<div dir="ltr">Hi Jason,<div><br></div><div>thank you for your reply! :)</div><div><br></div><div class="gmail_quote"><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0 .8ex;border-left:1px #ccc solid;padding-left:1ex">
It's supposed to be smart and detect which are changed and only rescan<br>
the new ones. I wonder why this isn't working for you. Are you<br>
operating atop a strange filesystem?<br></blockquote><div><br></div><div>Hm I don't know. Sometimes it works sometimes it doesn't.</div><div>I'm running it on top of a CentOS 7.5 Virtualbox machine running on a Windows OS filesystem exFAT.</div><div><br></div><div>Now I just rerun the ./main.py <album> <cache> and I'm getting "Forgot my camera" message.</div><div>Can't seem to find any logs.</div><div>Is there a way to fix it?</div><div> </div><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0 .8ex;border-left:1px #ccc solid;padding-left:1ex">
It's slow because the python imaging library is slow. I could probably<br>
replace that backend out with something else to speed it up a bunch,<br>
and maybe even parallelize the whole thing...<br></blockquote><div><br></div><div>Parallelizing by folder or a queue of commands would be awesome :D</div><div><br></div><div>Regards,</div><div>Carlos.</div><div> </div><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0 .8ex;border-left:1px #ccc solid;padding-left:1ex">
<br>
Jason<br>
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