![]() The reason I chose this was that it had good reviews, wasn't the cheapest option, had an Intel processor (which seemed important to Plex), and had some mysterious video transcoding hardware which I thought might get supported by Plex at some point. ![]() I did a bit of research and went for a DS416Play with a couple of 8tb WD Red drives. When the NUC and NAS started getting a bit old and wonky last year, I decided to replace them with a NAS that would could both run the Plex server and store my media. Not really much use for transcoding, but browsing the server was pretty snappy and the whole thing was quite reliable. volume2/ Media Server/Plex Media Scanner: /lib/libstdc++.so.6: no version information available (required by /volume2/ Media Server/libgnsdk_fp.so.3.07.7)įor several years I ran my Plex server on a little NUC with a cheap 2-bay D-link NAS to store my media, and it was pretty good. volume2/ Media Server/Plex Media Scanner: /lib/libstdc++.so.6: no version information available (required by /volume2/ Media Server/libgnsdk_dsp.so.3.07.7) volume2/ Media Server/Plex Media Scanner: /lib/libstdc++.so.6: no version information available (required by /volume2/ Media Server/libavutil.so.55) volume2/ Media Server/Plex Media Scanner: /lib/libstdc++.so.6: no version information available (required by /volume2/ Media Server/libavcodec.so.57) I followed the guides here for calling the media scanner from the command line (specifically the Linux section), however, I still get the following error messages: ![]() As far as I can determine the Media Scanner works just fine normally when initiated from the web-browser. I am attempting to run the Plex Media Scanner from the command line on an SSH bash terminal. on a Synology DS916+ running DSM version 6.1.4-15217 Update 5.
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