My jellyfin server is like 98% there. I just started it yesterday and I’ve made an account and added my movies into it except I can’t connect to it from any external devices. I go to the jellyfin Android app and I put in my public IP,private IP and the IP on the back of my modem made sure to also put :8096 after and still nothing, still get failure to connect. So I edited my port forwarding through my router, and I still get the same error. can anyone help?

  • hiTechNishachar@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    I didn’t have to play with my router settings, what I did was just open a port(8096) on the device that hosted the server. The ip was the device ip on the local network (192.168…)

    Everything works fine. Using the localip:8096 as url.

    Experienced people here Lmk if I made any mistakes or could’ve done better

  • chaplin2@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Off topic.

    Jellyfin apps seem to me less user friendly than plex.

    Plex iOS app moves back and forth in the video pretty fast. Why are there pictures of cups and tea etc instead of clear 10s back and forth? Common!

  • gh057k33p3r@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Even if your port is forearded, make sure 8096 is allowed through the firewall of your computer. Also make sure you are not behind a cgnat if you want to access it externally.

  • thekrautboy@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    put in my public IP,private IP and the IP on the back of my modem

    No no no. Stop what youre doing and first understand how opening your services to the public internet works, and what the risks are.

    Try subs like /r/HomeNetworking maybe, and the Jellyfin forum.

  • Yaunux@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    The simplest way of reaching a server hosted on your home network from outside of your network is to port forward traffic on a specific port to a specific ip. Say for instance all traffic on port 8096 to the ip of your Jellyfin server.

    Google the brand name of your router and port forwarding to find out how.

    But that is not the most secure solution and should preferably only be done if you understand at least the basics of network security.

    The better solution would be to have an encrypted VPN service to the inside of your network. This solution is a bit harder to set up (though not as hard as you may think). This would allow you to view any hosted services as if on your home network from anywhere in the world.

    I would recomend studying the VPN option. OpenVPN is a free option that can be hosted on a raspberry pi, LX container or most any other server option.

    Edit: If you port forward on your router the correct way to reach the Jellyfin service outside of your local network would be to enter your public ip followed by port. Your public ip can be found by googling “whats my ip”. The result should look something like this 92.16.23.54:8096