I’m giving it a try after failing to set something simple for a book collection (mostly epub). Interested in knowing other people take on this tool.
Its almost great, but the shortcomings / awful design decisions are deal breakers for me.
It’s required folder structure is not compatible with calibre’s required folder structure. Kavita will drop books on the floor while importing a series with multiple authors from your calibre library. They dont see this as an issue and claim there is other software to edit epub metadata (there isnt, really). Editing metadata on Kavita itself wont be reflected into your epubs when you send them to a device.
By default Kavita bounces all emails through the project owners gmail account & web server. This is… an insane decison and I have no clue how they think its a good idea. You can self host their email server yourself, but its yet another thing to setup and run.
Calibre-web is ok, but the owner is MIA for ages as far as i can tell. One person does seem to have commit access that is somewhat active, but good PRs have been open languishing for months and month at this point.
I think this comment summarizes the situation for me. I didn’t know about calibre-web development being stopped, but the specific folder structure is a deal breaker for me. I think I’ll stick to calibre-web for the time being.
Thank you and all the other people who commented in the thread :)
Yep, hosted via docker, for epub, mobi and pdf. Works great with the librera reader as well.
Have you tried calibre-web? Kavita one seems to be easier to run
I’ll say that I’ve run both Kavita and Calibre+Calibre-Web. I’ve stuck with running Calibreand Calibre Web together. Kavita was great but since I read on kindle and Kavita-email never worked for me I went back to Calibre. I also prefer calibre since it lets me convert files and change the cover images.
Personally I had more issues getting kavita to work the way I wanted than I did with calibre.
I use it on my laptop and android devices. I read magazines with it, so pdf. ^I’m old, okay?
It works great, but I haven’t tried a single epub…
I use it for my comics, but I didn’t care for the file/folder structure it required for books, so I’m using audiobookshelf for my ebooks as well as my audiobooks.
I selfhost kavita for about 30 ebooks and use KavitaEmail to send epubs to my kindle. I also tried out audiobookshelf only for podcasts and wasn’t quite up to my current workflow that antennapod running only on my phone exceeds at. I also recently saw audiobookshelf can host epubs and send them via SMTP via one container so once the android app for the latter comes out of beta and has better local file and androidauto support I may give that a shot again.
Yep, I love it. I use it for comics, manga, and epubs. It also connects to Tachiyomi and FBReader so I can read stuff on my tablet through the apps I prefer (though I’ve heard the built-in reader is good). The dev, Joe, is great too.