vgnmnky

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 6 points 22 hours ago (1 children)

Amstrad GX4000! Fantastic looking machine, sold mine a few years ago, which is a bit of a regret. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amstrad_GX4000

 

Hi. I've installed Filestash in a Docker container, which included passing a previously generated Dropbox access token to Filestash, as per the yaml file on the gihub page.

  • DROPBOX_CLIENT_ID=<dropbox_key>

When I connect to Filestash (just set up locally for now), and then click to connect to Dropbox, I get the following error from the Dropbox webpage that opens:

**Error (400) It seems the app you were using submitted a bad request. If you would like to report this error to the app's developer, include the information below.

More details for developers

Invalid client_id: .**

There's nothing that looks like an error in the Filestash logs. I've generated new tokens and tried again, same result.

Has anyone managed to add Dropbox to Filestash, and if so, would you mind explaining the steps you took?

(I've since set it up for external access via my domain, and npm, same error).

Thanks Rob

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

Thanks, will give that a good read!

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (3 children)

Thanks. If I access the client from another device, it'll still just stream to that device though, won't it? The same as using the Jellyfin web gui. I tried the Jellyfin-vue client, and that's what it did.

I'm trying to keep everything in containers, but I could install something bare-metal (Linux), as long as I can access it on the home network (or have Jellyfin cast to it).

14
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

I currently have a Raspberry Pi (with DAC) in my room attached to an amp and speakers, with Moode Audio installed on it, and it's perfect, been using it for many years. I can use plenty of MPD clients, or go through the web gui, and the sound outputs from the Pi itself.

I have similar hardware downstairs, except instead of a Pi, I have an x86 Dell thin client, with various Docker containers running on it. I'd like something that does the same job as Moode Audio (which is unfortunately ARM only), and outputs the sound directly from the host.

I've set up a Jellyfin container, and it's a great bit of software (will keep it for TV and movies), but doesn't allow me to output sound from the Dell PC itself. Is there a plugin or some other config that would let me do this? I'm aware that Airsonic would probably work (installed it, but not full tested it yet), but I much prefer the look and feel of Moode and Jellyfin, especially as it's not just for my use.

Does anyone have a similar set up?

Thanks

[edit: I can install Mopidy-Jellyfin, and cast to that. It works within the Jellyfin gui, and outputs from host. Would prefer something in a container (had to install directly on the Linux server) and I'm still looking, but I have something that works.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Did you use the OMV Docker add on for your containers? How are your drives and shares set up?

 

Hi. I'm a bit of a selfhosting novice, but currently have a Dell Wyse hosting a few docker containers (plus Portainer) including a Minecraft server, torrents, Nextcloud. and others) on an Arch Linux system. I also have a Gnubee NAS (running an old version of OMV) which is mounted on the Dell as well as on a couple of (music server) Pi's.

The NAS is really slow and limited, so I'm looking to migrate everything currently on there and on the Dell onto am unused NUC (with a 250GB and 1TB drive). Not bothered about keeping NAS/server on separate devices.

What is the best way for me to set this up? OMV + docker? Proxmox? I'm not up on lxc containers, pools, etc, but will go that way if that's where the advice leads. Also quite apprehensive about migrating things, especially Nextcloud, so any pointers there would be really appreciated!

Thanks