BosseJ wrote:
> Glad to see you found a solution with reasonable changes!
>
> If I may comment on your questions:
> >
Code:
> > 1) why can't jivelite deal with the simplest setup of all components
being in the same box? why not default to localhost when any connection
pavowren wrote:
> thanks guys for your valuable, thoughtful ideas!
> d6jg/BosseJ, let me mull over your suggestions but for now,
> i 'seem' to have come up with a working solution.
>
> 1) plugged in an old linksys router (running dd-wrt) and gave it
> 192.168.1.1 lan addr. i did this once befo
BosseJ wrote:
> Hmm, I always find it hard to follow my advice :-(
> I am not a windows user (well, some perhaps, but by no means with any
> administrator skills) so I cannot really recommend a dns caching server
> for windows with confidence, but I could hint at one that seems to do
> what's e
pavowren wrote:
> yes, i was over at the jivelite forum and it seems some folks had a
> similar (but not quite mine) situation where they removed the ethernet
> connection, began using wifi and then, jivelite would fail to connect to
> lms. common solution was re-installation or reset with wifi
If you really want to continue to use the phone as the connection to the
internet then what I would do is.
Id get a wireless Ethernet router. Thats a router with Ethernet
connection Wan side and normal lan / WiFi onnthe private side.
Then Id plug a Wireless Access Point configured in client mo
BosseJ wrote:
> Perhaps you could ask Ralphy in the JiveLite thread in these forums,
> https://forums.slimdevices.com/showthread.php?98156-Announce-JiveLite-cut-down-squeezebox-control-application
> if there is any way to force JiveLite to always use the eth0
> 192.168.1.23 IP as the LMS server
BosseJ wrote:
> Perhaps you could ask Ralphy in the JiveLite thread in these forums,
> https://forums.slimdevices.com/showthread.php?98156-Announce-JiveLite-cut-down-squeezebox-control-application
> if there is any way to force JiveLite to always use the eth0
> 192.168.1.23 IP as the LMS server
pavowren wrote:
> over at jivelite forum, bunch of people were talking about this!
> how did you uninstall/reinstall jivelite exactly? 'cause i made it some
> months ago following http://hagensieker.com/jivelite/index.php
> instructions.
>
> snooping around the .jivelite directory, i found Sli
d6jg wrote:
> Actually I think I have seen this before now I think about it.
> I was building a piCorePlayer player which was initially wired. After
> build I switched to wireless and I recall I had to uninstall and
> reinstall Jivelite to get it to recognise that I was now using a
> different i
pavowren wrote:
> thanks for that.
> i was reading the doc wrong.
> here's what the log says:
>
> [14:46:50.504244] slimproto:883 connecting to 127.0.0.1:3483
> [14:46:50.504824] slimproto:908 unable to connect to server 0
> [14:46:55.505206] slimproto:908 unable to connect to server 0
> [14:47
http://wiki.slimdevices.com/index.php/Connecting_remotely
Ports explained
VB2.4[/B] STORAGE *QNAP TS419P (NFS)
[B]Living Room* - Joggler & SB3 -> Onkyo TS606 -> Celestion F20s
*Office* - Pi3+Sreen -> Sony TAFE320 -> Celestion F10s / Pi2+DAC & SB3
-> Onkyo CRN755 -> Wharfedale Modus Cubes
*Dini
bpa wrote:
> If you want see what is going on - enable logging and look at log.
>
> For example, run squeezelite with "-d slimproto=info" to check that it
> connects to the LMS.
thanks for that.
i was reading the doc wrong.
here's what the log says:
[14:46:50.504244] slimproto:883 connecting
Probably but I dont know.
Seek out a post by Ralphy and pm him
I dont now think this is a networking or squeezelite issue as you have
demonstrated that both work its solely Jivelite
(You do have a bridge in play though)
VB2.4[/B] STORAGE *QNAP TS419P (NFS)
[B]Living Room* - Joggler & SB3 -
d6jg wrote:
> Actually I think I have seen this before now I think about it.
> I was building a piCorePlayer player which was initially wired. After
> build I switched to wireless and I recall I had to uninstall and
> reinstall Jivelite to get it to recognise that I was now using a
> different i
If you want see what is going on - enable logging and look at log.
For example, run squeezelite with "-d slimproto=info" to check that it
connects to the LMS.
bpa's Profile: http://forums.slimdevices.com/member.php?userid
Actually I think I have seen this before now I think about it.
I was building a piCorePlayer player which was initially wired. After
build I switched to wireless and I recall I had to uninstall and
reinstall Jivelite to get it to recognise that I was now using a
different interface.
