jaybird23059 wrote:I signed up for a service called "noip.com", got the activation link, but it's not working. Haven't had a chance to follow up to see why. I'm giving the kids the address using the ip address and that will have to work for now.
From what I gather the other thing I want to do can't be done, but if you or someone else on this forum has an answer that would be great.
I want my G rated movies separated from the rest. The R, and nc17 and (shhh) a few x rated videos should be available to the grown ups only.
I thought maybe setting up another serviio install on another machine, but there's no way to change the port. So I guess I may have to obtain another server program that uses a different port.
One option might be to use Plex, as it uses a different port. In addition, Plex can be configured to allow access from their web site directly to your server. Still requires port forwarding configuration in your router. I still prefer Serviio overall, although Plex has a real nice user interface.
Back to Serviio. Using MediaBrowser (as you do for remote access), there's no way to restrict access by user, as MB only has one user. For players within your network, you can have restricted access, but not external users. Also, I believe there is a way to change the port number, but it requires some tech savvy. I believe it's set in one of the jar files, and you must edit that file to change the port.
If you decide to use Serviio on a second computer, I suggest putting all your G rated movies on that one, rather than access them from the first computer. This way you aren't doubling up on your network traffic by sending the video from one computer to the other, then back out over the Internet using MediaBrowser. If you want to watch one of the G movies on something internal to your network, you just switch to the other Serviio install.
I do have Serviio on two separate computers (use one as a test box) on my network. They both use the same port of course, which is no issue within the network. However, for external users you could alter the port forwarding within your router to use a different public port, and redirect that to port 23424 on the second computer. Not every router offers this ability. My DSL router (Actiontec C1000A) will only forward the public port to the same internal port. I also have a Linksys E3200, which I use as a Wireless Access Point, and it would allow different internal and external ports. You'll just need to see what you have available.
Dan
LG NANO85 4K TV, Samsung JU7100 4K TV, Sony BDP-S3500, Sharp 4K Roku TV, Insignia Roku TV, Roku Ultra, Premiere and Stick, Nvidia Shield, Yamaha RX-V583 AVR.
Primary server: AMD Ryzen 5 5600GT, 32 gig ram, Windows 11 Pro, 22 TB hard drive space | Test server: Intel i5-6400, 16 gig ram, Windows 10 Pro
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