https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=465652
Bug ID: 465652 Summary: Rescan activated for all collection when adding new collection Classification: Applications Product: digikam Version: 7.9.0 Platform: macOS (DMG) OS: macOS Status: REPORTED Severity: normal Priority: NOR Component: Import-Albums Assignee: digikam-bugs-n...@kde.org Reporter: tuomas.kopo...@me.com Target Milestone: --- SUMMARY I do have a collection or roughly 80 000 photos that are kept under NAS device (Nextcloud with webdav via mountainduck). I'm in the middle off consolidating all my external disks to single storage and plugged new external disk and added it as a new collection. At the same time my network disk was mounted from wrong folder (bug by mountainduck, bookmark had subpath defined). Right after I finished to add new external disk all my photos from NAS device was removed. I have configured Digikam not to scan any files automatically and I have not selected collections to monitor for changes. STEPS TO REPRODUCE 1. add new collection OBSERVED RESULT All collections were rescanned EXPECTED RESULT Only added collection to be scanned SOFTWARE/OS VERSIONS Windows: macOS: 13.2 (22D49) Linux/KDE Plasma: (available in About System) KDE Plasma Version: KDE Frameworks Version: Qt Version: ADDITIONAL INFORMATION This is not such huge issue as it is recoverable by scanning files again. It will take easily a full day to san 930Gb of images and some videos. Digikam has worked out well and I do now have rather decent workflow with Piwigo to send images and organise them without Apple or Google services. Only annoyance is this collection management that seems to break rather easily. This was not first time I have had the same. I was hoping that mountain duck would solve some of the issues, but it seems not to be perfect. I would just hope that I could manage how and when collections are scanned to avoid this kind of a problems. Now settings that exists does not seem to allow that. -- You are receiving this mail because: You are watching all bug changes.