you can define a retention time for sources (=channels) so you can somewhat limit storage usage.
you can define a retention time for sources (=channels) so you can somewhat limit storage usage.
in a docker compose file you can set the option “restart: unless-stopped”
https://docs.docker.com/reference/compose-file/services/#restart
There’s a separate dog for that…
I have in fact never used MakeMKV in that way, I’ve always used the backup option. That makes it a lot easier, thanks so much for pointing me into the right direction!
Sadly, there’s no working Roku app for subsonic, that would be an option, too…
What really got me with Jellyfin is the integration I have with my TV (using a Roku box): I set it up for movies and tv shows, obviously, but since Jellyfin also serves my music, I can now also turn on the music over my tv. That’s pretty neat. I can relate to the discovery of music, but for me it currently works well enough…
That’s a good hint, although I wouldn’t mind too mich. personally. My server is located in the basement.
I don’t keep track actively. I noticed problems when reading a file and looked at the drive with smartctl for that reason. Does anybody know how to keep track actively?
that wouldn’t be a problem for me, as my server is located in the basement. But good to know!
my currently failing drive is a WD as well… 🥴 I bought it a year ago, I think…
I was thinking actual hard drives, not SSDs…
not astronomy, ok, but what about a “total eclipse of the heart”? memeable?
I fear that will be what I have to do. I’m just so confused why Emby seems to have no problem at allwith it, but Jellyfin does… Not a single show is automatically assigned correctly.
Good to know, but still a lot of source paths would change. that’s my worry…
I have multiple folders with movies and multiple folders with tv shows. Each folder is imported as either “movie only” or “tv show only”…
yes I have. still thanks for the question, I tend to forget about obvious stuff like that… :)
used a bash script and a cron job for a long time, now the whole topic is one of the projects i regularly rewrite whenever I want to get my hands dirty with a new programming language or framework.