• u/lukmly013 💾 (lemmy.sdf.org)
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    5 months ago

    I prefer NGINX with autoindex. Lightweight, no JavaScript, looks like every Linux ISO mirror, filenames already have all the required info, can be quickly searched with CTRL+F, fits perfectly to my laziness.

    If you want some improvement, you can use FancyIndex module.

    But the files need to be in codecs supported by your browser(s). I prefer AV1+Opus in WebM container which have been supported by Firefox for a while. At this point it’s really only Safari not fully supporting AV1 because it relies on hardware decoding and Apple wants you to buy new hardware.

    • @ReallyActuallyFrankenstein
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      5 months ago

      Sorry, your favorite media server is just files you play on a browser?

      I mean, not shaming, I just had never heard of that being preferable to Plex/Emby/Jellyfin.

      • u/lukmly013 💾 (lemmy.sdf.org)
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        65 months ago

        Yeah, I am too lazy to set up something like Jellyfin. It only makes sense for me with music, for which I use Navidrome. But again, my setup is mostly directory/filename based, so it’s really being carried with m3u playlists as opposed to proper metadata.

        I mean, maybe I’ll use Jellyfin if I’ll do something in a proper way, but currently I don’t see the point of it. And anyway, I can always copy the URLs to VLC, which will even accept DVD ISO files.
        e.g.:

        vlc --no-dvdnav-menu http/dvdnav://192.168.49.1:8080/media/ISOs/Interstellar.iso
        

        let’s me play entire copy of a DVD, properly with menus and bonus features, just as if I used the DVD directly.

        Although I don’t do this anymore because of storage limitations, but I’ll likely return back to it once I’ll have a proper media server and LAN.

    • @[email protected]
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      85 months ago

      The biggest issue with that is it requires all of your media to be in a flat folder for search to work right.

      Auto index has a mode to return results in json. With a touch of html and js you can make a page that will crawl the directory tree and build a simple searchable cache of name to path, and then you can play it from there. It ends up making a request per folder, but in realistic terms it’s not gonna be enough to actually be noticable.

      You can then use something like this on a cron to convert anything your browser can’t play and you’re pretty close to a minimalist media server with only static files.
      The one I used to use was just a bash script so I didn’t have to wrangle python modules, but I can’t seem to find it.

      I ended up dropping it when I bought a nas with all that stuff built in and it generally made my life easier. Worth the money if you can afford it.

    • @[email protected]
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      15 months ago

      Do you just remember where you are in every show (or movie that you only partway watched)? That’s the biggest appeal of jellyfin/plex to me, so I can go in and continue from where I left off without keeping track.