2024-03-06, 11:19 PM
(This post was last modified: 2024-03-06, 11:20 PM by Efficient_Good_5784. Edited 1 time in total.)
You can grab the same logs that you'll find in Truenas's GUI within Jellyfin.
Go to your Jellyfin dashboard, then under Advanced on the sidebar, there should be a Logs section.
Server logs start with "log" and transcode logs start with "FFmpeg.Transcode".
Just click on any of them to open them in a new tab. You can save the current log output (in the new tab) with "ctrl+s".
For your information, you can also grab the server logs from Truenas's App section. Just go to the app container and look around for the button/option to open the container's logs (this is in different locations depending on your Truenas version).
Also, if you want to access your Truenas server from your Windows computer using command prompt, you'll need to use SSH to log into the Truenas server. You'll then have to use the command line to see the Kubernetes container logs.
Go to your Jellyfin dashboard, then under Advanced on the sidebar, there should be a Logs section.
Server logs start with "log" and transcode logs start with "FFmpeg.Transcode".
Just click on any of them to open them in a new tab. You can save the current log output (in the new tab) with "ctrl+s".
For your information, you can also grab the server logs from Truenas's App section. Just go to the app container and look around for the button/option to open the container's logs (this is in different locations depending on your Truenas version).
Also, if you want to access your Truenas server from your Windows computer using command prompt, you'll need to use SSH to log into the Truenas server. You'll then have to use the command line to see the Kubernetes container logs.