2024-06-06, 12:44 AM
(This post was last modified: 2024-06-06, 12:47 AM by pcm. Edited 1 time in total.)
There's a couple of things that you might want to look into and find out ...
1. do you have a firewall on the router ? if you do, are you sure you have a rule in place that allows TCP and UDP packets to flow out of port 8096 ?
2. does your ISP block not-well-known ports ? if they do, can you ask them to open it for you ?
It might be worth it for you to change the port on your jellyfin-web-server to port 80 instead of 8096 and then setup a port-forward for port-80 on your router that goes to your server. This would be a simple enough thing to do and almost all firewalls and ISP allow traffic thru port-80 by-default without any additional hassle.
EDIT: Just realized that the issue is solved. And there is no way for me to delete my post... Oops
1. do you have a firewall on the router ? if you do, are you sure you have a rule in place that allows TCP and UDP packets to flow out of port 8096 ?
2. does your ISP block not-well-known ports ? if they do, can you ask them to open it for you ?
It might be worth it for you to change the port on your jellyfin-web-server to port 80 instead of 8096 and then setup a port-forward for port-80 on your router that goes to your server. This would be a simple enough thing to do and almost all firewalls and ISP allow traffic thru port-80 by-default without any additional hassle.
EDIT: Just realized that the issue is solved. And there is no way for me to delete my post... Oops