natchRoll 0 Posted February 24 Share Posted February 24 I have been working at this for a few weeks now, trying everything on the connectivity page and trying everything suggested to others with a similar issue. At this point I feel like I must be missing something simple. I have emby running in a proxmox lxc container on an asustor NAS. That server is connected to a router along with my PC, and that router is connected to my ISP router which i use for wifi. A while back i did this same setup with different hardware, using a laptop as the server. It worked then, and i was able to connect to my tv. So far I've tried port forwarding on my windows firewall, and on my router that the server is connected to. 8096 is still closed on https://www.yougetsignal.com/tools/open-ports/ Any help would be greatly appreciated. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Abobader 2952 Posted February 24 Share Posted February 24 Hello natchRoll, ** This is an auto reply ** Please wait for someone from staff support or our members to reply to you. It's recommended to provide more info, as it explain in this thread: Thank you. Emby Team Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
darkassassin07 432 Posted February 24 Share Posted February 24 Is the router between your PC (server?) and ISP router performing NAT, or is it in bridge mode? If it's not setup as a bridge, it's preventing everything that's directly connected to the ISP router from seeing the PC+NAS. All they can see is that router. Either - change the middle router to bridge mode. - or, on that router port forward 8096 to the IP of the server then, on wifi clients, use the IP of that middle router to connect to emby (the IP of the WAN interface, ie what the ISP router sees it as) - or connect the NAS+PC directly to the ISP router If you want external access, I wouldn't recommend the second option. It leaves you with three addresses to use: the LAN ip of the NAS, the WAN ip of the middle router, and the WAN ip of the ISP router, depending on where the client is. Clients can only ever remember two at a time. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Lessaj 76 Posted February 24 Share Posted February 24 Is the router you're using for your computer and NAS handling any DHCP, or is that all handled by your ISP router? In other words, are the devices on the same or different subnets? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
natchRoll 0 Posted February 24 Author Share Posted February 24 The middle router is in bridge mode, and DHCP is handled by the ISP router. Theyre on the same subnet Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
tedfroop21 39 Posted February 24 Share Posted February 24 So you can see all the devices on the ISP router dhcp table? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
natchRoll 0 Posted February 24 Author Share Posted February 24 I can only see the middle router and devices connected to wifi. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
natchRoll 0 Posted February 24 Author Share Posted February 24 So does that mean that the middle router is handling DHCP for the PC and NAS? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Solution darkassassin07 432 Posted February 24 Solution Share Posted February 24 Sounds like it, yeah. Make sure it's actually in bridge mode. Ensure it's DHCP server is disabled. Restart it after changes. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
natchRoll 0 Posted February 24 Author Share Posted February 24 That worked and I'm now able to connect to the server through wifi. I now can't connect to the GUI for proxmox, but hopefully I should be able to figure that out. Thanks for help. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Lessaj 76 Posted February 24 Share Posted February 24 You'll likely want to make sure that the middle router is not running any firewall services either, since that should be handled by your ISP router as well. You basically need it to act like an unmanaged switch, simply extending the connectivity of your ISP router to additional devices - "just plug in and go". I guess technically it's managed because it has a management page but you want it to be "transparent", a part of the network, but does nothing except pass traffic. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
natchRoll 0 Posted February 24 Author Share Posted February 24 Ok, I'll continue using it as a switch until i get some more components, and using it as a router actually makes sense. Thank you. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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