For a full Immich install tutorial with custom domain: ruclips.net/video/_XX3_wv9zcg/видео.htmlsi=jBal6TYB1deudem- For a 5 minute quick setup: ruclips.net/video/Oi5j-ZygALI/видео.htmlsi=smcrpipBPxTSH4vJ
Excellent tutorials thank you. Well explained and pros and Cons detailed in a factual way. A question. I have just install Immich on Truenas Scale, well more specifically HexOS. I do have a True nas Scale Nas as well. I would really like to upload all my thousands of historic images onto it with Bulk uploads, and the CLI mentioned seems ideal especially with the recursive uploading of Sub folders as albums. Does anybody know how or if it is possible to load the CLI into the HexOS setup. I am happy at loading the CLI as described in the tutorial directly into Linux, but unsure of where to start when Immich has been loaded into a container within Truenas scale. Understand the pros and cons of HexOS and that many technical people enjoy setting up and playing with Truenas etc.... But I am setting this up so that many of my less computer wise photographers can more easily set up and use their own localised storage of their photographs... Any help or suggestions would be gratefully received.
Do you mean that you are running Immich in windows through docker desktop? I'll have to give that a try, I use the CLI on windows to upload albums to my Immich instance running on Ubuntu.
@ThomasWildeTech my Immich instance is running on my Ubuntu server, I tried to upload using my windows machine with NPM. But I think I'm going to ditch the upload for the external library option which seem more practical
Immich indeed has created ways to financially contribute to the team, however, they have been adamant that Immich will always be open-source. Immich is open-source under AGPLv3, so if they decided to move closed source, which I doubt they do, it would just be forked and continue to be open-source. That's how I see it at least. Do you have another Photo solution that you like?
For a full Immich install tutorial with custom domain: ruclips.net/video/_XX3_wv9zcg/видео.htmlsi=jBal6TYB1deudem-
For a 5 minute quick setup: ruclips.net/video/Oi5j-ZygALI/видео.htmlsi=smcrpipBPxTSH4vJ
Excellent tutorials thank you. Well explained and pros and Cons detailed in a factual way. A question. I have just install Immich on Truenas Scale, well more specifically HexOS. I do have a True nas Scale Nas as well. I would really like to upload all my thousands of historic images onto it with Bulk uploads, and the CLI mentioned seems ideal especially with the recursive uploading of Sub folders as albums. Does anybody know how or if it is possible to load the CLI into the HexOS setup. I am happy at loading the CLI as described in the tutorial directly into Linux, but unsure of where to start when Immich has been loaded into a container within Truenas scale. Understand the pros and cons of HexOS and that many technical people enjoy setting up and playing with Truenas etc.... But I am setting this up so that many of my less computer wise photographers can more easily set up and use their own localised storage of their photographs... Any help or suggestions would be gratefully received.
not working on windows. getting "Crawling for assets...
No files found, exiting" it only works if I specify a file, but not the folder path :/
Do you mean that you are running Immich in windows through docker desktop? I'll have to give that a try, I use the CLI on windows to upload albums to my Immich instance running on Ubuntu.
@ThomasWildeTech my Immich instance is running on my Ubuntu server, I tried to upload using my windows machine with NPM. But I think I'm going to ditch the upload for the external library option which seem more practical
Stop wasting time on immich, it will be paid soon
Immich indeed has created ways to financially contribute to the team, however, they have been adamant that Immich will always be open-source. Immich is open-source under AGPLv3, so if they decided to move closed source, which I doubt they do, it would just be forked and continue to be open-source. That's how I see it at least. Do you have another Photo solution that you like?
Google photos