Linux
Alpine Linux
Jellyfin can be found in the community
repository as
jellyfin
and
jellyfin-web
.
To enable the web UI after installing jellyfin-web
, make sure to remove the --nowebclient
option from
/etc/conf.d/jellyfin
.
Arch Linux
The Extra
repository contains builds for both jellyfin-server
and jellyfin-web
.
jellyfin-server
includes a hard dependency on jellyfin-ffmpeg
.
Both packages, server and web, can also be built from source at the tip of the master branch using jellyfin-git
.
The AUR also offers each separately at jellyfin-server-git
and jellyfin-web-git
.
Fedora
Fedora builds in RPM package format are available in the main download repository. We do not yet have an official Fedora repository, but one is planned for the future.
However rpmfusion
provides both jellyfin-server
and jellyfin-web
for Fedora version 38
and above.
RPM Fusion
-
rpmfusion
must be enabled firstsudo dnf install https://mirrors.rpmfusion.org/free/fedora/rpmfusion-free-release-$(rpm -E %fedora).noarch.rpm https://mirrors.rpmfusion.org/nonfree/fedora/rpmfusion-nonfree-release-$(rpm -E %fedora).noarch.rpm
-
Install the
jellyfin
package, which will automatically installjellyfin-server
,jellyfin-web
andjellyfin-firewalld
sudo dnf install jellyfin
-
Enable and start the Jellyfin service:
sudo systemctl enable --now jellyfin
Manual installation via the .rpm packages
-
You will need to enable
rpmfusion
, asffmpeg
is a dependency of thejellyfin
server packagesudo dnf install https://mirrors.rpmfusion.org/free/fedora/rpmfusion-free-release-$(rpm -E %fedora).noarch.rpm https://mirrors.rpmfusion.org/nonfree/fedora/rpmfusion-nonfree-release-$(rpm -E %fedora).noarch.rpm
noteYou do not need to manually install
ffmpeg
; it will be installed by the Jellyfin server package as a dependency. -
Install the Jellyfin server
sudo dnf install <link to server `.rpm` file URL>
-
Install the Jellyfin web interface
sudo dnf install <link to web `.rpm` file URL>
-
Enable and start the Jellyfin service:
sudo systemctl enable --now jellyfin
-
Allow Jellyfin through the firewall:
sudo firewall-cmd --permanent --add-service=jellyfin
noteThis will open the following ports:
8096 TCP
, used by default for HTTP traffic; you can change this in the dashboard8920 TCP
, used by default for HTTPS traffic; you can change this in the dashboard1900 UDP
, used for service auto-discovery; this is not configurable7359 UDP
, used for auto-discovery; this is not configurable
-
Reload the firewall to apply the new rules:
sudo firewall-cmd --reload
-
Go to
localhost:8096
orip-address-of-jellyfin-server:8096
to finish setup in the web UI
CentOS
CentOS/RHEL 7 builds in RPM package format are available in the main download repository. We do not yet have an official CentOS/RHEL repository, but one is planned for the future.
The default CentOS/RHEL repositories don't provide FFmpeg, which the RPM requires. You will need to add a third-party repository which provide FFmpeg, such as RPM Fusion's Free repository.
You can also build Jellyfin's version on your own. This includes gathering the dependencies and compiling and installing them. Instructions can be found at the FFmpeg wiki.
The general process should follow the above Fedora instructions.
Debuntu (Debian, Ubuntu, and derivatives using apt
)
The Jellyfin team provides 3rd-party Debian and Ubuntu repositories, to help ensure your Jellyfin install is always kept up-to-date.
Repository (Automatic)
To simplify deployment and help automate this for as many users as possible, we provide a BASH script to handle repo installation as well as installing Jellyfin.
