The easiest I found was going to each episode and editing the subtitles then uploading the file (even though they are in the same directory)
I’m assuming if I named better then it wouldn’t be an issue since the subtitles are named “e1, e2, etc”
- GravitySpoiled ( @GravitySpoiled@lemmy.ml ) English12•10 months ago
What’s your goal?
Bazarr?
I have the srt files already, I’m just looking for the easiest way for jellyfin to recognize them
- 1hitsong ( @1hitsong@lemmy.ml ) English1•10 months ago
Name them following the filename documentation and you should be good to go
Documentation says
Film.de.srt
Should it be filename(minus extension).de.srt?
- 1hitsong ( @1hitsong@lemmy.ml ) English1•10 months ago
Yep. That should do it. Try it on one before doing them all, but that’s exactly what I do and it works great.
Thanks
- andrew ( @andrew@lemmy.stuart.fun ) English6•10 months ago
Bazarr was a bit of a pain to set up, since I ended up wanting provider accounts to get around some rate limits, but it’s solid for me now and pretty configurable. I use Plex but I’m assuming you can use the same strategy with jellyfin.
- jlow (he/him) ( @jlow@beehaw.org ) English3•10 months ago
Yeah +1 for Bazarr, has been working flawlessly for me for movies and series together with the other -arrs for Jellyfin for years.
- lud ( @lud@lemm.ee ) English1•10 months ago
Bazarr is great. When I set it up a while ago I just went with open subtitles and bought a VIP account so it wouldn’t take ages to populate all my movies. A VIP account was cheap enough that I didn’t mind.
- HStone32 ( @HStone32@lemmy.ml ) English1•9 months ago
The easiest approach is to use a client that is capable of multiplexing any subtitle codec. Something like findroid for android, and I’m assuming Kodi can do it too.