Versions:

  • 2.17.0.1
  • 2.16.1.1
  • 2.16.0.1
  • 2.15.3.1
  • 2.15.2.1
  • 2.15.1.1
  • 2.14.6.1
  • 2.14.5.1
  • 2.14.4.1
  • 2.14.3.1
  • 2.14.2.1
  • 2.13.4.1
  • 2.13.3.1
  • 2.13.2.1
  • 2.13.1.1
  • 2.13.0.1
  • 2.12.5.1
  • 2.12.4.1
  • 2.12.3.1
  • 2.12.2.1
  • 2.12.1.1
  • 2.12.0.1
  • 2.11.1.1
  • 2.11.0.1
  • 2.10.5.1
  • 2.10.4.1

Tautulli 2.17.0.1 is a Python-based monitoring and tracking application designed for administrators who run Plex Media Server and need granular visibility into how their libraries are being used. Falling squarely into the media-server utility category, the tool passively listens to Plex’s activity feed and records every stream, transcode, user login, bandwidth peak, and library change, then presents the aggregated data through a responsive web dashboard that can be consulted from any browser on the local network. Typical use cases include identifying which users consume the most bandwidth, spotting repeated transcoding bottlenecks before they become critical, sending proactive notifications via e-mail, Slack, Discord, or Telegram when a stream fails or a new episode is added, and generating detailed CSV or JSON reports for storage planning or parental oversight. Because historical statistics are kept in a local SQLite database that is automatically rotated and optimized, an administrator can compare month-to-month growth in concurrent streams, visualize geographic access patterns on a world map, or simply confirm that the nightly sync job succeeded without manually opening Plex. The project, now at its twenty-sixth public release, has evolved from a basic logger into a full analytics layer that supports custom scripts, API callbacks, and multi-server aggregation, all while remaining open-source and cross-platform. The software is available for free on get.nero.com, with downloads provided via trusted Windows package sources (e.g. winget), always delivering the latest version, and supporting batch installation of multiple applications.

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