I am sure I am just missing something simple… I have prowlarr -> sonarr/radarr -> qbittorrent -> jellyfin I created three directories. /jelly/video /sonarr /radarr. I configured sonarr and radar to use their respective directories. And I configured qbittorrent to use /jelly/video as the default download dir.
But what seems to be happening is that if I download a movie, it ends up in both /radarr and /jelly/video. And then if I delete it from /jelly/video it doesn’t seed for others.
What am I missing here?
The way I organized my setup was using a file structure like this:
My media player and torrent client have access to the videos directory, and Radarr and Sonarr have access to their respective directories. The *arrs add the files to the torrent client with the destination being their respective directories, and upon completion it triggers a media player library re-index. This way you can seed and stream concurrently.
Mine is a little more complicated, but it gives me piece of mind and the ability to see what each program is doing, and to manually sort files if sonarr/radarr stop working for whatever reason
My folder structure is
Each component of my stack is isolated using docker and can only acess what it needs to. Sonarr, Radarr and qbittorrent are configured to use labels to keep the downloads directory sorted.
I can post my docker-compose.yml file if you want to have a look.
Hi. I found this thread as I’m trying to setup Radarr/qBittorrent myself at the moment. I’ve followed the guides over at https://drfrankenstein.co.uk/ So my folder structure is:
torrents
media
I’m not sure if this is possible. Can I make Radarr add torrents to qBittorrent using the category selected in Radarr? In qBittorrent, I have the default category “radarr” where all movies are added to when making a request in Jellyseerr. After that, they are copied over to “media>01_movies” or “media/01_movies_animation” depending on what category I choose in Jellyseerr when making a request. Those categories work fine and so that media is sorted according to the paths and automatically shows up in Jellyfin. But in qBittorrent, all torrents that are added with Radarr are all just dumped in the “radarr” category, hence the folder “torrents/completed/radarr/”.I have enabled hard links in Radarr, but needless to say, they don’t work. I understand too little of how this works to sort that out. I’m just looking to have my torrents organized, but maybe this is just a really silly thought? I think I’m just stuck in my old ways as I’ve prior to this always downloaded torrents manually with magnet links. So then, having it organized on disk was much more important as that’s where I found my stuff. But maybe now, the way to go is to just dump them in the “radarr” folder and forget about it. No use to keep the torrents organized in there as Radarr manages the movies anyway? Maybe I should just work on making hard links work and then you use Radarr to filter your stuff and remove content when you need to?
EDIT: I’m not sure if this is the way to do it, but I added another qBitorrent download client in Radarr. One points to 01_movies and the other to 01_movies_animation. this forces the torrents to download to the selected folder in “torrents/completed/” now the only thing I need is to figure out how to make the hard links work.
So you are intentionally keeping two copies of things?
I am keeping 1 copy, with a hardlink to the other. It gets removed from qBittorrent once it has finished seeding
oh, hardlink. Linux I am guessing then? I am on windows for now. And it has been years since I tried to make a link in windows. I don’t recall it going well back then. :) So what do you mean by finished seeding? Someone else implied they only seeded to some limit. What is the story there?
Yes, however Windows offers hardlinks too, you just can’t span them across drives with either os
So do you set the torrent client default download dir to videos? And the system is smart enough not to make a copy there because there is already one visible to the client?