From what you've said, probably multiple ways.
It sounds as though they've deliberately implemented some kinds of checks to lock the feature down and get people to pay up.
From what you've said, probably multiple ways.
It sounds as though they've deliberately implemented some kinds of checks to lock the feature down and get people to pay up.
its most likely using the ip space of the primary interface to establish the local network and any tun interfaces are scene as remote automatically.
I don't know how it impacts the paid feature changes recently but you can add additional "LAN Networks" to Plex in the "Network" tab in the Settings to consider additional IP Ranges as a LAN network. I believe the LAN detection is based on the original subnet of the server where traffic from any other range is treated as WAN access.
There is an obfuscated direct URL that Plex uses. It uses the format (the IP address is an example):
192-168-0-111.[your Plex server hash].direct.plex.tv:[port]
This will allow for a direct connection, basically no matter what, though I should disclose that I have a lifetime Plex Pass. I forget how to find the hash, but I'm sure you can look it up.
@Underwire Plex probs? Try Jellyfin. You will need your own incoming VPN, but its all local
No I don't have issues and I already have different way to access it remotely.
I am just interested in the technical details of how it works.
A place to share alternatives to popular online services that can be self-hosted without giving up privacy or locking you into a service you don't control.