Plex

Plex is a media player system and software suite consisting of many player applications for 10-foot user interfaces and an associated media server that organizes personal media stored on local devices. Integrated Plex Channels provide users with access to a growing number of online content providers such as YouTube, Vimeo, TEDTalks, and CNN among others. Plex also provides integration for cloud services including Dropbox, Box, Google Drive, or Copy.

Plex for Linux is split into a closed-source server Plex Media Server, and an open-source client Plex Home Theater, a fork of the popular Kodi project.

Plex Media Server (PMS)

Installation

Install plex-media-serverAUR (stable update channel) or plex-media-server-plexpassAUR (beta update channel). The latter is only available to Plex Pass subscribers and can provide early access to improvements and/or new functionalities, but also early access to potential bugs. Even though the beta update channel is typically quite stable, it is recommended to install the stable release unless you require specific early access content (release notes).

Setup

Start/enable the plexmediaserver.service systemd unit.

To begin configuring the Plex Media Server, browse to http://localhost:32400/web/.

To configure Plex Media Server remotely, you can first create an SSH tunnel (setup can only be done from localhost)

$ ssh ip.address.of.server -L 8888:localhost:32400

and then browse to http://localhost:8888/web/.

or if you are running apache, with a reverse proxy, by adding this configuration in httpd-vhosts.conf

 <VirtualHost *:80>
   ServerName ip.address.of.server
   ProxyPass        / http://localhost:32400/
   ProxyPassReverse / http://localhost:32400/
 </VirtualHost>
Nginx reverse proxy

Below an example server configuration is given for a reverse proxy using Nginx, including certificate configuration.

/etc/nginx/sites-available/domain.com.conf
server {
    listen                  443 ssl http2;
    listen                  [::]:443 ssl http2;
    server_name             media.domain.com;

    # SSL
    ssl_certificate         /etc/letsencrypt/live/media.domain.com/fullchain.pem;
    ssl_certificate_key     /etc/letsencrypt/live/media.domain.com/privkey.pem;
    ssl_trusted_certificate /etc/letsencrypt/live/media.domain.com/chain.pem;

    # logging
    access_log              /var/log/nginx/media.domain.com.access.log;
    error_log               /var/log/nginx/media.domain.com.error.log warn;

    # reverse proxy
    location / {
        proxy_pass https://localhost:32400;
        proxy_set_header Host $host;
        proxy_set_header X-Real-IP $remote_addr;
        proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for;
        proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Proto $scheme;
    }
}

# HTTP redirect
server {
    listen      80;
    listen      [::]:80;
    server_name media.domain.com;
    include     nginxconfig.io/letsencrypt.conf;

    location / {
        return 301 https://media.domain.com$request_uri;
    }
}

Plugins

PMS can be expanded with additional plugins. For example, PMS can be used as an IPTV client with the IPTV plugin.

Plugins can be installed inside /var/lib/plex/Plex Media Server/Plug-ins.

Plex Live TV and DVR

Plex live TV requires a plexpass.

To enable live TV viewing and DVR support with plex, you must have one of the supported tuners listed on the support page. PMS will automatically recognize any connected tuners.

The plex user needs to be part of the video group in order to access local tuners. This can be done by running usermod -a -G video plex

To enable IPTV support via m3u playlist install xTeVeAUR.

Hauppauge

The drivers for all Hauppauge tuners have been included in the Linux kernel for some time now (e.g. ~v4.7 for WinTV-DualHD), however the firmware isn’t loaded by default. Look for a kernel message: by e.g. starting a tail with and enable/insert the (USB) tuner device. If missing, download the respective firmware file and copy it file to /lib/firmware/.

Security

It is recommended to store your media files outside of your home directory, as making it accessible to PMS would mean lowering its security. Having a separate or /mnt/media partition is a good setup for use with PMS.

You can further increase security via systemd, by editing plexmediaserver.service as follows:

Resource management

Originally, PMS used ulimit to limit its allocated resources, however this is not compatible with running as a regular user. Instead, you can now set a maximum amount of memory via, again, systemd. For example, you can add:

MemoryMax=4G

to the file mentioned above.

Network

PMS and its DLNA server require several ports to be open:

  • Plex Media Server: TCP 32400
  • Plex DLNA Server: TCP 32469, UDP 1900
  • Network Discovery: UDP 32410, 32412, 32413, 32414
  • Bonjour/Avahi Network Discovery (legacy): UDP 5353

A short example with iptables:

# iptables -A INPUT -p tcp -m multiport --dports 32400,32469 -j ACCEPT
# iptables -A INPUT -p udp -m multiport --dports 1900,32410,32412,32413,32414 -j ACCEPT

In order to connect to Plex through on a standard http port, this command can be used (for port 8080):

# iptables -t nat -A PREROUTING -p tcp --dport 8080 -j REDIRECT --to-port 32400

Then you can connect directly to http://yourplexaddress:8080 on this port

UFW Rule

If you use UFW and would like to create an App List entry for Plex, create/edit and ensure it contains the following content:

Once you have saved the file, reload the UFW application definitions with:

# ufw app update plexmediaserver

And then finally allow the Plex app with:

# ufw allow plexmediaserver-all

Library Updates

Plex Media Server has a setting "Update my library automatically" which can detect new media files as they are downloaded to your library. But as your library grows, these updates might stop working reliably. To fix, you need to increase the number of files non-root users are allowed to subscribe to via inotify. Create the file

and run to apply without rebooting. Now plex should see any new files.

Troubleshooting

Logs are located in .

In case there are no logs or they are not helpful, you might want to launch PMS manually to get some terminal output:

sudo -u plex /usr/bin/bash
source /etc/conf.d/plexmediaserver
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/lib/plexmediaserver
/usr/lib/plexmediaserver/Plex\ Media\ Server

Plex's WebUI returns 404

There may be a situation when updating Plex's WebUI will return 404 Not Found. To fix this you just need to restart plexmediaserver.service.

Plex Home Theater (PHT)

Previously known as Plex Media Center, Plex Home Theater is the software component used for a long time as the front-end media player for Plex's back-end server component Plex Media Server. This component came from a fork of XBMC Media Center software on May 21, 2008.

Official support for Plex Home Theater (from Plex, Inc.) has been discontinued in favour of Plex Media Player (based on MPV). However, Plex Home Theater was forked and has been developed further by the Open Source community under the name OpenPHT

Installation

Install the openphtAUR package.

Plex Home Theater can be launched by running .

Plex Media Player (PMP)

Plex Media Player is the current release of Plex's media client. It has officially replaced #Plex Home Theater (PHT) (which is still receiving bug fixes) and builds upon previous functionality, such as using mpv. Plex has made PMP available to all users and it has also become compatible with Kodi. Keep in mind, PMP is not open-source (unlike PHT).

Installation

Install the package.

Kodi and PleXBMC

With the PleXBMC add-on, Kodi can be used as a replacement for PHT.

Installation

Install the package, then follow the instructions at https://kodi.wiki/view/Add-on:PleXBMC.

gollark: It's possible that Apple are annoying and want you to have iTunes, or also possible that you're doing it wrong.
gollark: Interesting/
gollark: Did it say anything about trusting a new device or whatever?
gollark: It should probably support MTP or something or prompt you about it.
gollark: Try connecting it over USB?
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