
The startup script I'm talking about is one which would go in /etc/init.d. I don't think UMS comes with a startup script. I had to do that as well in a previous version when I had that problem. My error about giving you the paths without the file name. The Plex Media Server runs as the user plex which must have read and execute permissions to the media files and directories. Process: 2544 ExecStartPre=/bin/sh -c /usr/bin/test -d "$

Loaded: loaded (/lib/systemd/system/rvice enabled vendor preset: enabled)Īctive: active (running) since Mon 10:42:28 PDT 35min ago

The output should look something like this: To verify that the Plex service is running type: sudo systemctl status plexmediaserver Once the Plex repository is enabled, update the apt package list and install the latest version of the Plex Media Server with: sudo apt install apt-transport-https sudo apt update sudo apt install plexmediaserver Start by importing the repository’s GPG key using the following curl commandĪdd the Plex APT repository to your system’s software repository list by issuing: echo deb public main | sudo tee /etc/apt//plexmediaserver.list It requires no technical knowledge and it should not take you more than 20 minutes to install and configure the media server.įollow the steps below to install the Plex Media Server on your Ubuntu system: The easiest way to install and manage Plex Media Server on Ubuntu 18.04 is by using the Plex official repository. To be able to install packages on your Ubuntu system.

You’ll need to be logged in as a user with sudo access Plex is a streaming media server that lets you organize your video, music, and photo collections and stream them to all of your devices at any time and from anywhere.Īlthough this tutorial is written for Ubuntu 18.04 Bionic Beaver the same steps can be used for Debian and Ubuntu 16.04 Xenial Xerus.

In this tutorial we’ll walk you through installing Plex Media Server
