![]() The dumbest way I can think to do it would be to forward WAN traffic on port 32400 (Plex) to the Asus router at port 32400, then have the Asus router forward traffic on the same port to the Plex server. I forget if the Asus router would have its own IP but I think so. I'm not 110% sure how to do that, because I've never. If you forward traffic through your ISP router's firewall, it would have to go to your Asus router, and then your Asus router would have to send it to the server. Previously your ISP router and your Asus router were both making their own LANs. Just doing a shitty job at being pedantic I think I know what you meant.īasically you set the Asus router to Access Point mode so it is no longer running its own LAN, it's just being a dumb switch with wifi and the ISP router is handling routing/dhcp (IP assignment)/firewall/etc. Please go to the relevant subreddits and support forums, for example:Īsus router connected to the ISP router via WANīy definition the internet coming out of your ISP's router is not a WAN connection, it's a LAN that the router sends out to the WAN. Build help and build shares posts go in their respective megathreads During the installation process Jellyfin will set up a few things on our Raspberry Pi. ![]() sudo apt install jellyfin Copy This command will download and install Jellyfin from the package repository we added. No referral / affiliate links, personal voting / campaigning / funding, or selling posts On your Raspberry Pi, all you need to do is run the following command to install Jellyfin. Welcome to /r/Plex, a subreddit dedicated to Plex, the media server/client solution for enjoying your media! Plex Community Discord Rules Latest Regular Threads: No Stupid Q&A: Tool Tuesday: Build Help: Share Your Build: Submit Troubleshooting Post Files not showing up correctly?
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