Automated_Handprint

joined 1 year ago

5G mobile network connection which means zero opportunity to have port forwarding or open ports at all. This rules out private torrent trackers (tried a couple, no luck in getting any ratio ofc).

So is this why nobody leeches from me in private tracker downloaded torrents? I use a 4G mobile sim on a router that support sim cards.

I mostly download freeleach series' from torrentleach but need a way to get away from hit and runs

[–] Automated_Handprint@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

This is a guide someone on Reddit gave me years ago. Hope this will be helpful

I imagine most of your integrated torrent searches involve "linux distros" in 1080p and 4k. I'm a step above that because I have not even touched the qbittorrent app in months. It works automatically.

An *Arr stack is a collection of software that tracks, adds, searches, organizes and downloads your media collection. My stack consists of

Radarr - For tracking and managing movies.

Sonarr - For tracking and managing series and episodes.

Lidarr - For tracking and managing music albums, artists and songs.

Readarr - For tracking and managing books.

Prowlarr - Containing torrent tracker information to automatically add to the above 4 apps.

Ombi / Overseer - Requesting media - Movies, Series, Books, Music

qBittorrent - Downloading stuff.

All this runs on a "home server" as Docker containers. Thy all have web interfaces that you can access, even qBittorrent. Your workflow is as follows:

Say, you want to watch a movie that comes out in 3 months. You go to Ombi and put in a request for that movie. Ombi forwards the request to Radarr where the movie has its metadata downloaded and analyzed from IMDB and TMDB. Radarr tracks its release and once that happens it starts searching torrent trackers for a torrent meeting your search criteria like size, quality, etc. To search torrent trackers you need special queries that are handled by Prowlarr and distributed to all other *arr apps.

Once a suitable torrent is found, it's sent to qBittorrent where it's downloaded automatically. qBit plays very nicely with the *arrs. After downloading, the file is moved, renamed, pampered by Radarr in the media library. A movie is no big deal but imagine you are downloading and renaming a series with 9 seasons.

You can top that off with something like Jellyfin (like Plex) and you have your own homegrown Netflix. It sounds very complicated but it isn't. Eventually you have to go to Ombi to request and to Jellyfin to consume.

And it really pays off in the long run. For example The Witcher S02E01 leaked a few days before its official release date on Netflix. I found out about it when I opened Jellyfin and saw a new episode waiting for me. It's set-and-forget.

Easily skip YouTube video sponsors

Not just sponsors.

1000125508

This is from the revanced app. I think there's even more categories in the browser extension.