2023-12-18, 05:11 AM
(This post was last modified: 2023-12-18, 05:12 AM by Efficient_Good_5784. Edited 1 time in total.)
Following the video, you used Truechart's release for Jellyfin? And you used the NFS share option to mount the folders to the Jellyfin container? It could be that you need to reconfigure your NFS shares of the media.
When you get to the section for additional storage, maybe try mounting using the host path option. In the previous version of Truenas Scale (Bluefin), there was an option that you had to turn off if you wanted to host path mount folders that were shared with SMB. It was recommended that your media files be mounted with NFS to avoid this issue. However in the current release of Scale (Cobia), that option is gone, so it's up to you if you want to use the host path or NFS option.
Also, if it's a permission issue, you could run Jellyfin as root to see if that will allow it to see the files. If so, you need to figure out what the IDs are for the user that can see your media and have it run the Jellyfin container.
The Truenas Scale app GUI allows you to pull Docker images and run them. You could pull the latest official Jellyfin image directly from the Docker repo site yourself so you don't have to wait for the people that maintain the Jellyfin images on Scale's app section to update those. If you do this, just don't fill out the option to configure the container's user and group ID to have it run as root if you want to test if it's a permission issue that you have.
When you get to the section for additional storage, maybe try mounting using the host path option. In the previous version of Truenas Scale (Bluefin), there was an option that you had to turn off if you wanted to host path mount folders that were shared with SMB. It was recommended that your media files be mounted with NFS to avoid this issue. However in the current release of Scale (Cobia), that option is gone, so it's up to you if you want to use the host path or NFS option.
Also, if it's a permission issue, you could run Jellyfin as root to see if that will allow it to see the files. If so, you need to figure out what the IDs are for the user that can see your media and have it run the Jellyfin container.
The Truenas Scale app GUI allows you to pull Docker images and run them. You could pull the latest official Jellyfin image directly from the Docker repo site yourself so you don't have to wait for the people that maintain the Jellyfin images on Scale's app section to update those. If you do this, just don't fill out the option to configure the container's user and group ID to have it run as root if you want to test if it's a permission issue that you have.