Essjay10 5 Posted January 22, 2019 Share Posted January 22, 2019 Right, ideally, this would have been possible with older versions, but we have found issues with them relating to this. Thanks. Is there a recommended approach to "refreshing" an install so that I can be sure I can restore it in the future? or am I asking for a long of headache? I've had Emby installed (via Docker) for years, so I assume my installation would be included as one that would not fall under the "can be moved anywhere" with a fresh 4.0+ install. I'm wondering what it would take to start fresh and yet not start from scratch. If i followed the manual backup instructions with a fresh install, would that remove any remnants of the old installation? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Luke 37065 Posted January 22, 2019 Share Posted January 22, 2019 Is there a recommended approach to "refreshing" an install so that I can be sure I can restore it in the future? or am I asking for a long of headache? I've had Emby installed (via Docker) for years, so I assume my installation would be included as one that would not fall under the "can be moved anywhere" with a fresh 4.0+ install. I'm wondering what it would take to start fresh and yet not start from scratch. If i followed the manual backup instructions with a fresh install, would that remove any remnants of the old installation? It really depends. What version are you on now? What version did you originally install? I will have to review, but once you've upgraded to 4.0 you may be good to go after that, because the database upgrade will help with this. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Essjay10 5 Posted January 22, 2019 Share Posted January 22, 2019 It really depends. What version are you on now? What version did you originally install? I will have to review, but once you've upgraded to 4.0 you may be good to go after that, because the database upgrade will help with this. I'm on 4.0.1.0. I have no idea where I started. As mentioned, it has been years I have a backup server. When i find some free time, I'll try to restore there and see if it goes well. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Carlo 4330 Posted January 22, 2019 Share Posted January 22, 2019 (edited) So in essence, this solution already exists. Just not a direct path to it from old versions. @@kaizo, so they aren't ignoring... the improvement you are seeking is already there. Everything that you are describing that you don't like that Emby does, to most, is the essence of what a media server does. It organizes and updates everything automatically. Seems like what you want is just a media viewer instead of a complete management system. Nothing wrong with that, it just isn't what Emby is. Setting everything to read only by Emby eliminates many of its finest features. One of my biggest use cases is as a PVR. That wouldn't be possible if Emby was read only. There is a way around this that can give you the best of both worlds. Most OS have either built in or 3rd party the ability to POOL drives. Thus you can access all your media via one mount point or drive letter. In doing this all you have to do is be a bit creative. For example on Windows with DrivePool I can set my actual media drives as READ-ONLY to everyone but the administrator (me who puts the media there). Thus no program ran as another user can delete this data. BUT THEN I add another drive to this pool that has WRITE access. Now I've got a POOL that Emby/Plex (whatever) can write to for storing images, NFO, etc but can't delete or touch my actual media. Since you only allow one drive to have this WRITE access it's the only drive where the posters, NFO, etc will be stored. To Emby ALL THE DATA is there in one folder but in reality this is on different drives. Now before an update or anything else I think could radically change my posters or NFO I can easily make a copy of that WRITE Drive parent folder. It's not going to be big like my media drives! BEST OF BOTH WORLDS because you can keep your media locked while still allowing the use of NFO and locally stored posters (with an easy way to backup). No more fighting with Emby to get the features you want/need. Edited January 22, 2019 by cayars Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
stuartsjg 2 Posted February 26, 2019 Share Posted February 26, 2019 I agree, and going forward, if you install 4.0 fresh, you will be able to pick up the installation and move it around as much as you like. Is this applicable to the windows server or all versions? I have yet to get emby working properly since changing back in October. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Luke 37065 Posted February 27, 2019 Share Posted February 27, 2019 4.0 wasn't released until January. I've removed the parts of your post that are not related to backup, which is what this topic is about. We will help you in your freebsd topic. thanks. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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