All you need to do is run this command on your system (requires curl
, or subsitute curl
with wget -O-
):
curl https://repo.jellyfin.org/install-debuntu.sh | sudo bash
You can verify the script download integrity with (requires sha256sum
):
diff <( curl -s https://repo.jellyfin.org/install-debuntu.sh -o install-debuntu.sh; sha256sum install-debuntu.sh ) <( curl -s https://repo.jellyfin.org/install-debuntu.sh.sha256sum )
An empty output means everything is correct. Then you can inspect the script to see what it does (optional but recommended) and execute it with:
less install-debuntu.sh
sudo bash install-debuntu.sh
The script tries to handle as many common derivatives as possible, including, at least, Linux Mint (Ubuntu and Debian editions), Raspbian/Raspberry Pi OS, and KDE Neon. We welcome PRs to the script for any other common derivatives, or you can use the steps below instead.
Repository (Using extrepo)
extrepo is only supported on Debian currently. The advantage of extrepo is that it is packaged in Debian. So you don’t have to execute the curl | sudo bash
combo from the previous Automatic section. The risk with that command is that it relies on the security of the webserver. extrepo avoids this by having the Jellyfin repo information including the GPG key in its extrepo-data. extrepo-data is verified with GPG by the extrepo tool. So there is a chain of trust from Debian all the way to the Jellyfin repo information.
sudo apt install extrepo
sudo extrepo enable jellyfin
Now you can continue at step 5. of the following Repository (Manual) section.
Repository (Manual)
If you would prefer to install everything manually, the full steps are as follows:
-
Install
curl
andgnupg
if you haven't already:sudo apt install curl gnupg
-
On Ubuntu (and derivatives) only, enable the Universe repository to obtain all the FFmpeg dependencies:
sudo add-apt-repository universe
noteIf the above command fails you will need to install the following package
software-properties-common
. This can be achieved with the following commandsudo apt-get install software-properties-common
On Debian, you can also enable the
non-free
components of your base repositories for additional FFmpeg dependencies, but this is optional. -
Download the GPG signing key (signed by the Jellyfin Team) and install it:
sudo mkdir -p /etc/apt/keyrings
curl -fsSL https://repo.jellyfin.org/jellyfin_team.gpg.key | sudo gpg --dearmor -o /etc/apt/keyrings/jellyfin.gpg -
Add a repository configuration at
/etc/apt/sources.list.d/jellyfin.sources
:export VERSION_OS="$( awk -F'=' '/^ID=/{ print $NF }' /etc/os-release )"
export VERSION_CODENAME="$( awk -F'=' '/^VERSION_CODENAME=/{ print $NF }' /etc/os-release )"
export DPKG_ARCHITECTURE="$( dpkg --print-architecture )"
cat <<EOF | sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/jellyfin.sources
Types: deb
URIs: https://repo.jellyfin.org/${VERSION_OS}
Suites: ${VERSION_CODENAME}
Components: main
Architectures: ${DPKG_ARCHITECTURE}
Signed-By: /etc/apt/keyrings/jellyfin.gpg
EOFnoteThe supported values for the above variables are:
${VERSION_OS}
: One ofdebian
orubuntu
; if it is not, use the closest one for your distribution.${VERSION_CODENAME}
: One of our supported Debian or Ubuntu release codenames. These can change as new releases come out and old releases are dropped, so check the script to be sure yours is supported.${DPKG_ARCHITECTURE}
: One of our supported architectures. Microsoft does not provide a .NET for 32-bit x86 Linux systems, and hence Jellyfin is not supported on thei386
architecture.
-
Update your APT repositories:
sudo apt update
-
Install the Jellyfin metapackage, which will automatically fetch the various sub-packages:
sudo apt install jellyfin
noteIf you want to be explicit, instead of the metapackage, you can install the sub-packages individually:
sudo apt install jellyfin-server jellyfin-web
The
jellyfin-server
package will automatically select the rightjellyfin-ffmpeg
package for you as well. -
Manage the Jellyfin system service:
sudo systemctl {action} jellyfin
sudo service jellyfin {action}
.deb
Packages (Very Manual)
Raw .deb
packages, including old versions, source packages, and dpkg
meta files, are available in the main download repository.
The repository is the preferred way to obtain Jellyfin on Debian and Ubuntu systems, as this ensures you get automatic updates and that all dependencies are properly resolved. Use these steps only if you really know what you're doing.
