Rygel
Rygel is a streaming media server compatible with many DLNA/UPnP clients including the Sony PlayStation, Microsoft Xbox, smart televisions, DLNA speakers and many smartphones. Rygel will automatically transcode media to a format compatible with the client device. It can also utilise published media hierarchies from external applications like Rhythmbox and DVB Daemon through the D-Bus MediaServer specification. It is under active development and is a part of the GNOME project.
Installation
Starting
On a GNOME environment, go to Settings > Sharing > Media Sharing, then turn Media Sharing on. In Folders add or exclude the folders you want to share or not, and in Networks select in which network should the media be shared.
On non-GNOME environments, the rygel.service
user unit can be enabled to have it start automatically.
To start rygel
manually, any user can run in a terminal:
$ rygel -g 5
Configuration
Rygel can be configured globally (/etc/rygel.conf
) or per-user (~/.config/rygel.conf
). The default /etc/rygel.conf
is well documented. The command rygel-preferences
generates the ~/.config/rygel.conf
and allows some basic configuration.
More information on these and other configuration options can be found with rygel.conf(5).
If you use rygel
behind a firewall (nftables, iptables, etc.), add a rule to allow the connection to the listening port (see [1]). By default, rygel
assigns a port dynamically which may change from one session to another if the /etc/rygel.conf
sets port=0
. To control the listening port (here 50000), start rygel
as follows:
$ rygel -g -p 50000
Troubleshooting
When starting Rygel from the command line, there are several options that might help you troubleshoot any strange behaviour. Find out more about these options with rygel(1).