Docker
Tip
If you're new to dockers and want a easy setup I suggest to take a look at DockSTARTer. I've also created a short guide HERE where I explain the settings for the most used applications.
The main goal of DockSTARTer is to make it quick and easy to get up and running with Docker. You may choose to rely on DockSTARTer for various changes to your Docker system or use DockSTARTer as a stepping stone and learn to do more advanced configurations.
DockSTARTer was actually my first steps in to the world of dockers.
Note
I'm not going to explain how to get dockers installed and running, I will only explain which folder structure we recommend.
The paths mentioned below refer to internal paths for the containers!
External paths depends where you mounted your share or your drives.
For example /<path_to_data>/data
, or even /data
.
Folder Structure
Warning
It doesn't really matter which path you use for your media and appdata,
the only thing you should avoid is /home
.
Because user folders in /home
are expected to have some restrictive permissions.
It just could end up creating a permissions mess, so it's better to just avoid entirely.
For this example we're going to make use of a share called data
.
The data
folder has sub-folders for torrents
and usenet
and each of these have sub-folders for tv
, movie
, books
and music
downloads to keep things neat. The media
folder has nicely named TV
, Movies
, Books
and Music
sub-folders, this is your library and what you’d pass to Plex, Emby or JellyFin.
In this examples I'm using lower case on all folder on purpose, being Linux is case sensitive.
data
├── torrents
│ ├── books
│ ├── movies
│ ├── music
│ └── tv
├── usenet
│ ├── books
│ ├── movies
│ ├── music
│ └── tv
└── media
├── books
├── movies
├── music
└── tv
The default path setup suggested by some docker developers that encourages people to use mounts like /movies
, /tv
, /books
or /downloads
is very suboptimal and it makes them look like two or three file systems, even if they aren’t (Because of how Docker’s volumes work). It is the easiest way to get started. While easy to use, it has a major drawback. Mainly losing the ability to hardlink or instant move, resulting in a slower and more I/O intensive copy + delete is used.
Breakdown of the Folder Structure
Torrent clients
qBittorrent, Deluge, ruTorrent
The reason why we use /data/torrents
for the torrent client is because it only needs access to the torrent files. In the torrent software settings, you’ll need to reconfigure paths and you can sort into sub-folders like /data/torrents/{tv|movies|music}
.
data
└── torrents
├── books
├── movies
├── music
└── tv
Usenet clients
NZBGet or SABnzbd
The reason why we use /data/usenet
for the usenet client is because it only needs access to the usenet files. In the usenet software settings, you’ll need to reconfigure paths and you can sort into sub-folders like /data/usenet/{tv|movies|music}
.
data
└── usenet
├── books
├── movies
├── music
└── tv
The Starr Apps
Sonarr, Radarr, Readarr and Lidarr
Sonarr, Radarr, Readarr and Lidarr gets access to everything using /data
because the download folder(s) and media folder will look like and be one file system. Hardlinks will work and moves will be atomic, instead of copy + delete.
data
├── torrents
│ ├── books
│ ├── movies
│ ├── music
│ └── tv
├── usenet
│ ├── books
│ ├── movies
│ ├── music
│ └── tv
└── media
├── books
├── movies
├── music
└── tv
Media Server
Plex, Emby, JellyFin and Bazarr
Plex, Emby, JellyFin and Bazarr only needs access to your media library using /data/media
, which can have any number of sub folders like Movies, Kids Movies, TV, Documentary TV and/or Music as sub folders.
data
└── media
├── movies
├── music
├── books
└── tv
Don't forget to look at the Examples how to setup the paths inside the applications.
Permissions
Recursively chown user and group and Recursively chmod to 775/664
sudo chown -R $USER:$USER /data
sudo chmod -R a=,a+rX,u+w,g+w /data
Docker-compose Example
This is a docker-compose example based on a default Ubuntu install.
The storage location used for the host is actually the same as in the container to make it easier to understand in this case /data
.
The appdata (/config
) will be stored on the host in the /docker/appdata/{appname}
docker-compose - [CLICK TO EXPAND]
version: "3.2"
services:
radarr:
container_name: radarr
image: cr.hotio.dev/hotio/radarr:latest
restart: unless-stopped
logging:
driver: json-file
network_mode: bridge
ports:
- 7878:7878
environment:
- PUID=1000
- PGID=1000
- TZ=Europe/Amsterdam
volumes:
- /etc/localtime:/etc/localtime:ro
- /docker/appdata/radarr:/config
- /data:/data
sonarr:
container_name: sonarr
image: cr.hotio.dev/hotio/sonarr:latest
restart: unless-stopped
logging:
driver: json-file
network_mode: bridge
ports:
- 8989:8989
environment:
- PUID=1000
- PGID=1000
- TZ=Europe/Amsterdam
volumes:
- /etc/localtime:/etc/localtime:ro
- /docker/appdata/sonarr:/config
- /data:/data
bazarr:
container_name: bazarr
image: cr.hotio.dev/hotio/bazarr:latest
restart: unless-stopped
logging:
driver: json-file
network_mode: bridge
ports:
- 6767:6767
environment:
- PUID=1000
- PGID=1000
- TZ=Europe/Amsterdam
volumes:
- /etc/localtime:/etc/localtime:ro
- /docker/appdata/bazarr:/config
- /data/media:/data/media
sabnzbd:
container_name: sabnzbd
image: cr.hotio.dev/hotio/sabnzbd:latest
restart: unless-stopped
logging:
driver: json-file
network_mode: bridge
ports:
- 8080:8080
- 9090:9090
environment:
- PUID=1000
- PGID=1000
- TZ=Europe/Amsterdam
volumes:
- /etc/localtime:/etc/localtime:ro
- /docker/appdata/sabnzbd:/config
- /data/usenet:/data/usenet:rw
Docker-Compose Commands
docker-compose commands - [CLICK TO EXPAND]
sudo docker-compose up -d
(This Docker-compose command helps builds the image, then creates and starts Docker containers. The containers are from the services specified in the compose file. If the containers are already running and you run docker-compose up, it recreates the container.)sudo docker-compose pull
(Pulls an image associated with a service defined in a docker-compose.yml)sudo docker-compose down
(The Docker-compose down command also stops Docker containers like the stop command does. But it goes the extra mile. Docker-compose down, doesn’t just stop the containers, it also removes them.)sudo docker system prune -a --volumes --force
(Remove all unused containers, networks, images (both dangling and unreferenced), and optionally, volumes.)
Questions or Suggestions?
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