The setup and instructions helped a lot with setting up. My library is small and local now but the future is bright. Thank you all for writing info answers and docs.
Special thanks for all the devs of Sonarr, Radarr, Prowlarr, Torrent clients and nzb360.
Extra special thanks to the devs at Jellyfin. Honestly this whole set blew my mind.
You might like Reiverr it’s “a clean combined interface for Jellyfin, TMDB, Radarr and Sonarr, as well as a replacement to Overseerr” and it’s made by a Lemmy user
That looks awesome. I’ll consider migration if they get Homarr integration.
Ive never use homarr it looks like itd be an alternative to revierr? Idk whats its used for exactly so im not sure how theyd work together. but you could ask the creator. https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/post/1910033
@MonetarySqueeze@lemmy.dbzer0.com
Homarr is a dashboard. Integration would be a widget that shows info.
This looks very, very interesting. Thanks for sharing.
deleted by creator
I have been thinking of setting up my own media server for a long time but never got around to researching/doing anything about it. So seeing this post from the main page of Lemmy was very intriguing. Can anybody tell me with simple words what all these tools do?
Are any of the applications in the list used to stream the media to your devices, or do you need a different app like plex or similar for this?
Jellyfin is the media server. (Like Plex but free open source, and a cleaner interface.)
Thanks!
If I understood the github link correctly the stack is basically for downloading, renaming, moving and keeping track of what media you have watched?
Correct!
- VPN - hides that it’s you downloading stuff.
- Radarr - downloads and organizes movies.
- Sonarr - downloads and organizes TV series.
- Prowlarr - allows searching many torrent and usenet sites simultaneously, and makes the results available for the *arr services.
- qBittorrent - downloads the torrents that Radarr and Sonarr requests
- Jellyfin - mediaserver that can stream the media downloaded by the *arrs to you smast TV, computers, phones and tablets.
To add, nzb360 is a paid app to interact with the services from your phone easily with a killer UI. Worth the money imo.
Cool thanks!
This was exactly the explanation I was hoping for. Vpn and torrent I have used before, but the rest was new for me.
whats the purpose of a media server
See this reply to my questions here for a good walkthrough of what this stack of software does. Basically helps you make your own streaming service by downloading what you want to host from different sources and you can access it from your devices. Like your own custom Netflix.
okay but how do you even get media for this ‘custom netflix’? do yiu just pirate?
Yes but don’t tell anyone.
how
Download a torrent file and put it into a torrent client. Let the client download the torrent. Take the resulting file and watch it using the video player of your choice.
See the other reply I linked to for the tools. In those tools you define what torrent sites you want to download from and if set up correctly it should do the torrent searching and downloading for you.
Stremio with torrentio has replaced the whole Arr stack for me
I have both setups (arr stack and stremio+torrentio), here my opinion.
Where stremio falls short is:
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cast integration: semi works with chrome cast, but when using torrentio I just cant get it to work. I need to get into screen mirroring, which is less than ideal. Not to mention it doesn’t work with Roku/DIAL protocol.
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proprietary and closed- source. It will not take long until MPAA-eye will look at it and try to curtail it (eg. going after torre ntio or other addons).
I like it, but I prefer to control my destiny, so I keep my arr stack always close.
Stremio is not proprietary and closed source. It’s open source and you can find all the code for client applications and server on their GitHub account - https://github.com/Stremio
You’re right! My bad. I did search for it, but couldn’t find on their web site, but the code doesn’t seems to have everything. I can’t find the Android app source.
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🔥
Ísland er best
what even is a media stack im so confused
A stack is the pile of software that builds on other software to get something done. I’m here from /local so I don’t know what any of these programs are, but for example the classic website server “stack” is LAMP : Linux, Apache (web server software), MySql (database software), PHP (backend website language).
oh cool so if i ran nextcloud id need all that?
I’ve never heard of it before (remember I’m just passing through this community) but it looks like they have a docker container available. You would probably only need to install docker on your server, then get the next cloud docker container, and run it. The container (probably) has a web server and database and stuff built in.
Is there a similar guide for Plex that someone can point me to? I’ve always been interested in the arr services, and would like to try them out.