerndigital.co...ed-plus-hdd.pdf Tangentially related, it'd be interesting to know if Helium drives take measurably less power, though. I still think host-managed SMR would've been absolutely fine - but that's not what we got. On top of that the companies hosed customers over big-time by submarining drive-managed SMR into existing product lines where it'd do the most harm (ie. product lines used for RAID).
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# ? Jan 13, 2024 14:22 |
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# ? May 15, 2024 01:49 |
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BlankSystemDaemon posted:None of this explains why they have 3.3V lines - which, again, is something only found on enterprise drives, which are made on separate production lines. Yeah, I've already agreed that these are made on the same production lines as enterprise drives. Where we disagree is the idea that this fact means anything else by itself - you seem to think it's an indicator that these have functional defects (at least, compared to the enterprise-labeled drives), and I don't think that's sufficiently proven. The warranties being shorter could be a market differentiator by itself instead of an indicator of shorter expected life. It's not like the 5yr-warrantied drives have zero failures in the 3-5yr range, so WD would save money reducing that even if the drive is physically the same. They would also motivate consumers who want a longer drive life cycle to spring for the more expensive drive, so it might be that this is where some of the price difference comes from! Could they have a higher failure rate? Sure, they might! But we don't have any actual evidence of that, which is the through line of this whole conversation. e: They might also give the exact same drive a lower warranty in an external enclosure than in a form which is expected to go inside a PC/rack, because the former is a lot more vulnerable to physical shock and therefore has a lower expected life. Considering the bathtub curve that HDD failures tend to follow, I feel like a 3 year warranty is still long enough to indicate a fair degree of confidence from the OEM that the drive won't fail due to mechanical defects. Eletriarnation fucked around with this message at 17:09 on Jan 13, 2024 |
# ? Jan 13, 2024 16:50 |
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Doesn't it make sense that 3.5" SATA disks ending up in USB enclosures come off the enterprise line because there's just no demand for consumer HDDs any more? If hypothetically 95% of these drives end up going to cloud operators and OEMs for integration into actual enterprise products, then it's likely not cost effective to design and build a consumer line rather than just badging 5% of your output as a MyBook or whatever.
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# ? Jan 13, 2024 16:58 |
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Change of topic but what are the thread's thoughts on mixing and matching drives with a good warranty along with used drives. I built an Unraid NAS for my brother with some spare parts and put one good 12 TB HDD in there but didn't want to spend too much so threw in a couple used 12 TBs from Rhino Technology on eBay. Could have gone all used but seems less likely that multiple drives will go bad at the same time with there being one good on in there.
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# ? Jan 13, 2024 17:50 |
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Smashing Link posted:Change of topic but what are the thread's thoughts on mixing and matching drives with a good warranty along with used drives. I built an Unraid NAS for my brother with some spare parts and put one good 12 TB HDD in there but didn't want to spend too much so threw in a couple used 12 TBs from Rhino Technology on eBay. Could have gone all used but seems less likely that multiple drives will go bad at the same time with there being one good on in there. I buy my parity drives new and the rest is retired enterprise off eBay. Using unraid.
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# ? Jan 13, 2024 21:46 |
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I think it's good practice for large installations to avoid all your drives being made the same day, so they don't all die together if there was a problem with the production line. Using different makes or models should reduce the likelihood of them failing simultaneously even further, I guess?
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# ? Jan 13, 2024 21:55 |
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I'm extremely pro used drives, with the caveat that I do use some of the money saved to increase both redundancy and spares. I haven't even seen any real difference in reliability - they're most prone to failure just after you get your hands on them, just like a new drive. There are also a handful of sellers that offer their own warranty at a very small premium over the cheapest possible drives.
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# ? Jan 13, 2024 22:07 |
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wibble posted:I backed this on kickstarter: dang! missed out on it
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# ? Jan 13, 2024 23:11 |
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Smashing Link posted:Change of topic but what are the thread's thoughts on mixing and matching drives with a good warranty along with used drives. I built an Unraid NAS for my brother with some spare parts and put one good 12 TB HDD in there but didn't want to spend too much so threw in a couple used 12 TBs from Rhino Technology on eBay. Could have gone all used but seems less likely that multiple drives will go bad at the same time with there being one good on in there. I'm also interested in this because there are currently some "Seagate recertified" 16TB Ironwolf drives available for like 50% off from a local supplier. Only a 12 month warranty from the retailer but it seems like a pretty good deal?
