The use case is following:

I’d like to turn off my server at night. Sometimes I stop at 12, sometimes at 1 or 2. If I could ask “is someone watching?” And it returns false, I could postpone the shutdown.

The current solution is to always turn off at 2 and turn on at 7.

How do you guys handle the situation?

  • Esca@lemmy.one
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    7 months ago

    Yep, the api in jellyfin is quite easy. Someone already sent the link to the docs. The specific endpoint you want is Sessions. You need to get yourself an api_key which you can do in the admin panel. Here is an example code in Python to give you an idea on how to use the api:

    #!/usr/bin/env python3
    
    import requests
    
    response = requests.get("http://your_jellyfin_server:8096/Sessions?api_key=your_api_key")
    json = response.json()
    
    currently_watching = []
    for session in json:
        if "NowPlayingItem" in session:
            currently_watching.append(session["UserName"])
    
    if currently_watching:
        print("Currently watching: " + ", ".join(currently_watching))
    else:
        print("Nobody is watching")
    

    If it is indeed Python that you want to use, you can adjust it to your needs depending on what you want it to output.

    Basically, it is as simple as looping through every current session and checking if they have a NowPlayingItem key which is only present when they have a video open (both playing and paused). It works very reliability, I am using it to automatically change my lights when I watch a long video or movie.

    • swooosh@lemmy.worldOP
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      7 months ago

      Thank you!

      I wrote a bash script that powers off the computer when there was no user activity for 10 minutes.

      • Epzillon@lemmy.ml
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        7 months ago

        Neat and handy! I guess you could write some wake-on-LAN shenanigans to make it turn on when a user is trying to connect aswell 👍

      • st3ph3n@midwest.social
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        7 months ago

        I use one of those tiny mini PCs, with an AMD mobile CPU in it. It sips power but has enough oomph for transcoding when necessary. I’m sure the NAS that my library actually sits on uses way more power with its mechanical HDDs.

    • rambos@lemm.ee
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      7 months ago

      2W is insane. I wonder how much it actually drains from the wall.

      My server idles at 30-35W and turning it off for 6 hours at night (cheaper electricity) would save like 4€ a year. Its cheap here tho

      • mmmmmsoup@lemmy.today
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        7 months ago

        Ok so I did some testing, from the wall it’s about 7 watts idle. I wonder where that extra 5 is coming from, oh well still pretty good!

        Sleeping it’s less than 1 watt, so I might see if I can let it sleep at night somehow

        • rambos@lemm.ee
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          7 months ago

          I wonder where that extra 5 is coming from

          Most likely PSU efficiency because they are bad on super low power. Still insane, 7W is nothing

    • swooosh@lemmy.worldOP
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      7 months ago

      2 watts isn’t a lot 😁 I’m not sure but my gpu alone consumes more than that when idle