I have a music server on my home network. I recently replaced the existing server which had my library on an internal hard drive with one that has the library on an external drive. After a period of inactivity the external drive "sleeps". On the server with the external drive, the internal drive with the OS (Windows 7) is an SSD.
My problem is that dBp's CD ripper does not "wake up" the external drive when I try to rip a CD; I have Multi Encoder set up, with two FLAC copies (one to my master archive, one to the networked hard drive) and one MP3 copy (for use on portable devices). The ripper can't apparently see the hard drive on the network when it starts to rip, so aborts the rips and gives error messages to that effect.
However, if I use Windows Explorer to view the hard drive contents, this will wake it up; I can then use the ripper perfectly well. So it can write to this networked drive, but not wake it up. All permissions are appropriately set.
It's just that the ripper does not do whatever is necessary to wake up the hard drive, and it's quite annoying.
Suggestions?
R.
My problem is that dBp's CD ripper does not "wake up" the external drive when I try to rip a CD; I have Multi Encoder set up, with two FLAC copies (one to my master archive, one to the networked hard drive) and one MP3 copy (for use on portable devices). The ripper can't apparently see the hard drive on the network when it starts to rip, so aborts the rips and gives error messages to that effect.
However, if I use Windows Explorer to view the hard drive contents, this will wake it up; I can then use the ripper perfectly well. So it can write to this networked drive, but not wake it up. All permissions are appropriately set.
It's just that the ripper does not do whatever is necessary to wake up the hard drive, and it's quite annoying.
Suggestions?
R.
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