

It’s not going to take long until Linux is better at running Windows games than Windows itself, especially for older games.


It’s not going to take long until Linux is better at running Windows games than Windows itself, especially for older games.


Hello, I have some experience using Debian in NAS, but none with TrueNAS.
If possible, make a full copy of your pool onto external drives, or another NAS or anything else. If it is not possible to get enough spare storage soace, then at least backup the things your really care about (personal photos, important projects, password database). Just make sure you have a valid backup in case things go terribly wrong ! I am sure everything will go well, but this will give you additional peace of mind.
There are a few things I can think of, many might be obvious, anyway:
More advanced things:
htop or btop for system monitoring in the terminalwireguard is a very nice VPN, it’s easy to configure on all platforms in order to access your NAS from outside your homepowertop is an utility to optimize power saving settings (I’ve not bothered with this until now)hdparm is an utility to manage and configure hard drives, you can use this to configure automatic spin-down after some time of inactivity, this is a bit tricky though.You definitely want to install docker to run most of your services. Please, also add your local user to the docker group to not have to run everything as root. Useful services I use:
It’s been a long time I didn’t have to deal with NVidia. Debian comes by default with the nouveau open source driver, which works but may not give the best performance. I don’t know if it impacts transcoding performance. I suppose it doesn’t give your the NVENC codecs. Anyway, you can install the NVidia proprietary drivers and should be able to transcode.
Debian is a solid option for a NAS, it’s been serving me well for many years. It is set and forget. However. It takes time to setup and the terminal is going to be your main configuration tool unless you go for OMV or another distro specialty made for NAS.
Your main source of information shall be the Debian Wiki. You will find step-by-step guides to install most of the things mentioned above. The Arch wiki is also a good resource, keep in mind that some files may have different locations and package different names across Linux distributions, but configuration should be similar.
Best of luck my friend
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