Endless space 2 unfallen quest. Ive installed plex manually since this way you apparently get updates sooner and more frequently. Well they werent wrong, because since a few days now, plex has been telling me;
John DigitalFreeNAS Experienced
The ports tree is great but sometimes can take awhile to update to the latest version. I use the web version of plex a lot and the update nagging forced me to figure this out. I discovered there is no other good tutorial to accomplish this. So here you have it.
First you want to be ssh'd into your FreeNAS Host. Use putty or your favorite terminal to do this. Then we enter the plex jail. You need to have wget and nano installed so. pkg install nano wget Then for ease switch to your PMS directory, for me this is /usr/local/plexdata-plexpass but for you it may be /usr/local/plexdata or something. cd /usr/local/plexdata-plexpass Then we need to get the latest version of Plex from the plex.tv website, https://www.plex.tv/media-server-downloads/ at the time of this writing its 1.13.9.5439. Select FreeBSD, right click the download button and select 'copy link address'. Then at the Plex jail's terminal do. wget <paste the above copied link here> Then we get the script. Big thanks to mstinaff over at github. As it stands its written to only update the plugin version (PBI) so we update it for our use. This is where you need to know if you have standard (plexmediaserver) or (plexmediaserver_plexpass) installed. You probably already know which version you have. Do.. nano PMS_Updater.sh Paste in this script. Its set for the plexpass version. If you don't have plexpass, search and replace instances of plexmediaserver-plexpass and plexmediaserver_plexpass with just plexmediaserver. Then do CTRL+X, enter, enter to Save file and exit NANO. Then we make our script executable by chmod +x PMS_Updater.sh Now its time for the magic, run the command, take care to make the proper edits. Include your plex.tv login credentials if you have plexpass. ./PMS_Updater.sh -u USERNAME -p PASSWORD -vv -a AS TIME GOES ON THIS COMMAND WILL CHANGE WITH PLEX VERSIONS. Substitute whatever .tar.bz file was download above. Look by doing a ls and use that filename to complete the above command.You should now have the latest version not yet in the ports tree. Cheers hope this helps you!
Posted by10 months ago
Archived
An update is available. Please install manually.
Though im not sure how to do this, exactly.
I've installed plex into a 11.2 jail as follows;
Its been working pretty well sofar, but updates are pushed out for a reason, so id like to keep it fresh. I'm pretty new to this, so I figured all it would take to update a jail would be;
But apparently its not that easy ( it never is :P ). Does anyone know how to go about updating plexmediaserver (not plexpass) ? Using google I just keep running into dead end instructions for seemingly other builds.
12 comments
PMS_Updater.sh is a shell script for updating the Plex Media Server inside the FreeNAS Plex plugin
This script has been updated to work in a iocage jail in FreeNAS 11.2. Please ensure you have wget and ca_root_nss installed. To do so, from inside the jail (iocage exec plex csh) just run 'pkg install wget' and the same for ca_root_nss.
Copy the file into the root of the directory however you like and you can then run it from within the jail to update it. Thanks to @sretalla at the FreeNAS forums for all the help provided.
FreeNAS is an excellent open-source network attached storage project based on FreeBSD that is very capable of storing even the largest media libraries
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Plex is an amazing media server/client platform that can organize and stream those same media libraries.
FreeNAS has a plug-in architecture that makes running Plex Media Server on FreeNAS trivialy easy. But the available Plex Media Server plug-in is only as recent as the latest publicly available release.
To address this I have made a script that can be copied into a running Plex Media Server plug-in, and without needing anything else installed it can search the Plex.tv download site using paid PlexPass credentials and check for newer versions. If a newer version is found it can either be downloaded and held for admin approval or automatically installed to the server.
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To use run PMS_Updater.sh as root. The following options can be used:
Running without the username/password or bad username/password will retrieve the latest public release rather than the latest Plex Pass release.
The script can also be called from a cronjob to check for updates on a regular schedule.
The script requires wget and perl5 to properly work if you are working in something like a FreeBSD jail that doesn't come supplied with these packages.
Besides the media itself, the most important element of a media server software is how up to date it is–you can’t watch videos if the server doesn’t know they’re there. Plex Media Server offers three ways to keep your media collection up to date so you always know what’s available.
Why Would I Want To Do This?
RELATED:How to Set Up Plex (and Watch Your Movies on Any Device)
There are three components to the Plex Media Server experience. There’s the media itself (like your TV shows), there’s the actual Plex Media Server that manages your media, and then there are the Plex client applications you access the server from via your Apple TV, your iPhone, or other devices.
Because you aren’t directly browsing the folders that contain your videos, it is critically important that Plex Media Server’s database be up to date. If you’re away on a business trip, for example, trying to catch up on your favorite shows, but Plex Media Server hasn’t updated to include the latest episodes, you’re out of luck. Until the library is updated, you won’t be able to watch them.
Thankfully, the Plex Media Server software has multiple ways you can ensure your media list is always current including manual updating and multiple ways to automate the update process.
How to Manually Update Your Library
The simplest method is to manually update your library. Even if you follow the later steps in this guide and completely automate the update process, you should always be familiar with the manual update process as it’s a great way to force an immediate update.
To manually update your Plex library, log into the web control panel for your Plex Media Server. On the main page, select one of your libraries from the left hand navigation pane, as seen below, like your “TV Shows” library.
Within the library, click on the circular arrow icon in the upper right corner.
This will trigger a manual update for that library, and Plex Media Server will rescan the directories assigned to that library. Repeat this process for all other libraries (e.g. Movies and Music) you wish to update.
