plex

Plex on Ubuntu

Posted by robd on December 11, 2017
Linux, Plex / No Comments

I’m no expert with Linux but I’m trying hard to improve my knowledge, I recently ran through some great CentOS videos on Pluralsight and after that tried to install Guacamole which is a clientless remote desktop gateway.  The long and the short of it is I didn’t get it fully working but really enjoyed the process.

Anyhow as I mentioned in a previous post, I decided to install Plex on a Ubuntu server as I think my problem with Linux is the lack of visual prompts i.e. If I can see or draw something then I often understand the process better.

So after my initial vmware issues, I downloaded and installed Ubuntu and installed VMware tools:

Open the VMware Tools CD mounted on the Ubuntu desktop.
Right-click the file name that is similar to VMwareTools.x.x.x-xxxx.tar.gz, click Extract to, and select Ubuntu Desktop to save the extracted contents.

The vmware-tools-distrib folder is extracted to the Ubuntu Desktop.
To install VMware Tools in Ubuntu:
Open a Terminal window. For more information.
In the Terminal, run this command to navigate to the vmware-tools-distrib folder:

cd Desktop/vmware-tools-distrib

Run this command to install VMware Tools:

sudo ./vmware-install.pl -d

Note: The -d switch assumes that you want to accept the defaults. If you do not use -d, press Return to accept the defaults or supply your own answers.

Enter your Ubuntu password.
Restart the Ubuntu virtual machine after the VMware Tools installation completes.

Then I updated Ubuntu:

sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get upgrade

Next download the Plex Media server package

run from a terminal:

sudo dpkg -i plexmediaserver_1.10.0.4523-648bc61d4_amd64.deb

(replace the filename with the name of the package you downloaded)

To setup Plex Media Server, on the same machine you installed the server on, open a browser window, and go to http://127.0.0.1:32400/web.

Then I decided it best to run Plex as a service so if the server rebooted I wouldn’t have to logon:

sudo systemctl enable plexmediaserver.service
sudo systemctl start plexmediaserver.service

Finally I need to map a drive so I could access the media (photos etc) on my windows server again in a fashion where if the server rebooted it would map.

To do this you need cifs utils to connect to windows shares:

sudo apt-get install cifs-utils

Then you need to create a directory to mount the share too like so:

sudo mkdir /media/windowsshare

Then add the the share and add the Windows credentials that have permission to the share via the config file /etc/fstab, to add this line:

Sudo nano /etc/fstab
//192.168.1.2/share /media/windowsshare cifs username=BohemianUser,password=BohemianPassword,iocharset=utf8,sec=ntlm 0 0

Finally, test the fstab entry by issuing:

sudo mount -a

If there are no errors, you should test how it works after a reboot. Your remote share should mount automatically.

See if you have access via Plex.

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HP G7 N54L running ESXi 6.5 and Ubuntu

Posted by robd on December 11, 2017
Linux / 5 Comments

I run a HP G7 N54L which has ESXi 6.5 installed, its getting old but its brilliant.

Anyhow, I ran a Windows 10 VM which I had Plex installed on, for some reason Plex gave up the ghost so I decided to install Ubuntu and was planning on installing Plex on there.

Grabbed the ISO and installed and 5 minutes after install the Ubuntu server froze, so rebooted, froze again.

After some digging I post a post that mentioned its a hardware issue sorted in ESXi 6.5 update 1.

So downloaded and update my server (note there was a warning that future releases of ESXi wont be supported on this CPU) and ran Ubuntu and it worked flawlessly.

 

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