2024-01-28, 09:57 PM
@TheDreadPirate: Thank you for your quick response!
In this use case, there is buffered show data on disk. To help clarify, here is a process example of timeshifting working correctly in Jellyfin, only using the web client instead of the roku client:
1. Start recording of a one hour OTA Live TV show.
2. 10 minutes into the recording I can see that there is a .ts file in the library to which I am recording the show.
3. In the JF web client, go to the library where the show is being recorded and start playing. It starts from the beginning of the show and correctly indicates that there is 10 minutes of media remaining to play.
4. I can watch for a couple minutes, and then rewind to the beginning. It will correctly show that there is now ~12 minutes remaining to play.
However, I can't find a way to start from the beginning using the Roku JF client (even at the same time when actively timeshifting using the web client.) With both the web client and the roku client (when started from the TV guide), both are direct streaming. In both cases the video stream is being repackaged, and the audio stream is being transcoded.
In this use case, there is buffered show data on disk. To help clarify, here is a process example of timeshifting working correctly in Jellyfin, only using the web client instead of the roku client:
1. Start recording of a one hour OTA Live TV show.
2. 10 minutes into the recording I can see that there is a .ts file in the library to which I am recording the show.
3. In the JF web client, go to the library where the show is being recorded and start playing. It starts from the beginning of the show and correctly indicates that there is 10 minutes of media remaining to play.
4. I can watch for a couple minutes, and then rewind to the beginning. It will correctly show that there is now ~12 minutes remaining to play.
However, I can't find a way to start from the beginning using the Roku JF client (even at the same time when actively timeshifting using the web client.) With both the web client and the roku client (when started from the TV guide), both are direct streaming. In both cases the video stream is being repackaged, and the audio stream is being transcoded.