2024-04-16, 03:32 PM
Depends on the package manager you want to use? Look at the packages that were installed and try apt to remove them. You'll need sudo privileges.
Be aware that this will remove these packages, any orphaned dependencies, all known traces of them on your system. Then give it another shot. You could also try to play with the service before doing this and see if it'll even start up. Again, you need sudo.
Note that each line is a different command. I would probably nuke the entire thing and start over, but it may be worthwhile to save a little bit of time and at least try enabling/restarting the service. Don't go down the rabbit hole though, if those three commands don't produce much of anything, I'd erase the whiteboard and forge ahead with a clean install.
Code:
apt autoremove jellyfin jellyfin-ffmpeg5 jellyfin-server jellyfin-web --purge
Be aware that this will remove these packages, any orphaned dependencies, all known traces of them on your system. Then give it another shot. You could also try to play with the service before doing this and see if it'll even start up. Again, you need sudo.
Code:
$: systemctl status jellyfin
$: systemctl enable jellyfin
$: systemctl restart jellyfin
Note that each line is a different command. I would probably nuke the entire thing and start over, but it may be worthwhile to save a little bit of time and at least try enabling/restarting the service. Don't go down the rabbit hole though, if those three commands don't produce much of anything, I'd erase the whiteboard and forge ahead with a clean install.
Jellyfin 10.9 | Ubuntu 24.04 LTS | Intel i7-13700K | Intel Arc A380 | 64 GB DDR4-3600 | 78 TB Storage