this post was submitted on 05 Feb 2026
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submitted 16 hours ago* (last edited 6 hours ago) by xana@lemmy.zip to c/selfhosted@lemmy.world
 

Hi TCP users,

Currently, I have a homelab server that runs Jellyfin with direct access to local media content and a reverse proxy point to it. While it works well for people in Europe (where the server is), it is quite slow for some of my friends who are living in Asia. I am having some options in mind:

  • Hire a VPS in Asia and set up another Jellyfin instance there. This works but I don't really want to have two Jellyfin instances with two databases and also accessing to local media content will be curbersome to manage.
  • Hire a VPS in Asia and set up a CDN but I am not sure if it will ever work with Jellyfin ?

So I would like to ask do you know any things about this and any idea to improve this situation ?

Thank you very much!


Edit: Thanks for all of your response. Based on my experience, I think the slowness is caused by the fact that there are too many hops to jump through before reaching the final client. So I think I will try to do several things:

  • Try to optimize my upload speed, it is fast enough but not very stable recently so it could have some impact
  • Set up a second Jellyfin instance and sync a part of my library there for my friends.

Edit: Slow here means both slow page loading and slow buffering.

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[–] Ptsf@lemmy.world 8 points 14 hours ago (1 children)

Tailscale, headscale, or something along those lines may help optimize the route but as others have said to resolve this is an actual fashion you'd need a cdn which requires significant geo-redundant hardware which comes at a pretty significant cost. That being said I think your friend has a good shot if you implement the former.

[–] johnnixon@lemmy.world 2 points 8 hours ago

I was trying to stream my Jellyfin server on vacation..Over Tailnet I couldn't reliably stream anything. Over VPN it was as good as local. I can't believe it's just a routing issue but I wasn't proxied so it should have been the same. So a VPN for one user might fix the issue. The headaches of segmenting the network on that VPN are another problem even if the hardware/router is capable but doable.