I use Nginx for Sonarr/Radarr would I see any general performance benefit when loading their webpages in general? If so, what level of compression would be ideal for this case? Source: 10 months ago
There may be better places, since I've just stuck to the same one for years now (and don't need them often enough to look into alternatives), but I usually use either subscene or opensubtitles. There are also programs that can automate it like bazarr, but it requires you to also use Sonarr/Radarr. Source: 10 months ago
- Sonarr & Radarr for sailing the sea / keeping those media libraries growing ( https://sonarr.tv/, https://radarr.video/ ). Source: 11 months ago
Two instances of Radarr (one for 4K and one for everything else) running on one of my Linux servers. Source: 11 months ago
Jellyfin doesn’t download movies. I think you want Radarr for that. Unless you mean that your Jellyfin server is somewhere else other than the cabin and you’re connecting to Jellyfin remotely from your cabin, in which case yeah you’d probably have to wait for it to download/buffer which could take a while. Source: 11 months ago
Official support in healthchecks.io, Uptime Kuma, Radarr, Sonarr, Shoutrrr, Gatus, and many more! Source: 11 months ago
The above user seems to misunderstand something though. No one looks through hundreds or thousands of links anymore. I just use something called Radarr and it does the thinking for me. Mostly automated, then I watch it on Jellyfin. The setup is the only hard part. Now, it's super easy to just watch anything like an actual streaming service is suppose to be. Source: about 1 year ago
I learned that after setting up radarr. There is a shiiiiit ton of basically the same movie by different people at different times, it's incredible and sometimes a pain in the ass to properly assign. Source: about 1 year ago
Are you planning to run a GUI Ubuntu or server? I’ve run both, and for ease of use I recommend GUI if the hardware can handle it. Bare in mind you can always change the desktop environment. From there, you probably want a VPN - I recommend Mullvad because they accept cash, have servers in hundreds of cities and allow torrenting on all servers. The Mullvad client also allows you to turn on an “internet kill switch”... Source: about 1 year ago
For managing movies, there's nothing better than Radarr. It will search dozens of torrent sites at once, pick the best result of them all importing it to your torrent client, remove it from the client when complete, rename the files to your liking and sort them into your media folders for.plex/emby/jellyfin to find. Source: about 1 year ago
Movie collection manager and downloader: Radarr. Source: about 1 year ago
I use Jellyfin to host my media and Ombi for users to request media. Ombi sends user requests to Radarr for movies, and Sonarr for TV shows. Source: about 1 year ago
Yes theres is! Check out https://sonarr.tv and https://radarr.video. Source: about 1 year ago
You may want to look into using something like Radarr which can help organize your folders and naming schemes. Source: about 1 year ago
API access allows you to hook up software to automatically search for and download content, for example Sonarr and Radarr. Sonarr, for example, allows users to pick a specific TV show and download all the episodes for it automatically, following certain rules (such as specific file size limits, automatically finding the highest quality, preferring certain words in the release title, etc). This is a very popular... Source: over 1 year ago
Arr apps (Lidarr, Radarr, Sonarr) - Automated media downloading/sorting. Source: over 1 year ago
Which then uses Sonarr to automatically download new episodes (or whole seasons) as they are required - or Radarr if you're into films. Source: over 1 year ago
Https://radarr.video/ is the site for radarr, including download, but might be worth checking a setup video to understand what it does and how it works and looks. The other arrs are pretty much the same, just different content. Source: over 1 year ago
I recommend Sonarr (TV) and Radarr (Movies). You use Jackett to index your favorite torrent search providers. And I recommend qBittorrent as a lightweight torrent client that integrates with both. Source: over 1 year ago
Renaming and organizational structure are also very important in plex and many users struggle with following them. Apps like FileBot, Sonarr and Radarr can help with that. Source: over 1 year ago
Radarr & Sonarr are definitely the way to go for organization and naming. (Even editions are supported in the naming convention) this will put each movie into its own folder, and rename based on the settings you set And for tv shows will do the same and can have different naming if it’s a daily show, a standard show, or an anime…. Source: over 1 year ago
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