Version 4 vs 5
Version 4 vs 5
Edits
Edits
- Edit by keithzg, Version 5
- Sep 17 2019 10:09 PM
- ·You'll need xinit, actually, and that should pull in any dependencies
- Edit by keithzg, Version 4
- Sep 15 2019 2:16 AM
- ·Fix link to subdoc
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Content Changes
Content Changes
Say you've got something like a Raspberry Pi, and you wanna use it for Kodi.
The official wiki page for this sort of thing is at https://kodi.wiki/view/HOW-TO:HOW-TO:Autostart_Kodi_for_Linux, which points to https://github.com/graysky2/kodi-standalone-service. You could also just use something like OpenELEC (I hate it, personally), but here's some modified takes on the official-ish instructions. This presumes you're running Ubuntu 19.04 on a Pi 3, or have a similar setup to that.
Create `/etc/systemd/system/kodi.service` with the contents as
```
lang=systemd
[Unit]
Description=Kodi standalone (X11)
After=systemd-user-sessions.service network-online.target sound.target mysqld.service
Requires=network-online.target
Conflicts=getty@tty1.service
[Service]
User=kodi
Group=kodi
PAMName=login
TTYPath=/dev/tty1
ExecStart=/usr/bin/xinit /usr/bin/kodi-standalone -- :0 -nolisten tcp vt1
Restart=on-abort
StandardInput=tty
[Install]
WantedBy=graphical.target
```
If ya can't get kodi-gbm to work (which these instructions presume), you'll probably also need to run `apt install xserver-xorg` now.
(One might be able to get GBM to work with `echo "dtoverlay=vc4-fkms-v3d" | sudo tee -a /boot/firmware/config.txt`. Except you'll still probably have to [[ documentation/kodi/standalone/compile/ | compile it yourself ]] if you're on ARM...)
Then:
```
lang=bash
# Add the group
sudo addgroup kodi
# Add the user, giving it no login shell and with /var/lib/kodi as its home directory
sudo useradd -c 'kodi user' -u 420 -g kodi -G audio,input,uucp,video -d /var/lib/kodi -s /usr/sbin/nologin kodi
# Not sure why this is necessary frankly, since the shell is set to nologin anyways
sudo passwd -l kodi > /dev/null
# Actually make the home directory we're using, and set ownership correctly
sudo mkdir /var/lib/kodi
sudo chown -R kodi:kodi /var/lib/kodi
# Now, enable and start the service
sudo systemctl enable kodi.service
sudo systemctl start kodi.service
```
Say you've got something like a Raspberry Pi, and you wanna use it for Kodi.
The official wiki page for this sort of thing is at https://kodi.wiki/view/HOW-TO:HOW-TO:Autostart_Kodi_for_Linux, which points to https://github.com/graysky2/kodi-standalone-service. You could also just use something like OpenELEC (I hate it, personally), but here's some modified takes on the official-ish instructions. This presumes you're running Ubuntu 19.04 on a Pi 3, or have a similar setup to that.
Create `/etc/systemd/system/kodi.service` with the contents as
```
lang=systemd
[Unit]
Description=Kodi standalone (X11)
After=systemd-user-sessions.service network-online.target sound.target mysqld.service
Requires=network-online.target
Conflicts=getty@tty1.service
[Service]
User=kodi
Group=kodi
PAMName=login
TTYPath=/dev/tty1
ExecStart=/usr/bin/xinit /usr/bin/kodi-standalone -- :0 -nolisten tcp vt1
Restart=on-abort
StandardInput=tty
[Install]
WantedBy=graphical.target
```
If ya can't get kodi-gbm to work (which these instructions presume), you'll probably also need to run `apt install xinit` now.
(One might be able to get GBM to work with `echo "dtoverlay=vc4-fkms-v3d" | sudo tee -a /boot/firmware/config.txt`. Except you'll still probably have to [[ documentation/kodi/standalone/compile/ | compile it yourself ]] if you're on ARM...)
Then:
```
lang=bash
# Add the group
sudo addgroup kodi
# Add the user, giving it no login shell and with /var/lib/kodi as its home directory
sudo useradd -c 'kodi user' -u 420 -g kodi -G audio,input,uucp,video -d /var/lib/kodi -s /usr/sbin/nologin kodi
# Not sure why this is necessary frankly, since the shell is set to nologin anyways
sudo passwd -l kodi > /dev/null
# Actually make the home directory we're using, and set ownership correctly
sudo mkdir /var/lib/kodi
sudo chown -R kodi:kodi /var/lib/kodi
# Now, enable and start the service
sudo systemctl enable kodi.service
sudo systemctl start kodi.service
```
Say you've got something like a Raspberry Pi, and you wanna use it for Kodi.
The official wiki page for this sort of thing is at https://kodi.wiki/view/HOW-TO:HOW-TO:Autostart_Kodi_for_Linux, which points to https://github.com/graysky2/kodi-standalone-service. You could also just use something like OpenELEC (I hate it, personally), but here's some modified takes on the official-ish instructions. This presumes you're running Ubuntu 19.04 on a Pi 3, or have a similar setup to that.
Create `/etc/systemd/system/kodi.service` with the contents as
```
lang=systemd
[Unit]
Description=Kodi standalone (X11)
After=systemd-user-sessions.service network-online.target sound.target mysqld.service
Requires=network-online.target
Conflicts=getty@tty1.service
[Service]
User=kodi
Group=kodi
PAMName=login
TTYPath=/dev/tty1
ExecStart=/usr/bin/xinit /usr/bin/kodi-standalone -- :0 -nolisten tcp vt1
Restart=on-abort
StandardInput=tty
[Install]
WantedBy=graphical.target
```
If ya can't get kodi-gbm to work (which these instructions presume), you'll probably also need to run `apt install xserver-xorgxinit` now.
(One might be able to get GBM to work with `echo "dtoverlay=vc4-fkms-v3d" | sudo tee -a /boot/firmware/config.txt`. Except you'll still probably have to [[ documentation/kodi/standalone/compile/ | compile it yourself ]] if you're on ARM...)
Then:
```
lang=bash
# Add the group
sudo addgroup kodi
# Add the user, giving it no login shell and with /var/lib/kodi as its home directory
sudo useradd -c 'kodi user' -u 420 -g kodi -G audio,input,uucp,video -d /var/lib/kodi -s /usr/sbin/nologin kodi
# Not sure why this is necessary frankly, since the shell is set to nologin anyways
sudo passwd -l kodi > /dev/null
# Actually make the home directory we're using, and set ownership correctly
sudo mkdir /var/lib/kodi
sudo chown -R kodi:kodi /var/lib/kodi
# Now, enable and start the service
sudo systemctl enable kodi.service
sudo systemctl start kodi.service
```