synestine

joined 2 years ago
[–] synestine@sh.itjust.works 1 points 2 months ago

I think you're remembering Owncloud, not Nextcloud. Owncloud was all about file sync and would often break/remove other modules on upgrade. Nextcloud forked off and included calendar/contacts/etc. by default.

[–] synestine@sh.itjust.works 1 points 3 months ago

Correct, however basically no one uses that. The MD (RAID) devices are much more common for that, including under boot drives.

See comparison on ServerFault.

[–] synestine@sh.itjust.works 1 points 3 months ago

If personal anecdote is good for anything, I've been using LVM on top of software RAID on Linux for close to 20 years now without ever losing a volume. The last time I lost data was on ReiserFS 3. Like I said, LVM does not protect against drive failure itself. That's why I use RAID underneath. I've got my OS disk to protect against failures like that. Also frequent and verified backups of my data files to make sure that is protected.

And yes, modern (still supported) distros can scan LVM PVs on boot without issue.

LVM Physical Volumes (PV) can be moved between Linux machines without issue (I've done that several times), it's not like hardware RAID where you have to have the same controller on both machines. Nothing I've done has ever required LVM metatata export/import.

[–] synestine@sh.itjust.works 3 points 3 months ago (4 children)

LVM itself does not provide redundancy, that's RAID. LVM is often used on top of a RAID device. If your boot drive fails, LVM itself won't save you, RAID (software RAID 1 is really common for a boot drive) can.

LVM can be used to seamlessly move data between physical volumes. You can add a new PV to the VG and move extents between LVs. I've used it to love-migrate to a larger drive that way. Once the physical extents have been moved to the new PV, you can reduce the old PV and then remove the old disk.

[–] synestine@sh.itjust.works 0 points 4 months ago (1 children)

Yes, it can see them because their parent directories are readable, but it can't see anything inside /media/velummortis because the Other permissions are empty. If you run chmod 755 /media/velummortis then Jellyfin should be able to see those files

[–] synestine@sh.itjust.works 0 points 4 months ago (5 children)

What are the permissions on the directory itself, not the files? Is the directory owned by group 'video'?

[–] synestine@sh.itjust.works 12 points 6 months ago

I'm not aware of an SFTP client that works like the cloud drive connectors. Do you know of one that monitors local files/dirs for changes and automatically sends them? Or polls the server for changes and downloads then (if they're on the allow list)? Keeps versions?

If literally all you're doing is occasional file transfers, sure, SFTP is easy. That's not how most people use cloud drive clients.

For me and my group, Nextcloud works fine and fast. We do more than file sync and share.

[–] synestine@sh.itjust.works 9 points 6 months ago (5 children)

Same here. If it's TOTP based 2fa, you can keep them in entries and use them from there.

[–] synestine@sh.itjust.works 8 points 8 months ago

If you've optimized your BIOS settings (balanced mode or power saving wherever possible), the only other option is removing extraneous hardware. All hardware power use (disks, HBAs, other adapters and controllers) adds up. I managed to get idle power consumption of an HP DL-380 G9 down to about 60w (started at 210w) by removing the disks, RAID controller and battery, fiber channel adapters, and extra Ethernet adapter. Each SAS disk I removed saved me 10w. I used one M.2 drive in a PCI adapter instead.

Like you mentioned, these aren't designed to save power. That Opteron (and the chip set) hales from a time before "performance per watt" was a thing.

[–] synestine@sh.itjust.works 6 points 9 months ago

No. I upgrade my Ubuntus before they go EOL so I don't need ESM.

Most places that want ESM do so because they can't get away from EOL versions. I refuse to get stuck in that swamp myself, so I run LTS and migrate/rebuild them when necessary.

[–] synestine@sh.itjust.works 0 points 9 months ago

That's so strange, one of the first things my searches turned up is "Disable the TMDb Box Sets plugin because it causes problems"...

 

I've been running Jellyfin stable on Linux for a while now. I'm up to 10.10.7 and I've noticed a problem I cannot fix: my Collections are now empty. They used to be fully populated, would self-update whenever I added a new movie that belongs to a Collection, and all my movies are still here and work fine, but when I went into Collections, every single Collection had no items in it. I tried refreshing various libraries (That one, Movies, etc), and even removed and re-created my Collections library, but nothing has worked. Worse, now my Collections has no Collections in it. Movies are still fine though.

I've scoured the web, using various search terms (And wading through AI crap), but nothing has worked. I have very few plugins enabled, and none related to Collections. My movies are fine, but Collections refuses to repopulate.

Has anyone else run into a problem like this? If so, were you able to get it resolved?

[–] synestine@sh.itjust.works 0 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Ah, so you're the kind who loves bitching about things online, but won't lift a finger to defend themself, gotcha.

What I mentioned prior doesn't change anything about library management in the slightest, you just wanted an excuse.

 

Until recently I had been using an EZVIZ DB1C doorbell. I researched before I got it, and it worked immediately when bought. Then the company started playing dirty pool. Over the next two firmware updates (WIth nothing in the notes beyond "bugfixes and imrprovements") they stripped out the ability to use a local RTSP stream then they stripped out the ability to use their Windows-only software to even re-enable any functionality. Then they jerked me around for over a month before they finally copped to what the company had done.

And of course there's no way back to a working firmware.

I know people have mentioned Reolink and Amcrest before, but those models are no longer available.

Is there anything in the way of wired, mechanical-bell compatible doorbell cameras that work with HomeAssistant?

I'm so sick of companies that sell you one thing, then strip out the functionality that made it useful, shoving you into their cloud/app shit or leaving you stranded on whatever firmware the thing came with.

GRR

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