![]() ![]() miniDLNA connection testĬheck the connection to miniDLNA on your client: If using a firewall open port 8200 (for miniDLNA, TCP) and 1900 (for UPnP, UDP is enough here). ![]() Optional: firewall settings for miniDLNA and UPnP ![]() Restart miniDLNA: service minidlna force-reload & service minidlna status With: enable (by removing # in front of the line: In /etc/nf exchange: media_dir=/var/lib/minidlna (you will find your Seafile libraries under cd /mnt/seafile-fuse now) miniDLNA configuration seaf-fuse.sh start -o allow_other /mnt/seafile-fuse Sudo apt-get update & sudo apt-get install fuse miniDLNA FUSE system group, mount point, start FUSEĪdd a system group for FUSE, create a mount point where you mount your (only unencrypted!) seafile libraries and start FUSE: sudo addgroup fuse Install FUSE and miniDLNA on your server: Tutorial for streaming video/audo with your Seafile server via minidlna and FUSE Install FUSE and miniDLNA So with (a lot of) help from I figured out how to stream from my Seafile server via FUSE and miniDLNA. Yes, you can open a library using WebDAV but this won’t work for videos. (This tutorial is an add-on for Tutorial for Seafile CE + Nginx + dynamic DNS (on ARM / Cubietruck / RaspberryPi))Ī feature I was missing using Seafile was streaming the content of a library to a media pc ( KODI in my case). Tutorial for streaming video/audo with your Seafile server via miniDLNA and FUSE This tutorial version is the maintained one. Since the announcement to fork Seafile by Seafile GmbH I’ve decided to move my tutorials to the new Seafile forum of the original developers of Seafile (so this one). This tutorial was originally written for the first Seafile forum of Seafile GmbH. This tutorial is licensed under CC-BY-SA - feel free to share and modify it (but keep information free)! ![]()
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