Slightly overwhelmed with Tdarr...help?
from iturnedintoanewt@lemm.ee to selfhosted@lemmy.world on 11 Dec 09:54
https://lemm.ee/post/49514492

Hi guys!

I’m trying to re-compress a few TV shows that are mostly animation to some animation-friendly codec (HEVC 10bit, maybe even AV1), to reduce the storage it takes on the NAS (I’m looking at you, One Piece/Simpsons!). I’ve used handbrake with full folders to handle whole seasons of a TV show before, but that was a bit frustrating to run on my desktop PC, hence the install of Tdarr. However it’s a bit…overwhelming with all the options, without quite hinting what each one does. I’m adding a…library. Ok, what’s the library? Is it say, an -arr full TV Shows library? Or should I add one library per TV show (custom specific settings for each one?). How do I work…with the transcode options? I see it’s all drag-drop, but I’m not sure of all these options.

I’d like to transcode to say, HEVC 10bit, reduce perhaps audio with Opus or AAC, and keep same tracks and subs. How would I go about this?

THanks!

#selfhosted

threaded - newest

Bakkoda@sh.itjust.works on 11 Dec 11:18 next collapse

So I’m still using my original setup and have NOT learned the new flow system so i cannot help with that. My suggestion is to set up a test library and don’t delete the source material. Watch some tutorials and work on single tracks. Get the video how you like it first then work on audio.

My tv shows are one library and my movies are another.

AustralianSimon@lemmy.world on 11 Dec 23:56 next collapse

What’s a library?

A library is basically just a folder or collection of folders you want to apply flows or rules to.

Should I add one library per TV Show?

I do one for Movies, one for Shows, one for Anime.

Transcode options

There are example flows, I would use one of those and just modify the options to suit your purpose if you are not a power user.

There are videos for setting it up. youtu.be/JFvkJeDQRBQ?feature=shared&t=259

iturnedintoanewt@lemm.ee on 12 Dec 01:31 collapse

Great thanks! I’ll watch the video and see if it clarifies things.

AustralianSimon@lemmy.world on 12 Dec 11:01 collapse

Good luck!

Unchanged3656@infosec.pub on 12 Dec 04:53 next collapse

I recently decided to dive a bit deeper into flows since the plugin stacks were failing on me sometimes. Cobbled together something from the examples provided, seems to work fine for me now. Depending the worker it runs on it tries to transcode with nvenc or qsv, if it fails or is not available the flow falls back to cpu transcode.

<img alt="" src="https://infosec.pub/pictrs/image/58f7d5f2-9c40-4199-81fe-7c0cd7bbeefa.png">

Shimitar@feddit.it on 12 Dec 19:43 collapse

I find tdarr too much.

I had your same needs and ended up creating a bash script that run ffmpeg and has quite some flexibility.

Check it out: github.com/gardiol/media_fixer

You might want to change the ffmpeg default settings (its documented in the readme, just set some envs) because by default it encode in AV1 with mkv container at 720p, but all that can be easily changed.