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![](https://lemmy.ml/pictrs/image/h1ChnLuBHr.png)
It would just result in them having official and unofficial devices, where all the things they don’t want linked to their person, political party or public knowledge is on a different device that isn’t going to get caught in the FOIA requests.
It would just result in them having official and unofficial devices, where all the things they don’t want linked to their person, political party or public knowledge is on a different device that isn’t going to get caught in the FOIA requests.
Hmm, they’re not easily available in the EU it seems.
Also a US based company, if that matters to you.
I would consider that a downside TBH, but it’s hard to avoid unfortunately.
What would you recommend as a replacement with same level of novice-friendly UI/setup? I was looking to go down that route specifically because it seems like an easy way to get a solid network setup without being a network pro.
I’m running my smart home entirely from a single NUC running proxmox with VMs and LXCs for my services. It’s pulling ~7W on average
No they’re in the same compose file, I just left other parts out because it’s fairly long for a post.
Actually I’m also not using the default port for any of my qbit instances
IDK, it’s worth a try to rearrange the containers I would say.
Yeah i pretty much stole this from someone else, although it only used a single torrent client so i just added another that looked the same. i’m not very skilled in docker, so some things may not be best practice (or even correct)
qbittorrent:
image: lscr.io/linuxserver/qbittorrent:latest
container_name: qbittorrent
network_mode: service:gluetun
environment:
- PUID=${APPUSER_PUID}
- PGID=${APPUSER_PGID}
- TZ=${TIME_ZONE_VALUE}
- WEBUI_PORT=8084
volumes:
- ${PATH_TO_DATA}/qbit/config:/config
- ${PATH_TO_COMPLETE}:/downloads
restart: unless-stopped
depends_on:
- gluetun
qbittorrentTL:
image: lscr.io/linuxserver/qbittorrent:latest
container_name: qbittorrentTL
network_mode: service:gluetun
environment:
- PUID=${APPUSER_PUID}
- PGID=${APPUSER_PGID}
- TZ=${TIME_ZONE_VALUE}
- WEBUI_PORT=8085
volumes:
- ${PATH_TO_DATA}/qbitTL/config:/config
- ${PATH_TO_COMPLETE}:/downloads
restart: unless-stopped
depends_on:
- gluetun
gluetun:
image: qmcgaw/gluetun
container_name: gluetun
networks:
pirate_net:
cap_add:
- NET_ADMIN
- SYS_MODULE
environment:
- VPN_SERVICE_PROVIDER=protonvpn
- OPENVPN_USER=[USER]
- OPENVPN_PASSWORD=[PASSWORD]
- SERVER_COUNTRIES=[COUNTRIES]
- VPN_PORT_FORWARDING=on
- UPDATER_PERIOD=6h
ports:
- 8084:8084 # Qbit
- 8085:8085 # QbitTL
- 6881:6881
- 6881:6881/udp
- 8191:8191 # Flaresolverr
- 9696:9696 # Prowlarr
- 7878:7878 # Radarr
- 8989:8989 # Sonarr
volumes:
- ${PATH_TO_DATA}/gluetun/config:/config
networks:
pirate_net:
driver: bridge
That’s really weird, I’m using the same image to run two instances of qbit behind gluetun without any issues whatsoever.
Funny, i couldn’t get HW encoding to work with the linuxserver.io docker image, but the exact same compose file, except it’s using the official image, works just fine without any issues.
I just bought a 4k 60hz loopthrough usb3 card so I can start saving the media I want from the services I still subscribe to. What software do you use for recording?
I am actually using docker compose, I’ve tried their guide as well with no luck.