yes, with "systemctl start jellyfin" - and it is of course running.
but you can also type just "jellyfin" to see its status I guess:
but you can also type just "jellyfin" to see its status I guess:
Code:
root@jellyfin:/# jellyfin
[20:00:09] [INF] [1] Main: Jellyfin version: 10.9.11
[20:00:09] [INF] [1] Main: Environment Variables: ["[JELLYFIN_LOG_DIR, /root/.local/share/jellyfin/log]"]
[20:00:09] [INF] [1] Main: Arguments: ["/usr/lib/jellyfin/bin/jellyfin.dll"]
[20:00:09] [INF] [1] Main: Operating system: Debian GNU/Linux 11 (bullseye)
[20:00:09] [INF] [1] Main: Architecture: X64
[20:00:09] [INF] [1] Main: 64-Bit Process: True
[20:00:09] [INF] [1] Main: User Interactive: True
[20:00:09] [INF] [1] Main: Processor count: 8
[20:00:09] [INF] [1] Main: Program data path: /root/.local/share/jellyfin
[20:00:09] [INF] [1] Main: Log directory path: /root/.local/share/jellyfin/log
[20:00:09] [INF] [1] Main: Config directory path: /root/.config/jellyfin
[20:00:09] [INF] [1] Main: Cache path: /root/.cache/jellyfin
[20:00:09] [INF] [1] Main: Web resources path: /usr/lib/jellyfin/bin/jellyfin-web
[20:00:09] [INF] [1] Main: Application directory: /usr/lib/jellyfin/bin/
[20:00:09] [ERR] [1] Main: The server is expected to host the web client, but the provided content directory is either invalid or empty: /usr/lib/jellyfin/bin/jellyfin-web. If you do not want to host the web client with the server, you may set the '--nowebclient' command line flag, or set'hostwebclient=false' in your config settings