See also Mike's explanation on the users' list. That way you always write to the SSD but read from SSD and NAS without using undocumented settings. When MythTV doesn't find a file in the expected storage group it will search all known storage groups. ![]() You can set your default and livetv storage groups to contain only the SSD, then add a separate "long term storage group" with the NAS storage. I've recorded six streams, and watched two at the same time (but different files) with no problem at all, so the issue is confusing me. Mattlach wrote:The reason I am looking to change the weighting is that I am doing long term storage on a NAS, but for some reason while it can read and write multiple recordings just fine, if you are writing and reading the same file (like when recording and watching something at the same time) I get lots of stuttering. In order for mythtv to still be able to read (and autoexpire, etc) files, I need both the local SSD and the NAS in the defined storage directories, but I need to make sure that the weighting is such that it NEVER tries to record directly to the NAS. I'm going to have a fast local SSD for all live and scheduled recordings, and then a cron job that moves files with a timestamp older than a couple of hours to NAS at some time of the day when it's not in use. The reason I am looking to change the weighting is that I am doing long term storage on a NAS, but for some reason while it can read and write multiple recordings just fine, if you are writing and reading the same file (like when recording and watching something at the same time) I get lots of stuttering. I guess what I was hoping for was a little bit more detailed description about how this works, so I don't do something wrong and screw it up. I'm not sure at all what that example does, which fields I need to edit in order to get my desired results or where I even run it from (presumably on the backend, but since I don't know what it is doing, maybe it's the frontend?) For my servers I'm used to just using vim (or some other editor) from the command line, to edit some config file in /etc for settings like these. I've been using Linux as my primary system since college in 2002, and I've never used wget to configure anything before, just to download files from the internet. I saw that, but it confused the hell out of me. As the note says, there is no GUI to change them. They can be changed with the wget in that section.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |