01-23-2021, 02:59 PM
(This post was last modified: 01-23-2021, 03:10 PM by TheOldPresbyope.
Edit Reason: fixed jumbled wording
)
@beeper
First of all, congrats on enabling NFS service on your Windows host. I don't think we've ever had a user mention doing that.
As Tim says, these are "hidden" directories on the Windows side of your lashup. Their naming convention suggests some sort of logging scheme is running: ".@GMT-YYYY.MM.DD-HH.MM.SS" which recur aperiodically. The fact that they show up in your moOde folder listing suggests the directories in question contain files MPD believes to be audio files.
If you have 3 players which "work well" and only 1 which displays these folders, then the first question you should be asking yourself is, what is different about this 1 player from the other 3? For example, is it mounting a different directory? That could help you trace back to the root cause.
There is a feature in MPD, the .mpdignore file, which allows one to tell it to ignore files with certain naming patterns. I've never used it and I don't know if it works also for ignoring directories but I'm sure some other users can chime in on the subject. You could also search this forum for other posts which mention .mpdignore.
Regards,
Kent
First of all, congrats on enabling NFS service on your Windows host. I don't think we've ever had a user mention doing that.
As Tim says, these are "hidden" directories on the Windows side of your lashup. Their naming convention suggests some sort of logging scheme is running: ".@GMT-YYYY.MM.DD-HH.MM.SS" which recur aperiodically. The fact that they show up in your moOde folder listing suggests the directories in question contain files MPD believes to be audio files.
If you have 3 players which "work well" and only 1 which displays these folders, then the first question you should be asking yourself is, what is different about this 1 player from the other 3? For example, is it mounting a different directory? That could help you trace back to the root cause.
There is a feature in MPD, the .mpdignore file, which allows one to tell it to ignore files with certain naming patterns. I've never used it and I don't know if it works also for ignoring directories but I'm sure some other users can chime in on the subject. You could also search this forum for other posts which mention .mpdignore.
Regards,
Kent