parad0xic wrote:I have a somewhat theoretical question.
Supposing that my internal HD is getting slow, or running slowly, if I were to stream from the external HD to my blu-ray player over the network, would that streaming be bottlenecked by the slower internal hard drive, or would it directly stream over the network as its own drive, without needing to pass through the internal drive? In other words, does the movie/USB drive get accessed over the ethernet directly, or does the internal HD mediate the process?
I'll take a stab at this, but if I'm off base someone please correct me
If the file requires transcoding before it is being sent to the display, then yes your internal hard drive will be put to use. If the file does not need transcoding, I'll step out here and say I don't think it does, but in the wild world of computers anything could be possible.
That said, unless your internal hard drive is really, really bad, I doubt it would be a bottleneck for almost any streaming video. Hard drive transfer speeds are measured in megabytes per second, while video streaming is in megabits. A video that streams at 40Mbps (the upper end of an uncompressed HD movie) converts to 5 MBps. Even a poor hard drive can transfer data at 30MBps or more.
Now, if you only have one hard drive in your computer, that means your OS is also using the hard drive at the same time. That will reduce how much thoughtput is available for your video. Again, unless you are using the computer for other tasks while it's streaming, still not likely an issue. But I do have my transcoding folder located on a drive other than my C drive for that reason.
Dan
LG NANO85 4K TV, Samsung JU7100 4K TV, Sony BDP-S3500, Sharp 4K Roku TV, Insignia Roku TV, Roku Ultra, Premiere and Stick, Nvidia Shield, Yamaha RX-V583 AVR.
Primary server: AMD Ryzen 5 5600GT, 32 gig ram, Windows 11 Pro, 22 TB hard drive space | Test server: Intel i5-6400, 16 gig ram, Windows 10 Pro
HOWTO: Enable debug logging HOWTO: Identify media file contents