7

My Kodi is running as root (for better or for worse). This means the user folder is:

/root/.kodi/userdata/guisettings.xml

A quick search for web-related junk:

cat guisettings.xml  | grep web

yields

    <webserver default="true">false</webserver>
    <webserverpassword default="true"></webserverpassword>
    <webserverport default="true">8080</webserverport>
    <webserverusername default="true">kodi</webserverusername>
    <webskin default="true">webinterface.default</webskin>

Looks good to me. I just have to turn on the webserver.

Steps Taken

systemctl stop kodi
perl -i -pe 's/<webserver default="true">false<\/webserver>/<webserver default="true">true<\/webserver>/' /root/.kodi/userdata/guisettings.xml # (I actually used vim)
systemctl start kodi

Guess what happens, the guisettings.xml gets overwritten each time I start Kodi. I also tried adding the following file: /root/.kodi/userdata/advancedsettings.xml with the following contents:

<advancedsettings>
    <loglevel hide="attribute">3</loglevel>
    <webserver default="true">true</webserver>
        <webserverpassword default="true"></webserverpassword>
        <webserverport default="true">8080</webserverport>
        <webserverusername default="true">kodi</webserverusername>
        <webskin default="true">webinterface.default</webskin>
</advancedsettings>

This also does not work.

1 Answer 1

9

Are you by any chance trying to enable the web server to allow using Kodi remote?

I encountered the same issue too, "guisettings.xml gets overwritten".

According to kodi.wiki, you need to configure 2 more XML elements. To be complete, having the following in advancedsettings.xml should help:

<advancedsettings>
    <services>
        <esallinterfaces>true</esallinterfaces>
        <webserver>true</webserver>
        <zeroconf>true</zeroconf>
    </services>
</advancedsettings>
0

Your Answer

Reminder: Answers generated by Artificial Intelligence tools are not allowed on Stack Overflow. Learn more

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge that you have read and understand our privacy policy and code of conduct.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.