How to Automatically Update Your Library
Manual updating is great if you need to force the update right that second, but for ease of use and really frictionless user experience, you really want to enable automatic updating. Not only is automatic updating supremely convenient for you, but it’s practically a necessity if you have other people in your house. If Plex is always up to date then you, the manager of the media server empire, won’t be pestered with questions about whether a favorite show is up to date.
There are several ways you can automate library updates, and you’ll find all of them in a single menu within the settings of your Plex Media Server. Click on the Settings tool icon in the upper right corner of the Plex web interface.
Within the Settings menu select the “Server” tab along the top navigation bar and then select “Library” from the left hand navigation panel.
To see all the available options we’ll be highlighting, you need to click on the “Show Advanced” button to fully expand the library options.
With the advanced options visible, you’ll see the following entries in the Library settings menu:
There’s several options here and you should consider each one based on where your media is stored and your update needs.
Automatic Updates: The Best Option For Nearly Everyone
The top option, “Update my library automatically”, is the ideal one. Nearly every Plex user should check it. The only time automated library updates aren’t a viable solution is for Plex users with their media stored on a different computer from the Plex Media Server program (since the automatic detection of folders doesn’t typically work for folders on a network share).
Checking “Run a partial scan when changes are detected” is an additional option that can be paired with the automatic library update. This option will decrease library update time and amount of system resources used for library updates. It’s not a huge deal on a powerful system, but its a time saver regardless (and it’s quite useful if your Plex Media Server hardware is underpowered).
Scheduled Updates: Great for Media On Network Shares
If you find that automatic library updating doesn’t work for your system, you can always use the “Update my library periodically” setting to set an update schedule. This option works for both local files and files located on a network share (that is, a computer other than the one Plex Media Server is installed on), since it manually scans the entire directory structure at the frequency you specify. You can specify the update frequency in increments as low as every 15 minutes all the way up to once a day.
Automatic Trash: The Housekeeping You May Not Want
Finally there’s a small consideration regarding library cleanup. By default, the option “Empty trash automatically after every scan” is checked. If you have a fixed library (e.g. all your media is on a specific server on fixed internal drives) it’s a good idea to leave this checked. That way if you delete a bunch of stuff from your media server, Plex will automatically tidy up after you and remove all the entries for that media.
If, however, you use external drive that are sometimes removed from the Plex Media Server computer, you have media shared on the Plex Media Server that is located on a network share of another computer that isn’t always on, or some other situation where media you wish to keep in your library is not always online, do not check the “Empty trash” option. If you do, every time Plex runs an update scan and fails to see the offline media it will delete it (only to turn around and rescan the media, download all the metadata, and so on, the next time it’s online).
Once you have automatic updating configured just the way you want, you can sit back and enjoy one of the best benefits of Plex Media Server: always up-to-date and centralized management of your entire media collection.
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Freenas Plex Server
Plex Media Server is renowned for smooth and intuitive user experience, so you might be a bit surprised if you find yourself puzzled over exactly how to restart your server. Don’t worry, we’ve got you covered.
Where’s the *@%^ing Restart Button?Update Plex Freenas Plugin
If you’re a regular Plex user, you’ve gotten well used to interacting with your Plex Media Server through the web-based GUI—the place where you can handle all sorts of tasks like setting up remote access, sharing your library with friends, and optimizing your media, among other routine tasks and enhancements.
While you can do nearly anything from within the Plex interface, there’s one thing you may have noticed: there’s no reset button. No button, no toggle, no link, not a single reference to start, stopping, or restarting the Plex Media Server to be found anywhere in any of the system menus.
As baffling at that might seem at first, it’s actually a clever way to ensure server stability: you can only restart Plex Media Server if you’re either sitting at the computer it is running on, because that’s the only way to ensure you can turn it back on. If you’re accessing your Plex install through the web GUI away from home (like say on a business trip) and you accidentally shut it down then the server is off until you get home to start it back up again.
How to Restart Your Plex Media ServerManually Update Plex Freenas 11.2
So if you can’t restart it from the web control panel, then how do you get the job done? How you restart Plex Media Server varies significantly depending on the system you’re running it on, ranging from the kludgy to the useful. On Windows and macOS, there is no dedicated restart function, and you’re left simply quitting the application and starting it again.
Look for the Plex icon in the Windows system tray (or the macOS menu bar).
Select “Exit” to safely shut down the server.
Relaunch the application as you normally would using a shortcut in your Start Menu, Dock, or the like to fire it up.
If you’re running Plex Media Server on a unix-like platform like Linux or FreeBSD, you’ll start, stop, and restart your Plex Media Server from the command line. The following self-explanatory commands trigger each event:
The command-based approach is significantly more flexible because it allows you, if you wish, to set up a cron job to schedule when your server is started, stopped, or restarted.
If you’re running Plex Media Server on a storage appliance like a Synology NAS, you’ll typically find a place within the dashboard of the appliance itself (not the Plex GUI) to restart the Plex application. Synology, for example, has a “package manager” on their devices and you can use the “Action” menu for individual packages to start and stop them, as seen below.
Because most storage appliances are running a NIX-like environment under their GUI’s, you can often set up a cron-like-job—here’s an example from the Synology forum where someone used the Task Scheduler built into the device to schedule a start/stop sequence to restart their Plex Media Server on a schedule.
With the mystery of the missing restart button solved, you’ll know just where to look the next time you need to restart your Plex Media Server.
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