2024-05-24, 12:07 PM
You're most likely asking for the impossible. How is Jellyfin supposed to provide a list of media that it didn't properly pick up? It's not smart enough to understand that it misidentified something, unless you want to make Jellyfin self-aware by sticking AI into it.
Think about it this way. Lets say I give you a dvd that contains a movie you never have seen before. Lets also say that the physical dvd doesn't have the movie's name printed on it and the movie never shows its name in it either. You ask me what the name is, and I tell you the name. How do you know if I lied? Maybe I gave you a false name for the movie and you wouldn't know.
The same thing would apply here. Jellyfin relies on you giving the correct name in the correct format. If there are errors (user-error or program-error), it's up to human intervention to correct it. After all, it got it wrong the first time, why would it get it right the second time and report a mismatch to you?
The only way I could think about doing this is by creating a script that gets a list of all your movies and compares their filenames to their title names stored in their nfo metadata files (if you have those enabled). However, you'll need to parse the filenames since online sources sometimes have different names to what users name their files.
Otherwise, you would need to determine what a computer needs to see to declare a movie as "badly scrapped".
Think about it this way. Lets say I give you a dvd that contains a movie you never have seen before. Lets also say that the physical dvd doesn't have the movie's name printed on it and the movie never shows its name in it either. You ask me what the name is, and I tell you the name. How do you know if I lied? Maybe I gave you a false name for the movie and you wouldn't know.
The same thing would apply here. Jellyfin relies on you giving the correct name in the correct format. If there are errors (user-error or program-error), it's up to human intervention to correct it. After all, it got it wrong the first time, why would it get it right the second time and report a mismatch to you?
The only way I could think about doing this is by creating a script that gets a list of all your movies and compares their filenames to their title names stored in their nfo metadata files (if you have those enabled). However, you'll need to parse the filenames since online sources sometimes have different names to what users name their files.
Otherwise, you would need to determine what a computer needs to see to declare a movie as "badly scrapped".