Next let’s open the MySQLite browser you installed earlier, and click on “Open Database”. If this item needs fixing you’ll want to jot a number or two down, including “key=”, “parentKey=”, and “grandparentKey=” for tv shows - and you only need the numerical portion. Does this time make sense? In my case all of my problem items had dates well into the future. Copy the number and paste it into the Epoch calculator referenced earlier in this post. In particular, let’s look at “addedAt=”, which will be in Unix Epoch Time format. View XML gives us a look at what’s stored in the database for that media item: From the Plex webpage, click on one of the problem items in “Home – Recently Added”, and then click on the three dots near the thumbnail for the item:įrom there we want “Get Info”, and then “View XML”. To determine if that’s the case for you, we’re going to take a look at the XML for a movie or TV Show. The most likely reason for something to be perpetually in a Recently Added list is the value that was used for the “date added” is in the future. Windows Terminal (from the Microsoft Store) or the Command Prompt We’re going to use a combination of tools to determine what the problem is, and to correct it: If you have items that seem to have been stuck forever in Plex’s “Recently Added” lists, editing the Plex database directly is the surest way to correct the problems.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |