2013-02-26, 01:57
(2013-02-25, 11:13)MariusTh86 Wrote: I still need to get around to putting in OS X 10.8 notification support.
Since the last post, i've updated mediainfo, thanks for notifying me, and yup, that's the one I use. ^^
Could you see what the '<codec>' tag says on those files? if that one's more correct, i might switch to that.
I'll be pretty interested in that .nfo file.
I tried a couple of the files, sometimes the codec field is semi-relevant (DTS and DTS-HD both return a codec of "A_DTS"), other times it is useless (TrueHD has simple "131" in the codec field). It looks like the only way that's completely useful is a combination of format and profile. I think it'd be straightforward to handle, though. If result of the format field contains TrueHD, output TrueHD. If the format is DTS, additionally check the profile field for "MA". A little annoying, but not too bad.
I had another one of the crashes, and saved off the .nfo file. Again, deleting the .nfo file and rerunning the update resolved the issue. This one is somewhat vexing, though, as I had previously run the update on this movie several times in the past day. Since the update always processes movies in title order, I've been through #s and A-C four or five times. Possible theory: my movies are on a huge external array. If the drive the movie is on is asleep, there's a good 3-4 second delay while the drive spins up and starts passing the file over the network. Maybe something is timing out? Here's the .nfo just in case:
http://pastebin.com/mAB4wjL2
One other note: If I mark any movie as watched using Command-T, if I update that movie or change any of its extras, the movie loses its watched status. So every time I try to Update->All I have to manually go movie by movie and mark everything as watched again