Since you wa
d6jg wrote:
> When you control squeezelite via web browser which interface do you
> connect to?
> Look in LMS settings / information. Are there two instances of your Pi
> there as players?
> Id say that Jivelite is somehow trying to control squeezelite on the
> wrong interface?
on the browser
pavowren wrote:
>
> - ALL devices connect to internet via the mobile hotspot.
>
How do you do that?
Has every from these all devices a wlan nic?
pavowren wrote:
>
> - even lan-connected (i.e. ethernet wired) devices use the hotspot for
> internet, so the raspberryPi does not have to be a ro
When you control squeezelite via web browser which interface do you
connect to?
Look in LMS settings / information. Are there two instances of your Pi
there as players?
Id say that Jivelite is somehow trying to control squeezelite on the
wrong interface?
VB2.4[/B] STORAGE *QNAP TS419P (NFS)
pavowren wrote:
> time to leave networking and pick on squeezelite
This is a networking issue. Both Squeezelite & LMS issues TCP network
requests and it is up to raspbian to route them. If they are not
connecting it is how Raspbian is routing IP requests when there is no
internet.
-
DJanGo wrote:
> Networking sounds soo easy but everytime something sounds easy mostly it
> isnt. :o:cool:
d6jg/DJanGo,
yes, my networking knowledge is limited but not at zero level.
please consider these points:
- ALL devices connect to internet via the mobile hotspot. i was very
pleasantly su
Very challenging thread to follow...
pavowren wrote:
> i believe i mentioned this before.
> i can add a "dummy" router to the lan, assign it as the gateway. then
> squeezelite works!
> BUT when the hotspot comes around, it won't work; i.e., no internet
> access.
> it seems to be an either/or sit
d6jg wrote:
> Its a case of limited knowledge of networking.
Networking sounds soo easy but everytime something sounds easy mostly it
isnt. :o:cool:
DJanGo's Profile: http://forums.slimdevices.com/member.php?userid=1516
DJanGo wrote:
> the design.
> Rasbian has proper (but limited) routing capabilities on board .
> But -without- a active target aka WLAN0 or whatever the NIC is named -
> there is no way "or target" for a route.
I know what you are saying but I slightly disagree. Forgetting LMS
entirely if the Pi
d6jg wrote:
> And it’s not a networking issue in Raspbian more a lack of
the design.
Rasbian has proper (but limited) routing capabilities on board .
But -without- a active target aka WLAN0 or whatever the NIC is named -
there is no way "or target" for a route.
d6jg wrote:
> Easy. No. Not wi
And its not a networking issue in Raspbian more a lack of routing
software in Raspbian
What you are trying to do is in effect make the Pi act as a router. The
default Raspbian doesnt allow for that. Its ability to work with 2
network interfaces is similar to having a LAN and WiFi on a laptop.
pavowren wrote:
> naturally i want to keep things simple; i.e., neither 4g router nor pi
> as a router.
> consider this:
> i boot the pi without wifi, only eth0 (without gateway), and using
> desktop browser over lan, all works as expected.
> so browser is really a functional equivalent to squeez
pavowren wrote:
> at this point, i've concluded it's a networking issue in raspian9 and
> pursue that line,
> not necessarily any flaws in squeezelite or lms.
>
> thank you for your thoughts and feedback...
No its not...
You have a system that has one permanent connection and one on/off
conne
BosseJ wrote:
> In addition to reviewing your network you should review how you mount
> the USB-drive: try to do it manually, as basic as possible to remove any
> hidden dependencies to network (whatever they may be).
> How do you add music to the USB-drive? Using Samba (SMB export)? That
> coul
d6jg wrote:
> This is where using the Pi as a router and a mobile as the gateway falls
> down.
> You would find that what you are trying to achieve will work perfectly
> if you used a proper 4g router but I appreciate that means swapping SIM
> cards around. It is as you have surmised all to do w
pavowren wrote:
> you have sized up the situation correctly and thus, your questions are
> exactly mine.
> that in itself is some consolation.
> i would have thought my situation would be quite common (at least not
> uncommon) given all the purported cord cutters.
>
> at this point, i've conclu
Ill add to that by saying that I have used a Pi as a router / vpn
server at one remote location where there is a public WiFi only and I
need a small secured LAN and access back to HO.
We used a router specific image for the Pi - cant recall which.
VB2.4[/B] STORAGE *QNAP TS419P (NFS)
[B]Livin
This is where using the Pi as a router and a mobile as the gateway falls
down.
