I’ve just skimmed through the proton blog briefly and I couldn’t see anything referencing this. Do you have a link by chance?
I’ve just skimmed through the proton blog briefly and I couldn’t see anything referencing this. Do you have a link by chance?
That’s a bold claim. Got a source for this move?
Nothings stopping you. It achieves the same thing. Some people might just prefer this since it’s easier and gets logged in the systemd journal? The Arch wiki lists some nice benefits of using systemd timers as a replacement to cron jobs.
The way I understand it, it’s an automated job that sends the “trim” command to SSDs to discard all the blocks that have been marked as unused by the filesystem. My knowledge is a little patchy so I’m probably missing some important details…
When you go to delete something on an SSD, it’s simply just marked as being deleted. The file still technically occupies space on the SSD and the SSD will never simply overwrite space that has a deleted file on it.
So… by enabling the service, systemd will automatically send the trim command that tells the SSD to empty out all the space occupied by files marked as deleted which allows the SSD to reuse said space.
Check they’re in separate folders, search for each on TVdb, and append the TVdb series ID onto the folder name in the file system.
So for example, change the One Piece (2023) folder name to “One Piece (2023) [tvdbid-392276]”
Jellyfin can use this information to help correctly pull the information you’re looking for.
More info here: https://jellyfin.org/docs/general/server/media/shows/
Thanks,
So they haven’t made an announcement about retiring the proton bridge app yet.
I think I’ll wait until I see them actually remove it before I believe they’re locking us in.