2025-01-17, 04:11 AM
The easiest way is to just buy a cheap domain name from somewhere like porkbun, and then use a dynamic DNS client (there's lots, I use a dockerized version of porkbun-ddns) which will sync your current public IP with the domain name.
But a reverse proxy is a good idea so you can avoid forwarding a bunch of ports for services on your router, and many of them can pull SSL certificates. There's a lot of pretty user-friendly ways to do that these days, like Cosmos-Cloud for example.
But a reverse proxy is a good idea so you can avoid forwarding a bunch of ports for services on your router, and many of them can pull SSL certificates. There's a lot of pretty user-friendly ways to do that these days, like Cosmos-Cloud for example.
Specifics:
Jellyfin 10.10.7 (docker) on Debian 12.6 // N100 16GB
Storage: Synology DS220+ CIFS mounts
Clients: Jellyfin4Kodi (Addon Mode), Android, Android TV, Roku, Symfonium
Jellyfin 10.10.7 (docker) on Debian 12.6 // N100 16GB
Storage: Synology DS220+ CIFS mounts
Clients: Jellyfin4Kodi (Addon Mode), Android, Android TV, Roku, Symfonium