-
On Ubuntu (and derivatives) only, enable the Universe repository to obtain all the FFmpeg dependencies:
sudo add-apt-repository universe
noteIf the above command fails you will need to install the following package
software-properties-common
. This can be achieved with the following commandsudo apt-get install software-properties-common
On Debian, you can also enable the
non-free
components of your base repositories for additional FFmpeg dependencies, but this is optional. -
Download the desired
jellyfin-server
,jellyfin-web
, andjellyfin-ffmpeg
.deb
packages from the repository;jellyfin
is a metapackage and is not required. -
Install the downloaded
.deb
packages:sudo dpkg -i jellyfin_*.deb jellyfin-ffmpeg_*.deb
noteThis step may throw errors; continue to the next step to resolve them.
-
Use
apt
to install any missing dependencies:sudo apt -f install
-
Manage the Jellyfin system service:
sudo systemctl {action} jellyfin
sudo service jellyfin {action}
Gentoo
The Gentoo ebuild repository includes the Jellyfin package which can be installed like other software:
emerge www-apps/jellyfin
Linux (generic amd64)
Generic amd64
, arm64
, and armhf
Linux builds in TAR archive format are available in the main download repository.
Base Installation Process
Create a directory in /opt
for jellyfin and its files, and enter that directory.
sudo mkdir /opt/jellyfin
cd /opt/jellyfin
Download the latest generic Linux build for your architecture.
The rest of these instructions assume version 10.8.13 is being installed (i.e. jellyfin_10.8.13_amd64.tar.gz
).
Download the generic build, then extract the archive:
sudo wget https://repo.jellyfin.org/?path=/server/linux/stable/combined/jellyfin_10.8.13_amd64.tar.gz
sudo tar xvzf jellyfin_10.8.13_amd64.tar.gz
Create a symbolic link to the Jellyfin 10.8.13 directory. This allows an upgrade by repeating the above steps and enabling it by simply re-creating the symbolic link to the new version.
sudo ln -s jellyfin_10.8.13 jellyfin
Create four sub-directories for Jellyfin data.
sudo mkdir data cache config log
FFmpeg
Installation
If you are not running a Debian derivative, install ffmpeg
through your OS's package manager, and skip this section.
Not being able to use jellyfin-ffmpeg
will most likely break hardware acceleration and tonemapping.
If you are running Debian or a derivative, you should download and install an ffmpeg
.deb
package built specifically for Jellyfin.
If you run into any dependency errors, run this and it will install them and jellyfin-ffmpeg
.
sudo apt install -f
Running Jellyfin
Due to the number of command line options that must be passed on to the Jellyfin binary, it is easiest to create a small script to run Jellyfin.
sudo nano jellyfin.sh
Then paste the following commands and modify as needed.
#!/bin/bash
JELLYFINDIR="/opt/jellyfin"
FFMPEGDIR="/usr/share/jellyfin-ffmpeg"
$JELLYFINDIR/jellyfin/jellyfin \
-d $JELLYFINDIR/data \
-C $JELLYFINDIR/cache \
-c $JELLYFINDIR/config \
-l $JELLYFINDIR/log \
--ffmpeg $FFMPEGDIR/ffmpeg
Assuming you desire Jellyfin to run as a non-root user, chmod
all files and directories to your normal login user and group.
Also make the startup script above executable.
sudo chown -R user:group *
sudo chmod u+x jellyfin.sh
Finally you can run it. You will see lots of log information when run, this is normal. Setup is as usual in the web browser.
./jellyfin.sh
Starting Jellyfin on boot (optional)
Create a systemd
unit file.
cd /etc/systemd/system
sudo nano jellyfin.service
Then paste the following contents, replacing youruser
with your username.
[Unit]
Description=Jellyfin
After=network.target
[Service]
Type=simple
User=youruser
Restart=always
ExecStart=/opt/jellyfin/jellyfin.sh
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target
Apply the correct permissions to the file, enable the service to start on boot, then start it.
sudo chmod 644 jellyfin.service
sudo systemctl daemon-reload
sudo systemctl enable jellyfin.service
sudo systemctl start jellyfin.service
Portable DLL
Platform-agnostic .NET Core DLL builds in TAR archive format are available here.
These builds use the binary jellyfin.dll
and must be loaded with dotnet
.