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# ? Jan 16, 2024 17:59 |
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evil_bunnY posted:do..do you not have backups? I mean.... Usenet is my backup for the majority of the data. Anything truly irreplaceable is backed up in a couple other places, but it's more the desire to not re-download 30+TB of Linux ISOs on a 1TB/mo data capped line.
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# ? Jan 21, 2024 04:18 |
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PitViper posted:I mean.... Usenet is my backup for the majority of the data. Anything truly irreplaceable is backed up in a couple other places, but it's more the desire to not re-download 30+TB of Linux ISOs on a 1TB/mo data capped line. No data cap here, but if I drop 50tbs with of Linux, I'll probably just give up on digital media. And yes/same, important things backed up properly.
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# ? Jan 22, 2024 13:49 |
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Any suggestions for decently priced refurb 16-20tb drives? I see Seagate exos x18s on eBay, would that be a terrible mistake? Use case would be some kind of home Linux iso server (Plex, jellyfin, or Kodi) probably in a Synology enclosure. https://www.ebay.com/itm/3041946844...ABk9SR8bMqvamYw
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# ? Jan 23, 2024 18:40 |
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Serverpartdeals.com is where I got my most recent batch of drives (6x Exos X18 SATA 16TB) several months ago and they have been flawless so far. You can save $1/drive if you order directly instead of through their eBay store: https://serverpartdeals.com/collect...fied-hard-drive
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# ? Jan 23, 2024 19:29 |
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MixMasterMalaria posted:Any suggestions for decently priced refurb 16-20tb drives? I see Seagate exos x18s on eBay, would that be a terrible mistake? Use case would be some kind of home Linux iso server (Plex, jellyfin, or Kodi) probably in a Synology enclosure. That ebay storefront is for ServerPartDeals, which another goon said they've ordered from successfully. Looking on their site, they have HGST 16TB drives for slightly less: https://serverpartdeals.com/collect...fied-hard-drive https://serverpartdeals.com/collect...fied-hard-drive https://serverpartdeals.com/collect...fied-hard-drive
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# ? Jan 23, 2024 19:32 |
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MixMasterMalaria posted:Any suggestions for decently priced refurb 16-20tb drives? I see Seagate exos x18s on eBay, would that be a terrible mistake? Use case would be some kind of home Linux iso server (Plex, jellyfin, or Kodi) probably in a Synology enclosure. You might also roll the dice with these 20TB disks with a 5 year warranty, for around $220-230 based on what week it is: https://www.amazon.com/MDD-MDD20TSATA25672E-256MB-Internal-Enterprise/dp/B0BYTYCP14/
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# ? Jan 23, 2024 19:42 |
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Is arr questions better here or Plex? What steps should I take when upgrading to Sonarr v4? I'm using the linuxserver/sonarr:latest image currently. it looks like latest is now 4.0.1, so I should be able to just recreate the container and pull the newest image right? And I'll have to redo Settings > Profiles; Settings > Quality, but everything else migrates pretty smooth? I am using Prowlarr. Thanks
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# ? Jan 23, 2024 19:57 |
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MixMasterMalaria posted:Any suggestions for decently priced refurb 16-20tb drives? I see Seagate exos x18s on eBay, would that be a terrible mistake? Use case would be some kind of home Linux iso server (Plex, jellyfin, or Kodi) probably in a Synology enclosure. I snagged a 4 pack from the exact seller, went with a lot that only had 80 powered on hours. Then did the "make an offer" dealio, and he finally accepted one of em. No issues, exactly as expected, great shipping pack job. https://www.ebay.com/itm/2959407906...emis&media=COPY
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# ? Jan 24, 2024 05:54 |
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Not sure if this is the best thread, but we're connecting some our windows 10 and 11 machines to our NAS via 10gbe and I'm looking for recommended NIC cards. I've seen the X550-t2 thrown around but seems to be a lot of fakes being sold?
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# ? Jan 24, 2024 20:49 |
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BonoMan posted:Not sure if this is the best thread, but we're connecting some our windows 10 and 11 machines to our NAS via 10gbe and I'm looking for recommended NIC cards. I've seen the X550-t2 thrown around but seems to be a lot of fakes being sold? Serve The Home just did a review of a few inexpensive 10g cards that seem to be pretty good.
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# ? Jan 25, 2024 18:19 |
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deong posted:Is arr questions better here or Plex? if you want to play it really safe you could always have the arr in question produce a backup artifact and set it aside in case things don't go so smooth.
