I’ve started working with Media Servers recently and am starting to get acustom to Jellyfin. I’m using Book Lib Connect and AAX Audio Converter to download and convert my purchased Audiobooks.
I would like my Audiobooks to retain chapters, but I’m not sure the export I’m getting from the above is fully compatible with Jellyfin. Here’s what I’ve tried so far:
Audiobooks
- Author
-
- Book
-
-
- (01) Opening Credits.m4b
-
-
-
- (02) Chapter 1.m4b
-
-
-
- etc.
-
-
-
- Book.txt
-
-
-
- metadata.json
-
-
-
- chapters.json
-
I also have the full m4b file and the aax file in an ignored folder at the top of the book.
Book.txt contains the author, title, narrator, publish year, description, duration.
metadata.json contains specific information like purchase date, product #, author #, SKU.
chapters.json contains the actual chapter titles. chapter length, start offset.
Any ideas on how I can get Jellyfin to read the json files? Do I need to write a conversion script into some other file type? Maybe Jellyfin isn’t the right software for Audiobooks?
I’m open to ideas, suggestions, or any other advice.
JASN_DE@lemmy.world 9 months ago
Do yourself a favor and have a look at Audiobookshelf.
harsh3466@lemmy.world 9 months ago
+1 for audiobookshelf. It’s amazing.
Voroxpete@sh.itjust.works 9 months ago
That’s it. That’s the thread. Everyone else go home.
singularity@lemmy.ml 9 months ago
I agree. This is the best choice for audio books.
vbatts@lemmy.ml 9 months ago
Big agree. I tried to make jellyfin acceptable for a while and life with audiobookshelf is just so good. github.com/advplyr/audiobookshelf
Showroom7561@lemmy.ca 9 months ago
I started using it for podcasts!
Really easy to set up on a synology NAS.
shrugal@lemm.ee 9 months ago
Their ebook support has become quite good as well, it’s like a gift that keeps on giving!
uzay@infosec.pub 9 months ago
Yep, haven’t tried Jellyfin for audiobooks in a while, but when I did it didn’t work well. Audiobookshelf on the other hand is really really good.
ProtecyaTec@lemmy.world 9 months ago
Oh no.
I decided to go with an Asustor prebuilt NAS for my first self-host. It’s got a Jellyfin app, but not an Audiobookshelf app.
Jellyfin runs on Docker, so I have the Docker app installed and running.
Audiobookshelf runs on Docker. Could I just like, spin up a container and run it? How would I access it through my Asustor? I access Jellyfin either direct or through my portal dashboard.
So many questions! Like, I lowkey love having all my media accessible in 1 place: Series, Movies, Music, Audiobooks all in one place through Jellyfin. If I split my Audiobooks into Audiobookshelf somehow, how do I keep the ease of access? Maybe spin up another Docker container and create a landing page linking both Jellyfin and Audiobookshelf? Could (should I? Can I?) do it all through the same Docker container that Jellyfin is currently run on? Are there tutorials about this?
Thank you again for the suggestion
scrubbles@poptalk.scrubbles.tech 9 months ago
Yes you can just spin up a container just like jellyfin.
Yes it’s nice for a one stop shop buuuut trust us, just audiobookshelf. You’ll thank us later
Fumbles@lemmy.world 9 months ago
I use an app called Smart Audiobook Player for Android. I download my books from JellyFin and just use that app to play them. JellyFin’s audiobook experience is lacking right now.