You would find that what you are trying to achieve will work perfectly
if you used a proper 4g router but I appreciate that means swapping SIM
cards around. It is as you have surmised all to do with the lack of
gateway
BosseJ wrote:
> Even if you could define a gateway statically on the ethernet network,
> where should it point? You don't have any other routers you wrote and I
> got the impression that your only internet access is via the mobile
> hotspot (the mobile phone)? I assume that your PC and laptop ha
pavowren wrote:
> apparently, with Raspian 9
ahhh another thing i didnt read cause its not written by the TO
Please get yourself a break.
Add all the stuff onto a sheet of paper
If your done ask a complete question and submit all information...
---
pavowren wrote:
> apparently, with Raspian 9, /etc/dhcpcd.conf is used rather than
> /etc/network/interfaces
> as stated before, specifying "any" gateway for eth0 renders wifi to not
> function at all.
> when the pi connects to the hotspot, wlan0 gets its gateway assigned to
> the hotspot and al
DJanGo wrote:
> Hi,
>
> there is a lot of information and a lot is missing..
>
> the way to change the ip must be in /etc/default/logitechmediaserver
> otherwise you may end with nothing when there is a update.
>
> DONT modifying the /etc/default/logitechmediaserver !
>
> each NIC can have m
BosseJ wrote:
> Look at the commandline for starting Squeezelite. If no server is
> specified Squeezelite searches for a server via the network and of
> course the LMS server replies via the network interface it received the
> call on.
> From the Squeezelite man-page:
> >
Code:
pavowren wrote:
> just tried this by modifying the /etc/default/logitechmediaserver and
> LMS did bind to 192.168.1.23.
> but again, i had no trouble accessing and playing local music via
> desktop browser (of course it has the hotspot nearby).
> strange thing is there at the pi itself, there wa
Hi,
there is a lot of information and a lot is missing..
the way to change the ip must be in /etc/default/logitechmediaserver
otherwise you may end with nothing when there is a update.
DONT modifying the /etc/default/logitechmediaserver !
each NIC can have must have its own gateway! I dont kn
Paul Webster wrote:
> Starting LMS with command line including --httpaddr 192.168.1.23
> might be the answer for you.
> However, I'm not sure that pCP provides an easy way to do that from the
> web interface.
just tried this by modifying the /etc/default/logitechmediaserver and
LMS did bind to
BosseJ wrote:
> Yes, it sound strange.
> First, LMS does get any IP-address by itself, the OS on the device (the
> PI3B+) does by dhcp broadcast on the connected interfaces. LMS uses
> whatever IP-address the OS reports, but LMS is not designed to handle
> dual networks as far as I know (it can,
BosseJ wrote:
> Yes, it sound strange.
> First, LMS does get any IP-address by itself, the OS on the device (the
> PI3B+) does by dhcp broadcast on the connected interfaces. LMS uses
> whatever IP-address the OS reports, but LMS is not designed to handle
> dual networks as far as I know (it can,
Sounds like hes rug the Pi as a router between LAN and WiFi. As
others have said LMS will bind to one address.
The use case isnt described so almost impossible to answer except one
point. Its easy to set a static or reserved ip on the LAN side.
You can reserve via whatever is running dhcp
Y
The OP hasn't mentioned pCP, so I assume he has probably using Raspbian.
Greg Erskine's Profile: http://forums.slimdevices.com/member.php?userid=7403
View this thread: http://forums.slimdevices.com/showthread.php?t=109789
... also, there are a bunch of other command line options that move
various other functions to a specific IP address.
Maybe LMS could do with a command that moves them all to a particular
subnet so that it would not matter if the address changed through the
wonders of DHCP.
Something like --ips
Starting LMS with command line including --httpaddr 192.168.1.23
might be the answer for you.
However, I'm not sure that pCP provides an easy way to do that from the
web interface.
Paul Webster
http://dabdig.blogspot.com
Author Radio France (FIP etc) plugin
pavowren wrote:
> hello,
> i have been looking into this issue for couple of weeks now and feel i'm
> at least zeroing into it.
> here's the setup:
> - LMS installed on a raspberryPi3B+ along with squeezelite and jivelite
> - media is local at /mnt/usb
> - ethernet connection and wi-fi via a mob
hello,
i have been looking into this issue for couple of weeks now and feel i'm
at least zeroing into it.
here's the setup:
- LMS installed on a raspberryPi3B+ along with squeezelite and jivelite
- media is local at /mnt/usb
- ethernet connection and wi-fi via a mobile hotspot
problem:
when hots
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