Long monitor contention event with owner method=int .NativeCrypto.SSL_read(long, java.io.FileDescriptor, .NativeCrypto$SSLHandshakeCallbacks, byte, int, int, int) from NativeCrypto.java:4294967294 waiters=0 for 23.519sĪt (Thread.java:1031)Īt (Thread.java:985)Īt de.GpodnetSyncService$WaiterThread$1.run(GpodnetSyncService.java:356) I can't remember if gpodder is included here, but did you check the 'download history' section? Can't think of another way to easily access errors. Is there a possibility to see the full error message? Well, you're not the first one complaining about instable syncing with gPodder not working. Is is possible that the syncing with gpodder is kind of instable and not always very well working?.(also Since version 1.6 (now in Alpha testing) there is a way to manually sync gPodder (see #1708) No: Gpodder sync (subscriptions and episode action) is triggered whenever all feeds (not individual feeds) are refreshed, manually or by the auto updater Is there a possibility to see the full error AntennaPod I'm going in episodes -> (tab) all -> then I'm touching the syncing symbol in the top-center of the right The text is the following:ġst row | SynchronisierungsfehlerĢnd row | Ein Fehler ist beim Synchronisieren aufgetreten: jav.ġst row | Synchronization failureĢnd row | A failure occurred during syncing: jav. After some milliseconds the syncing icon changed to the syncing icon with the exclamation mark. Shortly after that I saw the syncing icon of AntennaPod in the status bar of the tablet. After one minute I paused and went back to the home screen. I started a streaming of one episode (tablet). I'm not sure what is the regular behavior of AntennaPod. If I use the gear wheels inside of a podcast feed, the syncing to gpodder doesn't seemed to work. If I'm marking the episodes manually episode by episode as played the syncing seemed to be working. ![]() Is there a difference how to mark episodes as played? But I receive an error in the status bar. ![]() I guess AntennaPod want's to sync with gpodder the latest status. I get syncing error if I'm pause one episode. Is is possible that the syncing with gpodder is kind of instable and not always very well working? Maybe above described procedure is also helping vasyugan. Now it was syncing with the described way above. ![]() Of course I did before also a manual syncing as described above.ĭo I do something wrong or is there something else? I expect then, that AntennaPod is getting an update of the listened episodes and the latest status of one or more podcast episode which has been listened in one of the three devices I have. If this is incorrect, please let me know how to do a manual syncing. > as far as I understand AntennaPod this is the manual way of syncing with gpodder. In AntennaPod I'm going in episodes -> (tab) all -> then I'm touching the syncing symbol in the top-center of the right Also in the gpodder web page under subscriptions it's visual, that all devices have the same subscription (three small icons of an cell phone on the right of each row for each podcast). These days, my day-to-day podcast consumption happens with the built-in Podcasts app on the iPhone, but gPodder (on the Desktop) is still useful for downloading and archiving (hoarding) YouTube subscriptions (especially since there are so many ads on the web and TV versions of YouTube), mixes from Soundcloud and others and just interesting podcast episodes that might not be available in the future.The devices are registered and synced inside gpodder as cell phones (two cell phones + one tablet). GPodder started in 2005 when I needed a tool on Linux to download podcasts and sync it to my iPod mini, so even back then it was mostly about downloading on the Desktop, and my phone of the day didn't have much storage space for audio, let alone a 3.5mm headphone jack (I remember getting a "MP3 player phone" with 3.5mm headphone jack and dedicated media player buttons, the 5310 around 2006 or 2007 at which point the iPod as a dedicated device starting to become redundant).Īt some point though, phones (and "mobile Internet devices") became powerful and programmable enough that it made sense to port gPodder to "Desktop Linux Userland"-based devices and phones (N800, N810, N900, N9, Jolla) and run it directly on the phone.
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