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Glad you got it working.
I’ve noticed it need a lot of time to start even with good hardware and the confusing part it’ll throw errors rather than doing nothing.
Now to configure sponsorblock, go to settings > advance > select downloader: choose yt-dlp
Then go to settings > downloader > global custom args type this: --sponsorblock-remove,,all
Now, for all new videos, it will download the video and remove all sponsorblock marked segments.
Hi me again, sorry to use you for tech support, but I'm getting this error:
No problem. I think you missed a comma before all. It should look like this:
--sponsorblock-remove,,all
Edit: I don’t know why lemmy client I use remove the double comma.
ohhhh that's funny thanks!
Awesome thanks, I think I'm going with this! The UI is good. I'm struggling to find a list of all sponsorblock args, know of anywhere?
Also do you happen to know what Plex scraper is best for YoutubeDL-Material's default naming scheme?
For Plex:
In YouTube download-material settings: Extra-> check "generate nfo files"
In plex, create a library called "YouTube" or whatever you'd like, category set to "other videos". Use scanner: "Plex Video Files Scanner" set agent to "Personal Media."
Under Plex settings "Agents" make sure under both the "movies" and "shows" tabs that the "personal media" agent is set to use "Local Media Assets" and that that is top priority.
Plex will use the nfo files generated by ytdl for metadata.
I believe there is a dedicated YouTube series agent, but those can be finicky. This way, ytdl has already done all the metadata work.
Thanks for this, this is the only breakdown I've been able to get (sort of) working.
Just to clarify- this won't load thumbnails into Plex, correct?
Yeah, it won't. Only Plex's own screengrabs.
Sure, you can find the documentation under sponsorblock options here: https://github.com/yt-dlp/yt-dlp
For categories, maybe sponsorblock github is the best place to find them.
Unfortunately, I don’t know how to scrape information or import it to Plex. Also, check out jellyfin as an alternative of Plex.