![]() ![]() Please post the output wrapped in 'code tags' here. Would be best to show the permissions for the working storage and the non-working storage. Use ls -l from a terminal to show the permissions. perhaps /mnt/d1 and /mnt/d2? The names don't matter. If you have 2 media partitions ( never mount disks) mounted, then they would be in different subdirectories under /mnt/. Standards say /mnt is for temporary use, not permanent mounts, but in reality, it doesn't matter. mnt isn't the best place, but it can work. If it doesn't setup the mounts in the /etc/fstab, then you need to fix that. Two things remain on the "systems" side, as opposed to Emby settings. ![]() But trying to add any new share, the videos will not play.Ok, thanks. The videos in the older shares play fine. I have another drive in the system, mounted the same way and was able to add shares originally when I put the drive in there. The drive is connected to the Ubuntu system, Emby is installed on the same system. But trying to add any new share, the videos will not play. It is a permissions thing.The drive is connected to the Ubuntu system, Emby is installed on the same system. Hence a reason for NOT ever using NTFS nor using CIFS. NTFS doesn't support chown, chgrp, chmod. IF the file system is NTFS, none of those commands work. That would have made the script above a little easier (actually, just the chown), but whatever. I'd prefer if jellyfin's server daemon started up with a umask of 002. Because my userid is the owner of everything, additional processing, like comskip and apertium can be performed to mark commercial locations and translate into a few other languages. The files inside are similar, just without the eXecute permissions. Every hour, I have a script run by root via cron thatĬode: drwxrwsr-x 2 thefu jellyfin 4096 Dec 13 07:00 SEAL Team/on the directories. While that is happening, the jellyfin user and group are the owner/group on the file. ![]() TV/Recordings is where OTA TV gets recorded. Jellyfin and Plex have read-only access to those places and my userid is the owner for management purposes. If it is NTFS, the best answer is to wipe all the files from it, format it as ext4, setup the permissions correctly so your userid and emby have access to the files, While you are there, force the permissions to remain correct, then mount it in a place that emby can see.ĭon't mount storage under any user's HOME directory.įor example, my storage server runs Jellyfin (a fork of emby) and Plex (not much longer) and is an NFS server to the house. That's easily handled if the file system IS NOT NTFS. I'm 90% thinking there is a file permission problem. The **only** answer should be via the /etc/fstab When you mount the EXT4 drive, where did you mount it, exactly?.Did you format the drive as EXT4 or ZFS or some other native Linux file system?.The new drive is connected to the Ubuntu system?. ![]()
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