• @Vendetta9076
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    31 year ago

    If youre savy enough to do that, its probably worth it to look into running a servarr stack.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      Never heard of it, but I will take a look.

      Oh ok, so this is just a RSS feed essentially for torrenting media content that I want to in the future. I honestly want to do it at some point. Need to get a dedicated Linux machine.

      • @Vendetta9076
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        51 year ago

        At its core, yeah. The most popular ones are sonarr(tv) and radarr(movies) then a media frontend like plex/jellyfin/emby. But theres plenty of other *arr programs depending on your needs. If you ever need any help, Im trying to get the servarr community going on here or you could dm me.

        • @[email protected]
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          11 year ago

          I’ll join the community for sure. I have ok experience with Linux as a DevOps engineer. I only have a Linux laptop for work though. Would need to get something else going for it.

          • @Vendetta9076
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            11 year ago

            My first homelab running servarr was just an old optiplex I bought off ebay. Now its been moved to an old gaming pc lol. I run it for my household and about 5 other friends and haven’t seen much in the way of performance issues that can’t be explained/mitigated. So you certainly don’t need a ton of power. Mainly just storage.

              • @Vendetta9076
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                11 year ago

                I use overseerr for TV/movie requests since I can stand it up behind a reverse proxy easily and Its a much nicer interface. For content I use Plex/Jellyfin. Users decide which they like to use.