![]() ![]() Whilst this is not the cleanest implementation it seems to work OK. When a DVD is inserted, the machine recognises the disc and starts running a bash script. (eg: some times a reboot and they work flawlessly. ![]() Not to mention I get them intermittently for the same disks. The machine has an external DVD connected via USB. Mike圜arter wrote:Messages like these, 'Device '/dev/sr3' is partially inaccessible due to a bug in Linux kernel', would be more useful if they had the actual bug number associated to it. The original incarnation of PMS used Debian. Automating makemkv on linux The aim of this was to be able to run my dvd collection through a headless linux server running Ubuntu 12.04. (If thats not what you mean with testing apologies.) i think you misunderstand, the glibc package 2. But their courage to ship ZFS and provide bi-annual LTS means that it has been a predictable, reliable and dependable long term option to build PMS on top of. binhex would that be the arch-delugevpn:test one If so, could you push the image The one on docker hub is out of date. MAKEMKV LINUX KERNEL INSTALLsudo add-apt-repository ppa:heyarje/makemkv-beta -y Install MakeMKV Before running the installation command, run an apt update to reflect the new imported PPA. Use the following command to import the PPA as follows. They make weird choices about pushing proprietary app packaging formats like SNAP 1 that you can't easily disable 2. First, import the HJMooses’s PPA that contains the latest up-to-date version of MakeMKV. I wanted to convert an already ripped DVD to MKV via command-line and successfully used. ![]() Ubuntu is the only mainstream distribution which ships with both projects compiled into the kernel and doesn't rely on DKMS - see ZFS -> What about the license?. I use Ubuntu 16.04 and a debian-based NAS with kernel 3.16. In the context of building PMS the choice is kind of made for you, if you're interested at all in using ZFS or WireGuard. When we refer to "Linux", we are technically referring to the Linux kernel.Ī "distribution" is the Linux kernel paired with the required packages to make a system boot, connect to the network, display video and so on. ![]()
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