2010-05-19, 17:45
Rescraping the file does not seem to fix anything. Also, I renamed the nfo file to .xml and it loaded fine in IE so I'm guessing no XML errors. The XML looked solid to me. Here is the XML that is generated.
Edit: Upon trying your suggestion and scraping a movie that's not hosted over the network, everything seems to work as expected. Strange. Any ideas as to what to check as far as network setup is concerned? The files are hosted on a linux machine on a drive that's formatted ext4 if that makes a difference. Thanks.
Code:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes" ?>
<movie>
<fileinfo>
<streamdetails>
<video>
<width>620</width>
<height>256</height>
<aspect>2.422</aspect>
<codec>DIVX</codec>
<format>DX50</format>
<duration>1h 56mn</duration>
<bitrate>719 Kbps</bitrate>
<container>.avi</container>
</video>
<audio>
<codec>MP3</codec>
<channels>2</channels>
<bitrate>112 Kbps</bitrate>
</audio>
</streamdetails>
</fileinfo>
<title />
<sorttitle />
<year />
<rating />
<votes />
<top250 />
<outline />
<plot />
<tagline />
<runtime>116 min</runtime>
<mpaa />
<genre>problem</genre>
<credits />
<director />
<studio />
<trailer />
<playcount>0</playcount>
<createdate>99999999</createdate>
</movie>
Edit: Upon trying your suggestion and scraping a movie that's not hosted over the network, everything seems to work as expected. Strange. Any ideas as to what to check as far as network setup is concerned? The files are hosted on a linux machine on a drive that's formatted ext4 if that makes a difference. Thanks.