this post was submitted on 17 Mar 2025
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[–] [email protected] 1 points 8 hours ago* (last edited 8 hours ago) (1 children)

Kodi doesn't organize your media, you use other applications for that (tinymediamanager, sonarr/radarr, etc).

The default library layout, for Plex/Jellyfin/Kodi is very human navigable, for example TV Shows are in this format:

TV Show Name
 |-Season 1
 |-Season 2
 |-\-S02E01-Episode_Name.mkv

There may be a few extra files in the directories depending on what metadata you're storing and what you're pulling from the Internet, but it is organized and navigable.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 7 hours ago* (last edited 7 hours ago) (1 children)

aight, I never said that Kodi organises media, if it tried to, I would shoot it on sight.

I organise my media, ebcause it's media I've decided I want to keep and organise accordingly. Kodi has very specific requirements and cracks the shits if you don't give it exactly what it wants. If that fine for you, then that's fine for you. That is not how I roll

how I do roll:

-> \fileserver
--> Sci fi series
---> Babylon 5
----> 1.01 - Midnight on the Firing Line
----> ...
----> 2.01 - Points of Departure

etc etc etc.

I've played with a translation file so Kodi's file scrapers can understand that X is Y and react accordingly, but it's very "my way or the highway" and I don't bow to a machine. When it refuses to even acknowledge the existence of a file (as in just display the file name, not necessary with any metadata) unless it can jam its thumb up there, I'm out.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 5 hours ago (1 children)

I understand, I used to manually organize my own files as well.

When I'm given the choice of user interfaces. Choosing between a file browser and something like Kodi, Plex or Jellyfin seems pretty easy, to me.

Even with the most organized file system, a file browser just isn't a good UI for a media player interface. No user tracking (watched episodes, saving progress or playlists), for example.

That being said, everyone's use case is different. There isn't a "right" way, but in a multiuser environment across multiple types of devices with non-technical users it's much easier and feature rich to simply use Kodi/Plex/Jellyfin.

Trying to setup direct access to the file system of a media server which could be accessible by Android/Apple phones, video game consoles, smart TVs as well as Linux and Windows clients would be more complex than just using a media interface and a standardized media directory structure.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 5 hours ago (1 children)

ok. Please stop trying to convince me to change to something I do not want to.

I stated my issue with Kodi. If there's no solution to that issue then it's a dealbreaker, like I said.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 hour ago* (last edited 1 hour ago)

I'm not trying to get you to change anything. You can organize your media however you like, I'm mostly just setting up the solution:

The solution that you're looking for is called filebot (https://www.filebot.net/forums/viewtopic.php?t=7). In filebot you first define how you name your media and what directory structure you'd like to use. You can use it to handle ingesting new media. It will read common naming schemes used on files often shared online and re-name them into your defined directory and filename structure.

In addition, it comes with bindings already setup for the 'plex' format (that Kodi and Jellyfin also use) so you can, once you've defined a format to match your preferred directory structure, use filebot to hardlink your media library into a different Plex-compatible structure. Since you're using hardlinks it won't use any additional disk space.

Then you can keep your media how you always have it, have a powerful tool to handle managing that library (for example, you could define a new format and it can move the files between them) and also hardlink the files in a Plex folder structure which will let you have access to a media player interface.

If you manage any media at scale you should learn how to use filebot in any case, manually organizing a library can be tedious and take a while. Filebot is a lot faster once you learn it.

e: Also, if you ever run into a media collection that is already in a plex folder format, you could use filebot to re-organize it into your preferred directory format. It works on music as well and can use ID3 Tags or, if they're missing, AcoustID audio fingerprints. TL;DR: Use filebot