tass wrote:
> I'm running as my logged-in user.
> I ran the sysinternals tool, which lists Administrators, Users and
> Authenticated Users having Read permission.
> There were a few files which also showed up with extra permissions,
> though all of these were ones which were successfully scanned
DJanGo wrote:
> tbh i would get rid of systemd (btw that "thing" is made by the same guy
> to trown pulseaudio to the world)
>
> http://without-systemd.org/wiki/index.php/How_to_remove_systemd_from_a_Debian_jessie/sid_installation
First, thanks for your reply and suggestion I get rid of
I found this thread which looks to be the same issue:
http://forums.slimdevices.com/showthread.php?105502-Scanner-can-t-see-symbols
It looks like they weren't able to solve it, either. I might need to
spend some more time trying to figure this out.
Have to say given issues with backups and other tools with non-ascii
filenames I've eradicated them from directory trees and filenames. The
id3 or vorbis tags can still contain the full character sets and lms
will ignore the pathnames.
tass wrote:
> Are you running from source, by any chance? I'm using the Windows
> executable version (inclusive of perl, etc.)
No, running the Windows executable as well.
To check if missing access rights are the root cause, here my question
again: Are you running LMS under the system account
reinholdk wrote:
> This is strange. When I create a folder named
>
> , it shows up correctly when
> browsing from the LMS settings page to set the music folder.
Hmm that is strange. I tried copying back from my FAT32 volume, and it
still didn't show up.
I then copied the folder name which you
reinholdk wrote:
> This is strange. When I create a folder named
>
> , it shows up correctly when
> browsing from the LMS settings page to set the music folder.
Hehe - now comes the simplest question...
How did the TO first add the Folder?
>From another System and copy or direct on that