![]() First thing I did was turn on JRiver and stream it via bluetooth into boat stereo, then hit shuffle and let it play for hours while I worked.īefore JRiver I used Google Play. Example, yesterday I was out in the driveway winterizing the boat. I love having my entire library available anywhere I go. The same setup will enable you to send music to any other PC or phones that support the client.Ī happy JRiver user. This setup will enable you to stream video files stored on the PC or the home local network to the TV. For example, many modern "Smart" TV have a built in PLEX client and you can install a PLEX server on a connected PC. When you install your own server, it will manage the library of your media collection and you will be able to access it with a suitable client. But in this case you have no control over the server. If you think about streaming video online to a TV or PC, like what happens with YouTube, it's also a client/server streaming technology. Both server and clients can reside on the same network or in some cases the server can allow connections from an external network, such as the internet, as well In most cases, a server can accept and serve simultaneously several clients. The server is responsible for managing the media library, approving connections from clients and sending the media to the client in the best format the client can accept. The client is responsible to connect to the server, browse the media stored there and issue a request to send the media. Your router might have DNS caching as well, which might be utilized for this purpose as well.ģ.Write to every computer's host file: the least amount of initial work! But the one that will keep you tripping! You could edit the host file on each computer to indicate that should be 192.168.1.5.Click to expand.To stream media you need a server and a client. ![]() Setup the internal DNS server so it will provide 192.168.1.5 instead of 93.107.237.199 to the internal computers. pfSense has good support for it ( pfSense Manual)Ģ.Split DNS (recommended): create your own internal DNS server, which will be queried first for all internal computers. ![]() That's why it's not working within your LAN.ġ.NAT Reflection: if your gateway/router supports this, then enable it. It will send your request outside the LAN, but since your outgoing IP is also your requested IP, it doesn't go anywhere. If so, what you have is that any internal computer asking to resolve the DNS name of "" will get the answer to look for 93.107.237.199, which is not an internal IP address. If I understand this correctly, you have this server on your LAN and you port-forwarded on your router from your WAN to the internal address? And your issue is that your other computers can see the server only if they are outside your LAN (or use the internal IP)? Your question can be answered here, but it's not a Ubuntu specific issue. # DO NOT EDIT THIS FILE BY HAND - YOUR CHANGES WILL BE OVERWRITTENĬan anyone help? I guess its a DNS issue but don't know how to fix this. Pre-down ip addr del 93.107.237.199/32 dev loĪnd # Dynamic nf(5) file for glibc resolver(3) generated by resolvconf(8) Here is the output of /etc/network/interfaces and /etc/nf: # This file describes the network interfaces available on your system I can putty in using the IP address inside the network. If I putty into the hostname () outside the network, it resolves correctly, but I get a time-out from within the LAN. Everything works fine if I access the server from outside LAN but I cannot use the server within LAN. I have a server set up with a static IP on 192.168.1.5.
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