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# ? Jan 25, 2024 21:45 |
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Krailor posted:Serve The Home just did a review of a few inexpensive 10g cards that seem to be pretty good. Oh cool thanks! Definitely at the price point that it's ok if it' doesn't work out
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# ? Jan 25, 2024 21:57 |
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QNAP came up last time I posted here and the consensus was they weren't trustworthy. Is there a recommend appliance that will: 1) Transcode Plex media reliably 2) Talk to Backblaze B2 3) Run TrueNAS Scale or at least a reliable file system 4) Take at least four HDDs 5) Take optional NVMe / SATA SSDs That last one is pure luxury as all I want out of this is a LAN media server. Building my own is either an exercise in stuffing a SFF case to fit under my printer, or carving out space for a Meshify 2, and both of those options end up costing me close to $3000 CAD once drives are in.
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# ? Jan 28, 2024 23:29 |
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Shumagorath posted:QNAP came up last time I posted here and the consensus was they weren't trustworthy. Is there a recommend appliance that will: Maybe a Terramaster box? I know you can switch out their OS for Unraid/TrueNAS and some models have a few nvme slots.
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# ? Jan 29, 2024 04:05 |
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Do you actually have a need for transcoding? It would simplify things quite a bit if you didn't.
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# ? Jan 29, 2024 04:09 |
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Yeah - you can transcode on a separate $100 (USD, at least) mini PC, so if that's the hurdle to making it all work with an appliance I'd just split it into two boxes.
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# ? Jan 29, 2024 04:33 |
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I mean I can transcode on my gaming PC for about 85W idle, but the idea was to use less power not just expand its storage. How much transcoding would I need to do on XBox Series X, anyway? Most of my content is h264 and x265. Will AV-1 or old-rear end MPEG be a problem?
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# ? Jan 29, 2024 05:14 |
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That's basically why I asked. Most clients can direct play most media these days. I'd either convert or re-rip anything that's actually a problem. I have transcoding completely disabled on my Plex install and I very rarely have an issue. https://support.plex.tv/articles/203824396-what-media-formats-are-supported/
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# ? Jan 29, 2024 05:16 |
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Shumagorath posted:I mean I can transcode on my gaming PC for about 85W idle, but the idea was to use less power not just expand its storage. Personally, I transcode (using Tdarr) just so I have everything in the same formats/codecs because of my OCD, and Tdarr also keeps track of the health of my files. The benefit of splitting the files/transcoding is when I need to I can just pull out a few NUC's I normally use for other purposes and absolutely tear through the transcode queue by running Tdarr nodes on them as well.
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# ? Jan 29, 2024 05:40 |
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Shumagorath posted:I mean I can transcode on my gaming PC for about 85W idle, but the idea was to use less power not just expand its storage. Well, yes, you could - but a mini PC with an i5-8500T will use a fraction of that (probably about 10W idle): https://www.ebay.com/itm/176202466407 It won't do AV1, but if you want that you need a discrete card or something from at least 11th generation. Like an N100, which is not much more expensive actually. Eletriarnation fucked around with this message at 12:54 on Jan 29, 2024 |
# ? Jan 29, 2024 12:26 |
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Shumagorath posted:I mean I can transcode on my gaming PC for about 85W idle, but the idea was to use less power not just expand its storage. I have rarely and I mean rarely seen Series X need ANYTHING transcoded. I run a server that can transcode and I keep track of who watches what and on what device and what and who needs transcoding. I contact them to change some settings per device to get it to direct play as the defaults on some devices are terrible and almost everything I have needs to be transcoded for those default settings. But a series X 9.5/10 times is just direct playing everything!
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# ? Jan 29, 2024 12:57 |
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Internet Explorer posted:That's basically why I asked. Most clients can direct play most media these days. I'd either convert or re-rip anything that's actually a problem. I have transcoding completely disabled on my Plex install and I very rarely have an issue. Thanks for your input everyone!
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# ? Jan 29, 2024 14:04 |
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So it's been a long time since I built a media server/NAS, but I really like the setup I had and I was wondering if there's a simpler way to get the functionality I had. My previous file server was running Windows 8 with five four terabyte hard drives and one 128gb SSD. I was using a combination of two programs, SnapRAID and DrivePool for data management. I had three archive drives, one parity drive, and one "dump" drive. The directory structure of the four non-parity drives was flattened into a single virtual drive. DrivePool was set up so that any new data written to the virtual drive would go to the dump drive and data could only be written to the archive drives manually. I liked that this setup wasn't flogging all five drives constantly, and that the files on each drive were readable without the whole array present. When I was done seeding a torrent I could move the files from the dump drive to one of the archive drives with the same directory tree and to my media server software it was like nothing changed. Every few days I would manually stop everything and synchronize SnapRAID since that could not calculate parity while data was being written. While I liked the features I got with that system there is no denying it was super janky. I was wondering if there's anything out there that would replicate this functionality in a more integrated way.
