2023-08-03, 07:50 PM
(This post was last modified: 2023-08-03, 07:55 PM by St. Glocktopus. Edited 2 times in total.)
The software firewall is configured to allow 8096/tpc and udp on the server so I don't know why I can't connect to it via IP:port. I can't reach it via localhost:8096 even directly on the server itself via the browser, that's why I was thinking my Apache config may be interfering with access.
I can access is via the local IP and port 443 which doesn't seem to auto-redirect to my FQDN but any attempts to use just the plain IP address will redirect and any attempts to specify any port other than 443 (or ports to my other programs I have running such a radarr, sonarr, prowlarr, ombi, and qbitt which I can reach via the local IP + their respective port(s)).
I've been trying to get it to work off of local IP:8096 for further testing of speeds locally but can't figure out why it refuses connections to that IP:port. I did experience an oddity when I restarted my router and got full 1Gbps speeds during the router boot process with a speed test that quickly calmed back down to the usual 250mbps after the router finished booting fully. Which brings me back to thinking the router is sending all traffic out and back in for routing to the FQDN.
I can access is via the local IP and port 443 which doesn't seem to auto-redirect to my FQDN but any attempts to use just the plain IP address will redirect and any attempts to specify any port other than 443 (or ports to my other programs I have running such a radarr, sonarr, prowlarr, ombi, and qbitt which I can reach via the local IP + their respective port(s)).
I've been trying to get it to work off of local IP:8096 for further testing of speeds locally but can't figure out why it refuses connections to that IP:port. I did experience an oddity when I restarted my router and got full 1Gbps speeds during the router boot process with a speed test that quickly calmed back down to the usual 250mbps after the router finished booting fully. Which brings me back to thinking the router is sending all traffic out and back in for routing to the FQDN.