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Showing content with the highest reputation on 06/09/25 in all areas

  1. Is there any update / ETA for when users who have been using TrueNAS & want to switch to HexOS will be able to import their pools inside of HexOS? I purchased the license on Black Friday & would love to contribute but have been waiting on the ability to seamlessly import my pools. I saw a post about a user importing a dummy drive & then importing them in the TrueNAS UI but I want to do it through HexOS & not do a hack method
    1 point
  2. it might work but jgreco, the guy that wrote the truenas 10gb primer, called it garbage. yup nvenc should be more than adequate for plex but we usually recommend intel cpus for the lower power draw vs amd cpu + gpu. I get not wanting to deal with 13th and 14th gen. its why i usually recommend 12th and older or the new core ultras. How much it matters really depends on your power costs, for me with my shit rates itll cost me close to $40 usd a year just from gpu idle costs. if this is your OS drive, i would recommend spending less and getting a smaller drive as OS drive doesn't really benefit from being larger than 16gb as the rest of the storage is locked out. you can save your self a bit of money getting arctic p8 max or p8 silent fans, both highly rated. 80 plus efficiency means almost nothing for us homelab nas users as our systems will be at idle most of the time. Check out this article of best psu's from the ppl that do the cybernetics ratings You want to scroll to the graph for idle 20-80w power at 230v (assuming your are in australia) and just find whatever has the most efficiency. in general psus that are rated for smaller loads tend to be more efficient at 20-80w
    1 point
  3. I've been on 24.,10.2.2 for some time, no issues and no conflicts with HexOS. It's Fangtooth (25.04***) that you need to stay away from for now.
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  4. See a few posts above this where jonp suggests upgrading to 24.10.2.2 (NOT 25.x,) via the TrueNAS UI should be fine. I did so myself and have seen no issues as a consequence, except that I'm now able to update my docker instances again. I share your frustration with regards to the boot drive. I remember finding it rather unbelievable that someone would create a NAS solution and release it in any capacity without a feature to backup configuration in order to recover from a boot drive failure. The only reason I didn't back out right then, was realizing that TrueNAS does feature configuration backup/recovery, so if my boot drive fails all I lose seems to be the HexOS UI, which is currently pretty useless anyway.
    1 point
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