Am 10.04.2023 um 15:07 schrieb Marko Mäkelä:
Some time ago, I created the wiki page https://www.linuxtv.org/vdrwiki/index.php/Systemd that describes much of my VDR installation.
On my Raspberry Pi, there is no real-time-clock. My low-tech solution for waking up VDR for recordings is that I set an alarm on my phone, to remind me to turn on VDR when needed. Today, I refined that a little by implementing an idle timeout shutdown when no further recording timers exist, or when they are in the distant enough future.
I learned that there is a portable Linux tool "rtcwake" that should support whatever is needed by VDR. It is much simpler than the "nvram-wakeup" that I used almost 20 years ago. On my Raspberry Pi, basically any "rtcwake" commands will fail. That provided a good way of testing the fallback mechanisms of my shutdown script.
I think that it could be useful to include some Systemd integration scripts in the VDR distribution. My systemd integration consists of 4 parts that are documented in the https://www.linuxtv.org/vdrwiki/index.php/Systemd wiki page:
- /etc/systemd/system/vdr-keep-alive.sh to control system shutdown
- /var/lib/vdr/vdr-shutdown.sh to handle VDR shutdown (vdr -s)
- some configuration to have a VDR service in Systemd
- optional: additional configuration to have the video directory on USB
storage, to have VDR auto-start when the storage is plugged in.
Because rtcwake does not work on my VDR system, it would be nice to get some feedback from users of wake-on-timer capable systems. It is possible that the "rtcwake -m disk -s $2" and "rtcwake -m mem -s $2" require that "vdr-keep-alive.sh stop" be invoked first and "vdr-keep-alive.sh start" be invoked once rtcwake successfully returns (at the wake-up time). It is also possible that the VDR process would need to be restarted.
Best regards,
Marko
vdr mailing list vdr@linuxtv.org https://www.linuxtv.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/vdr
How about https://www.berrybase.de/ds3231-real-time-clock-modul-fuer-raspberry-pi? Joerg