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# ? Jan 29, 2024 19:07 |
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If you're not attached to windows, as a do it yourself solution you can combine mergefs/snapraid. Or pay for unraid.
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# ? Jan 29, 2024 19:46 |
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Gangringo posted:So it's been a long time since I built a media server/NAS, but I really like the setup I had and I was wondering if there's a simpler way to get the functionality I had. Unraid. You set your drives you want parity protected as the main array drives, and your "dump" drive as the cache drive. I don't personally use a cache drive, but as far as I understand it, you set a schedule that starts the process to flush data from the cache to the main array (or I guess you could trigger it completely manually), the share access remains unchanged. https://docs.unraid.net/legacy/FAQ/cache-disk/ The part about each drive being readable without the whole array present is true in Unraid (at least if you don't use ZFS), so that matches up to your desires. But you can most definitely calculate parity while data is being written, and when reading from the array Unraid will only spin up the drives needed to read the files requested. HalloKitty fucked around with this message at 21:23 on Jan 29, 2024 |
# ? Jan 29, 2024 21:10 |
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That sounds perfect. Unraid was just starting to be a thing when I last built something like this but it sounds like it has matured a lot.
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# ? Jan 29, 2024 21:34 |
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Internet Explorer posted:Do you actually have a need for transcoding? It would simplify things quite a bit if you didn't.
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# ? Jan 30, 2024 03:38 |
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Shumagorath posted:Soooo... what are some good ZFS / Backblaze / Plex capable vendors if QNAP isn't reliable and iX Systems boxes are overpriced? QNAP has SEO'd everything to death. There aren't any, which leaves you either building it yourself or using an alternative raid tech like Synology. Unfortunately the "entry level server" space that used to have options like the HP Microserver or Dell or Lenovo towers is a small, dying market so the only options left are consumer or small businesses targeting NASes. Commercial NASes aren't targeting people who want a specific RAID tech, they're targeting people who want to stuff drives in there, click a button, and be done with it. Synology has a much better reputation than QNAP, but as I'm sure you noticed QNAP gives you way more powerful CPUs for your money.
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# ? Jan 30, 2024 03:55 |
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So I've been looking to build/buy a NAS for my apartment and have been weighing my options between both as my storage hard drive on my workstation eeks closer to 100% capacity. AMD recently (or will soon) release some new APUs, and one perk they have is hardware support of AV1 encoding, so if I ever want to double it as a Plex server it might prove useful. Anyone have any thoughts on the new APUs and using them for a NAS?
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# ? Jan 30, 2024 04:01 |
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I’d be interested in that too since I thought everything was QuickSync or bust.
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# ? Jan 30, 2024 04:05 |
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# ? May 15, 2024 01:49 |
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MadFriarAvelyn posted:So I've been looking to build/buy a NAS for my apartment and have been weighing my options between both as my storage hard drive on my workstation eeks closer to 100% capacity. AMD's AV1 encoder in RDNA3, which is the 7xxx GPU line and 8xxx APU line, only supports output resolutions that are a multiple of 64x16, which does not include 1080p. This is a hardware level limitation that cannot be fixed in software, but if your client decoder is able to accept higher resolutions and you're using a container with the right cropping support, it all works fine. However, this breaks simple / naiive decoders, and means that you can't use it to stream to Twitch at 1080p because they only allow specific input resolutions. If you want to read more about this, here's some links: https://trac.ffmpeg.org/wiki/Encode/AV1#Align https://github.com/GPUOpen-LibrariesAndSDKs/AMF/issues/423 https://www.reddit.com/r/davinciresolve/comments/163ycjz/deliver_1920x1080_coming_out_as_1920x1082/ AMD did somehow do a software workaround that means that attempting to output 1080p will instead output 1082p, they didn't have to round all the way up to 1088. You can output 720p and 4K though, because those are both divisible by 16. Edit: It looks like the cropping support isn't actually widespread yet in software that uses hardware transcoding, so it's just outputting 1082p video in general, without cropping to remove the black bar. You also might not care about 1080p, in which case you'd be golden. Twerk from Home fucked around with this message at 04:32 on Jan 30, 2024 |
# ? Jan 30, 2024 04:21 |