People resoundingly suggested using containers. So I’ve been reading up. I know some things about containers and docker and what not. But there are a few decision points in the jellyfin container install instructions that I don’t know the “why”.
Data: They mount the media from disk, which is good cause it’s on a NAS. But for the cache and config they use docker volumes. Why would I want a docker volume for the config? Wouldn’t I want to be able to see it from outside the container easier? What am I gaining by having docker manage the volume?
Cache: I saw a very old post where someone mentioned telling docker to use ram for the cache. That “seems” in theory like a good idea for speed. I do have 16gb on the minipc that I am running this all on. But I don’t see any recent mentions of it. Any pros/cons?
The user. I know from work experience that generally you don’t want things running as root in the container. But… do you want a dedicated user for each service (jellyfin, arr*)? Or one for all services, but not your personal user? Or just use your personal user?
DLNA. I had to look that up. But I don’t know how it is relevant. The whole point seems to be that jellyfin would be the interface. And DLNA seems like it would allow certified devices to discover media files?
“or a 6 year old that gets 5 minutes alone with your mouse” haha. I have a 10 year old with a tendency to be inquisitive with electronic devices. He is pure of heart, but we joke that some day the NSA is going to come knocking. He wouldn’t hack a bank to get money, he would just be “exploring” what is possible instead of reading directions. lol. Question though. When you do want to delete something. I am guessing you logon to your media server and do it from your user account?