Posts by chewitt

    I've never heard of people playing games on DVD discs until recently but apparently this is a real thing. I'd guess you need the JRE-Zulu add-on from the LE repo so that Java things on DVD media are possible in the first place. Then open some discs and see what happens. This is firmly at the niche end of things so no guarantees.

    If high CPU is a problem the likely cause is that you are software decoding media and not hardware decoding. It's hard to triage that without being able to follow a readable log though. Logs to the JustPaste site have been stripped of line endings and are essentially unreadable. Logs to our paste site are only system logs with no Kodi log.

    Your hardware should work with the Generic (GBM) image; so I would ask that you 'update' to a current LE13 (non-Legacy) image and if that didn't magically fix things, share some readable logs.

    Images for RK3588/RK3576/RK3568/RK3566 have been updated with hardware deinterlacing support. Watching the Winter Olympics and F1 pre-season testing from DVB sources that use 1080i is now hugely improved. I'm also investigating pass-through audio support on RK3588 and RK3576. Formats like DTS and Dolby Digital that use 6-channels (5.1) are working but the 8-channel (7.1) HBR formats like TrueHD and DTS-MA are still handled as PCM and anything with Atmos seems to result in no audio at all. This probably points to the HDMI driver missing support for the 8-channel packing/handling needed for HBR audio, but Claude seems to think the driver can handle this already so more digging is needed.

    Images for RK3399 and RK3328 are now created from the same Linux kernel source as RK3588/RK3576/RK356X. Merging the patches has needed some guesswork from me in a few places. It all compiles, so must be good? - I am interested to know about regressions on RK3399 and RK3328 boards as I don't have board samples and depend entirely on your feedback. I am keen to know about things that don't work now, that did work on images in recent weeks/months. Things that have never worked or missing for ages are still nice to know about, but are a lesser concern.

    Images for RK3288 are not updated as there are some compile failures on Linux 6.19.y that I need to investigate.

    NB: As part of the pass-through experimenting I changed the alsa config used, and the new one changes the names/presentation of audio devices to Kodi. After updating you will need to reselect an audio output in Kodi.

    DeViLRuNNeR-dev there are now 200+ patches in my Rockchip 6.19.y kernel branch so I can't put my finger on specific things that make PCM output work on that hardware. I do know that working multi-channel PCM output is not a new thing for LE images, it's been around for a few months now.

    inputstream.adaptive installs inputstreamhelper (widevinehelper?) which handles downloading the chromeos image we have to extract libwidevine from the first time an add-on that requires it is used. I'm using IA on an RPi5; which uses exactly the same IA addon as RPi4 (same files/repo). I'm using it on an LE13 image, not LE12.2, but that shouldn't make any difference as the add-on versions are kept in sync.

    If something is failing there will be info in kodi.log.

    As 99%+ of users will use the Generic album scraper to scrape their albums, it makes sense to include it in the embedded filesystem instead of incurring bandwidth and the inconvenience of having to download/install it. As Mr Spock says .. "the needs of the many outweight the needs of the few".

    If you want to remove it you need to compile your own custom LE image that omits it as a default installed item. You are welcome to do that (all the sources are public and GPLv2) but staff aren't going to be too interested in spoon-feeding instructions, you will need to figure out how on your own. The easier option is to ignore it and/or don't use the generic scraper.

    Soundcloud is an online audio source and not an album in the local music database; which is where Kodi stores knowledge of an album and album volume preferences. If you want to set a persistent volume level for all soundcloud objects, or soundcloud album objects, you need to make a feature request to the add-on maintainer via the Soundcloud addon support thread in the Kodi forum; and then wait patiently until someone investigates, and if possible and you are lucky, implements the feature.

    Although they are add-ons, they are 'core' Kodi capabilities and Kodi expects them to be present, hence they are pre-installed and reside inside the squashfs SYSTEM file which is expanded into a virtual filesystem on each boot. You cannot delete something that exists inside a read-only file.

    LE distro packaging is not like a normal distro and we require TWO partitions; one used for boot files (KERNEL/SYSTEM, 512MB to 1GB in size, can be VFAT or EXT4) and one for a persistent /storage area (4GB+ and must support Linux permissions, e.g. EXT4). If you understand what you are doing it shouldn't be hard to reconfig free space to create the required TWO partitions, copy boot files over to the boot= partition, then create the config. LE normally uses syslinux (legacy) or grub2 (EFI) bootloaders so there are two configs (syslinux.cfg and grub.cfg) that describe the boot= (boot files) and disk= (storage) using either UUID (default) or disk label or /dev/device. I have no experience of rEFInd so have no idea what EFI configs it requires, but all bootloaders are similar so you can use the grub/syslinux configs for prior-art.

    NB: This is an unsupported configuration; meaning if it goes wrong it is not our problem to solve. There is no interest in trying to implement support for installing to a single partition because users with this config have multiple bootloader options to choose from and the risk of touching partitions and trashing someone's existing Windows/Linux/etc. install that contains pics of their kids/pets/dead-relatives etc. is high. Simply not supporting it and forcing users to install LE to an entire disk is simple, long-proven, and avoids the risk and irate user support issues that follow when things inevitably fcuk up.

    There are lots of simple ways to copy/paste (SMB or SFTP) or upload (File-Browser add-on) or copy from USB (Kodi file manager) to move content to the local /storage of an SBC board.

    I'm not aware of any add-ons that source media content from the Internet Archive (Games, but not media). If you are seeking other sources of free media, there's a load of non-pirate video add-ons for Kodi in the Kodi repo. If you're hinting towards the pirate kind then you are asking the wrong audience as that kind of discussion is not at all welcome in this forum.

    The "normal" problem with projectors is limited-range vs full-range colourspace, but the "flashed in rainbow-like colour" description doesn't fit the normal comment of colours looking a bit washed out. So assuming you have removed and reseated cables, to triage anything you need to provide some pictures and tell us what the projector indicates is being sent on the HDMI connection, e.g. the resolution, bi-depth, colourspace, etc. - and put Kodi into debug mode with a current LE13 nightly image and run "pastekodi" then share the log URL. The log probably won't tell us anything useful (same as the mode output you shared) but you never know.

    If the current HDMI cables and/or internal firmware (most NUC like devices use an internal DP to HDMI adapter and this has some firmware) have issues with 4K60 but the Kodi GUI (desktop) defaults to 4K60 and "adjust refresh" is not used and/or 1080p modes are not whitelisted, Kodi will upscale everything to 4K60 to compound the problem. It's also possible to have bandwidth issues with uncertified HDMI cables. Have a read of https://wiki.libreelec.tv/configuration/4k-hdr for explanations of recommended config.

    To force 1080p desktop, run tail /sys/class/drm/*/status to understand what connector type/number is in active use. Assuming HDMI-A-1, then add video=HDMI-A-1:1920x1080M@60D to kernel boot params; which will be either the syslinux.cfg file in the root folder of the USB (legacy boot) or EFI/BOOT/grub.cfg on the USB (EFI boot). If the active connector is not HDMI-A-1 adjust the video= command accordingly. This forces the initial kernel DRM state to 1080p@60 and not 4K where it probably defaults to 4K60.

    NB: Some users solve 4K60 issues by using an external DP to HDMI adaptor instead of the HDMI ports on the box. This is not always a guarantee of success as most adaptors are cheap and can also have rubbish firmware; but unlike the internal one soldered to the motherboard, you can order a bunch from Amazon and experiment until you find one that plays nice.