2025-01-06, 18:53
Hi,
I've been using MythTV for nearly 18 years and have been testing v34 of their backed. Today I tried a test of Kodi with the Myth Add-On.
I have Kodi installed on a Fedora 41 machine. Once configured, is there a way to change the Myth settings? I have a production Myth server with Myth v31 and a test one with v34. I found the only way to change from one to the other was to erase the myth xml file in .kodi.
I can see status information about the Myth system in Kodi but no settings visible after the initial configuration screen. Is there some magic incantation that I've missed to re-invoke that setup menu?
When viewing my test Myth v34 system, that has only two recordings on it, Kodi only showed one of them, whereas the MythFrontend software showed them both.
I had been hoping to use Kodi as an alternative frontend on Fedora 40+ systems but linked to my production Myth v31 backend. There isn't a Myth v31 frontend for Fedora 40+
(And I was thoroughly caught by playback running in background - that led to a kill command. I've found the quite hidden option to stop playback now.)
Thanks
Ken
I've been using MythTV for nearly 18 years and have been testing v34 of their backed. Today I tried a test of Kodi with the Myth Add-On.
I have Kodi installed on a Fedora 41 machine. Once configured, is there a way to change the Myth settings? I have a production Myth server with Myth v31 and a test one with v34. I found the only way to change from one to the other was to erase the myth xml file in .kodi.
I can see status information about the Myth system in Kodi but no settings visible after the initial configuration screen. Is there some magic incantation that I've missed to re-invoke that setup menu?
When viewing my test Myth v34 system, that has only two recordings on it, Kodi only showed one of them, whereas the MythFrontend software showed them both.
I had been hoping to use Kodi as an alternative frontend on Fedora 40+ systems but linked to my production Myth v31 backend. There isn't a Myth v31 frontend for Fedora 40+
(And I was thoroughly caught by playback running in background - that led to a kill command. I've found the quite hidden option to stop playback now.)
Thanks
Ken