#Initial Mass Content Rating Update operation results in many movies rated "NR"
1 messages · Page 1 of 1 (latest)
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logs would be great
This is the first run that performed the mass content update
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Do you have the paid MDBList API?
If the answer is no, that's your problem.
MDBList's free API is limited to 1000 requests per day, once it hits that the rest of the requests will be denied, and as per your operations your final fallback is "NR":
operations:
mass_content_rating_update:
- mdb_commonsense0
- mdb_age_rating0
- mdb
- NR
API limits are shown here if you wanted to consider a paid model:
oof, that would be my issue. Is there any easy way to target a range so I can get my library updated over the course of a week?
Not at this time, no
This problem could likely be addressed for $1; $3 at the most
Well, per month. Because kometa won't understand how to track just updates to the library.
This was one of the primary reasons I even found kometa to begin with, and the docs don't even mention the mdblist dependency on content ratings, and there's no indication which APIs are paid or not in the docs. Not that I expect kometa to keep an updated list of 3rd party pricing, but it's nice to know what you're comitting yourself to.
The content rating description in the wiki notes that the mdb_ options come from MDBList.
Also, I can't find how to support mdblist other than patreon, which is actualy $1.50/month for the lowest tier, $2.50 for standard, $3.50 for Supporter (100k req per day)
Then the page about MDBLIst notes the differences between the free and paid tiers.
Many of the apis don't require configuration and just work out of the box. And there's not great differentiation in the docs, that's what my comment is directed towards.
Yeah, I guess the link above goes to the Euro pricing 1,2,3
And yes, I notice the note on the docs on the mbdlist page now. Not sure how I missed it yesterday.
And I'm also seeing that it should be able to work as I hope if the cache works as intended.
Which answers my question about scope limiting, it's uncessessary due to caching.
Probably a note on the various mass updates that some of these things are based on external sources which may have tiers of access would be useful.
Agreed
How big is your library? The update will do 1000 per day. The first 1000, wouldn’t be updated the 2nd day unless for some reason the rating changed. So if your library is 3000, would essentially take about 3 days to update rating
Movies will take 3 days, but TV shows will also take a few more days. Maybe a week total, so the default cache of 60 days should be fine.
If I'd caught the limitation of the API in the docs I wouldn't have started this thread though, so thank you all for helping me RTFM.
That said, 99% of the data kometa is gathering could be stored in a zipped text file under a few GB (for every movie and show in the db). It's curious that nobody has figured out how to provide a "self-hosted" movie db we can all share via torrent.
The "heavy" info is the assets. Not insignificant, for sure. But in the example of what I'm wanting, I just want the common sense media rating, which is a movie id + a two character text field. I'm not against people wanting funding for their APIs, but this is a relatively small request in the grand scheme.
For me there's $18/yr in value in not having to build and maintain that.
And some pay $250/y in streaming services. I get that. Not saying the databases are useless. Just pointing out that the weight of carrying the text aspects of the db is trivial, and could even live in a git repo.
Anyway, not trying to cause a rukus, just sharing my thoughts.
Seems like a reasonable project for an interested party.
Don't tempt me with a good time 😉
antwanchild used !aenh
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