Also, during the scan, mount.exfat process takes up 46% of cpu. They are only visible after I manually hit the update button. Also, the scanning does not repopulate the music database, because any changes made to music directories are not visible after the long ‘scanning’ finishes. For example, if I change a setting and hit save. The rescan does not happen only on system restart, but each time mpd is restarted. I would try a new flashed installation on a different sd card, and if you still have the problem, then consider raising the issue on Github. I am wondering if such plans are there in a future update. What I would ideally like Volumio to do is (assuming the updating is unavoidable), perform the directory update in the background while I am listening to music. I just read in these forums, someone with a huge library has to wait 16 hours for the update to finish. I am worried that more the music library grows, longer it will take to finish the directory scan. This is exactly what I am experiencing (and feels better to know that its not something I did). Your description of the issue is spot on. I have no idea how to avoid this “hang ups” … So, I’m leaving alone my volumio on boot for half or one hour - in “do not touch until music library gets available” state … Music library is empty, and if you open “My Music”, some kind of MPD restart happen - don’t do it ! But Spotify can work. You cannot play music from your library, and cannot run internet radios. On boot up, linux is running “inotify” for checking directory changes. I’m not sure 100%, let me correct someone who knows more about this …
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