![]() Last edited by TheFu October 28th, 2015 at 10:25 AM. LiveTV issue could be because the paid codecs are needed to handle hidef mpeg2 video don't have any paid codecs installed. Works great for everything else, but we transcode everything to h.264. It only gets flaky since the 4.2 kernel was added to debian AND if I try to get live-TV working. My raspberry pi v2 has been solid the last 4 months running OSMC (a Pi specific version of debian+Kodi). R u using passthru or transcoding? What CPU, RAM, video drivers? Need some info. vcodec, acodec, container would be needed at a minimum. Playback of videos is hard to help without any information. According to the power company, we are in the most efficient 1% of homes - whatever that means. The electric bill here is pretty cheap with 7 boxes running 24/7, so I don't see the point. Tried to make it work on a client a few years ago - going to sleep was easy, but the remote couldn't be used to wake, so it was worthless to me. Sleep and hibernate haven't been anything I've bothered with on any servers. I run the plex server on a machine that is also a NAS, calibre server, and a few other things on my network. LTS is designed to be stable and supported for 5 years.Īny other release has different goals which change from release to release. ![]() Last edited by jwhitener October 28th, 2015 at 05:23 AM. Watching TV right now on my Ubuntu fed plasma TV using Plex. They are just tips I came across from random forums. Not sure if all those packages are necessary. ![]() Sudo apt-get install ffmpeg (edit: not needed for plex as pointed out below) Sudo apt-add-repository ppa ulse-eight/libcec Sudo add-apt-repository ppa lexapp/plexht The above are the proper commands, take out the spaces between ppa and : and plexapp and pulse. Sudo apt-add-repository ppa : pulse-eight/libcec Sudo add-apt-repository ppa : plexapp/plexht The forum is making my below copy paste have a few weird smiley emoticons so this is for clarity: The plex server installation was well documented, but the Plex video viewing client, Plex Home Theater, was not as well documented. Overall I don't see this being a bit negative and we'll still keep the series information up to date so the impact should be fairly low.I ended up installing Plex since it was what I was most familiar with. The file is only re-written if the data changes, a hash of each file written. ![]() The cons would be the people that don't read will toggle it off and Sonarr will never see that the files were deleted, but we'll have logs for that and they'll survive. Another option would be to simply only create NFO files for episodes that don’t currently have one - this would also resolve the issue of Sonarr overwriting changes to NFO files every 12 hours (eg. The pros of doing this would let the people that get worried about their disks actually running wouldn't be affected by the 12 hour rescan and would handle the unionfs case. I'd suggest labeling the option Disable periodic series folder rescanning (or something similar) so it's more clear that it's only the periodic ones (though people won't read it anyways). This would make a small subset of users happy, without a significant impact to Sonarr in most cases, but would involve an extra option to skip rescanning disks after an automatic series refresh, but would still be run if Update Library was manually run (this would eliminate the case where someone ran it manually and the files weren't rescanned). ![]()
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