2024-09-13, 11:25 AM
Hey!
Local:
I would double check your NAS's IP hasn't changed after the reboot. If you haven't set a static IP through your router for your NAS it is very likely this will change on every reboot. Then try to access as usual by going to <local-ip>:8096 on your browser.
Tailscale:
If you still have Tailscale installed on both your NAS and client nodes (Desktop and phone) go to Tailscale admin portal and grab your NAS's Tailscale IP. I'm assuming you haven't further configured tailscale restrictions so every node should have access to all other nodes on all ports. If this is not the case then create an ACL and tag the nodes you want to give access to. Then try to access as usual by going to <tailscale-ip>:8096
Hope this helps!
Local:
I would double check your NAS's IP hasn't changed after the reboot. If you haven't set a static IP through your router for your NAS it is very likely this will change on every reboot. Then try to access as usual by going to <local-ip>:8096 on your browser.
Tailscale:
If you still have Tailscale installed on both your NAS and client nodes (Desktop and phone) go to Tailscale admin portal and grab your NAS's Tailscale IP. I'm assuming you haven't further configured tailscale restrictions so every node should have access to all other nodes on all ports. If this is not the case then create an ACL and tag the nodes you want to give access to. Then try to access as usual by going to <tailscale-ip>:8096
Hope this helps!
Jellyfin 10.9.10 [LSIO Docker] | Ubuntu 24.04 LTS | i7-12700T | 16 GB RAM | 60TB Storage