With Netflix and other streaming platforms increasing price, I finally decided to get a seedbox for my family members' needs with Plex/jellyfin.
My budget is 10-15 USD per month. I'm currently on the 11$ hostingby.design plan with 4TB storage and 9TB traffic, 10gbit connection. I've been mostly happy but,
Their app selection feels small though I've found most of the mainstream stuff.
I'm missing things like cross-seed, jellystat, jellyfin-vue, transmission and audiobookshelf.
Not happy with how apps installed by the GitHub scripts are not available on HTTPS.
Can't disable ssh password login for public key, which is making me really uncomfortable.
Their wiki seems quite sparse.
The other options I'm thinking of are:
13$ HDD plan at seedhost.eu - 4TB/9TB but only 1gbps, downgrade in specs but seems to have more apps.
14$ plan at ultra.cc with 3TB/8TB but 20gps (which feels like an overkill honestly). Also a downgrade but their wiki/app support looks top notch.
I really wish there was a way I could manage docker containers on my own on a similar shared setup without paying for a dedicated vps but haven't found something like that so far.
Any advice regarding the other providers, experience or otherwise would be greatly appreciated :)
Thank you :) I've heard generally good things about them. The reason I didn't pick them initially was because the 15$ plan is 2/5TB which is a bit less than the options I mentioned.
How is the app selection? Are you able to use SSH keys?
Their faq says they have one click installation for the following:
rTorrent
Deluge
Transmission
Plex
Sonarr
Radarr
Prowlarr
Jackett
Syncthing
Jellyfin
qBittorrent
I'm not actually sure what an SSH key is but you can find just about anything you could want to know here:
The list is pretty similar to hbd. Hbd doesn't have transmission and syncthing, and prowlarr is semi-official but instead they have Medusa, autobrr, filebrowser and resiliosync.
Will check out the wiki :) If you have ssh enabled in your box, I would suggest looking up SSH keys. I have some public stuff I run for my work and I get at least a hundred brute force attacks on port 22 when I use a password.
How is there customer support infrastructure? With hbd I can raise tickets or talk on discord where they answer pretty fast.
I will do some research on SSH keys as you suggest, thanks for the heads up.
I just went to look at the support tab and I didn't see any discord info but they have a ticket system that still has all 5 tickets I've ever submitted all being 4-8 years old. Didn't even realize I had had it that long lol. Its obviously been a while but I remember a pretty quick response each time I needed them.
That's amazing :) I am definitely going to try them if I am sticking around.
The prompt for me to switch was the fact that Netflix, Hulu and prime increasing their prices which made many members of my family stop using them. If they can adapt to Plex/jellyfin, then I'll probably keep it around and maybe even upgrade.