this post was submitted on 16 Jun 2023
2 points (75.0% liked)

Self Hosted - Self-hosting your services.

11495 readers
11 users here now

A place to share alternatives to popular online services that can be self-hosted without giving up privacy or locking you into a service you don't control.

Rules

Important

Beginning of January 1st 2024 this rule WILL be enforced. Posts that are not tagged will be warned and if not fixed within 24h then removed!

Cross-posting

If you see a rule-breaker please DM the mods!

founded 3 years ago
MODERATORS
 

I have Jellyfin on my Raspberry Pi and I usually access it via my local network or via SSH tunneling when I'm outside of my local network, but I want to be able to just access it via https outside of my local network.

I am following the instructions on Jellyfin's Networking page here: https://jellyfin.org/docs/general/networking/

On the part where I input this command

openssl pkcs12 -export -out jellyfin.pfx -inkey privkey.pem -in /usr/local/etc/letsencrypt/live/domain.org/cert.pem -passout pass:

I get this error

Can't open /usr/local/etc/letsencrypt/live/domain.org/cert.pem for reading, No such file or directory

Any idea what I'm doing wrong?

Got it solved! For future people reading this, the solution is here: https://github.com/jellyfin/jellyfin/issues/6697#issuecomment-1086973795

Jellyfin's Networking guide is all wrong.

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[โ€“] lambchop@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I'd recommend using a reverse proxy even if you just have 1 service. The swag container from Linuxserver is good, nginx proxy manager is probably the easiest, both automate the cert and renewal

[โ€“] animist@lemmy.one 1 points 1 year ago

Yeah I am definitely going to be working on this next week