crxo 4 Posted April 29, 2019 Share Posted April 29, 2019 Hello, i have a library for my movies with two different folders, one for 1080p content and one for 2160p files. The 1080p movies are accessible for every user, the 2160p movies only for me. But now when grouping 2 versions (1080p / 2160p) of a movie manually, every user can access the 2160p copy of the movie. Is this a expected behavior, or a bug? Thank you Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
arche 176 Posted April 29, 2019 Share Posted April 29, 2019 If your folder structure is for example: Movies\The Avengers (2012)\The Avengers (2012) - 2160p.mkv Movies\The Avengers (2012)\The Avengers (2012) - 1080p.mkv Then yes, this is expected behavior. The only way (That I know of) is to restrict them via tags per user or go back to having two different folders for each resolution. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
crxo 4 Posted April 29, 2019 Author Share Posted April 29, 2019 If your folder structure is for example: Movies\The Avengers (2012)\The Avengers (2012) - 2160p.mkv Movies\The Avengers (2012)\The Avengers (2012) - 1080p.mkv Then yes, this is expected behavior. The only way (That I know of) is to restrict them via tags per user or go back to having two different folders for each resolution. There are 2 seperate folders, one for 2160p content and one for 1080p content. The 2160p library is excluded in the settings for all users, expect for me. When i group two versions of the same movie out of the two library's, every user can access the 2160p version of the movie. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
arche 176 Posted April 29, 2019 Share Posted April 29, 2019 The only way I got it to work when I tired separating 1080 and 2160 movies, I had to create separate libraries. Movies\The Avengers (2012)\The Avengers (2012) - 1080p.mkv Movies4k\The Avengers (2012)\The Avengers (2012) - 2160p.mkv I never had them under the same root folder. I'm not sure on your situation. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Luke 37191 Posted April 29, 2019 Share Posted April 29, 2019 To answer the original question, that's just a tricky example that we haven't' gotten to looking at yet. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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