I have recently re-purposed my old desktop PC as a 'server' running
Ubuntu LTS 12.04. I want to use the machine as my primary squeezebox
server in place of my HTPC MacMini (to reduce the strain on the
MacMini). I managed to install squeezebox server without to much
difficulty and added Music
Hi
I'm a beginner with ubuntu but for many years ago I worked some with
Unix...
So excuse me if my question is stupid...
I have decided to give ubuntu a try and have installed newest version
12.04.1.
Now I would like to install squeezeplayer.
I have downloaded the debian version and opened it
The installation instructions in this link might be helpful but other
people might have more advice for you.
Last year, when I was a linux absolute newbie I used the terminal
installation method and it worked perfectly.
Hi
The last time I tried running squeezplayer on ubuntu I ended up with
garbled screen however I saw this posted yesterday
http://forums.slimdevices.com/showthread.php?96306-Squeezeplay-deb-package-for-amd64
so try that
Took a drive I removed from one of my Nas's and threw it in the Ubuntu
machine. Copied all the files to it and then set the permissions.
Scanned and added the files to LMS with no issues.
tedfroop's Profile:
Well, one way to see if it is related to rights on the folder would be
to open a terminal and type:
cd /media/mediadisk
then type ls -l
This should show you the rights on the Music folder. If you want to
paste that into this thread it would probably be useful for
troubleshooting.
-Chris
Yeah try the packages I built and see how they work. I had to change a
bunch of stuff so it would compile right, the biggest problem being that
there was no audio.
rpress's Profile:
Klaas,
Does BrutefirDRC 1.2.0 work under LMS 7.7.2 ? (My server runs a CentOS
derivative)
blackbear's Profile: http://forums.slimdevices.com/member.php?userid=7015
View this thread:
For all you OpenIndiana fans...I've built SqueezePlay for the intel 151a
version.
See 'this post'
(http://forums.slimdevices.com/showthread.php?96224-ANNOUNCE-SqueezePlay-for-Solaris-and-OpenIndiana)
for details.
It does require X to run.
You may need to specifically mount the 2nd drive to /mnt/something via
and entry in /etc/fstab. Use the UUID found by using # blkid -l to
identify the drive in fstab, rather than the device name. E.g., here is
the entry in fstab that I use to mount my 3TB ext4 drive:
Code:
I have a similar issue that I cant solve using the advice above.
I have two external USB drives. They are both auto mounted via fstab
under .media as follows :
LABEL=Cyclopes15 /media/Cyclopes15
,ntfs-3g,uid=1000,gid=1004,umask=022,dmask=022,fmask=022,auto,nobootwait,nofail,bootwait
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