6.9 KiB
Installation
{% hint style="danger" %}
Overseerr is currently in BETA. If you would like to help test the bleeding edge, please use the image sctx/overseerr:develop
!
{% endhint %}
{% hint style="info" %}
After running Overseerr for the first time, configure it by visiting the web UI at http://[address]:5055
and completing the setup steps.
{% endhint %}
Docker
{% tabs %} {% tab title="Basic" %}
docker run -d \
--name overseerr \
-e LOG_LEVEL=debug \
-e TZ=Asia/Tokyo \
-p 5055:5055 \
-v /path/to/appdata/config:/app/config \
--restart unless-stopped \
sctx/overseerr
{% endtab %}
{% tab title="Compose" %}
docker-compose.yml:
---
version: '3'
services:
overseerr:
image: sctx/overseerr:latest
container_name: overseerr
environment:
- LOG_LEVEL=debug
- TZ=Asia/Tokyo
ports:
- 5055:5055
volumes:
- /path/to/appdata/config:/app/config
restart: unless-stopped
{% endtab %}
{% tab title="UID/GID" %}
docker run -d \
--name overseerr \
--user=[ user | user:group | uid | uid:gid | user:gid | uid:group ] \
-e LOG_LEVEL=debug \
-e TZ=Asia/Tokyo \
-p 5055:5055 \
-v /path/to/appdata/config:/app/config \
--restart unless-stopped \
sctx/overseerr
{% endtab %}
{% tab title="Manual Update" %}
# Stop the Overseerr container
docker stop overseerr
# Remove the Overseerr container
docker rm overseerr
# Pull the latest update
docker pull sctx/overseerr
# Run the Overseerr container with the same parameters as before
docker run -d ...
{% endtab %} {% endtabs %}
{% hint style="info" %} Use a 3rd party updating mechanism such as Watchtower or Ouroboros to keep Overseerr up-to-date automatically. {% endhint %}
Unraid
- Ensure you have the Community Applications plugin installed.
- Inside the Community Applications app store, search for Overseerr.
- Click the Install Button.
- On the following Add Container screen, make changes to the Host Port and Host Path 1
Appdata
as needed. - Click apply and access "Overseerr" at your
<ServerIP:HostPort>
in a web browser.
Windows
Please refer to the Docker Desktop for Windows user manual for details on how to install Docker on Windows. There is no need to install a Linux distro if using named volumes like in the example below.
{% hint style="danger" %} WSL2 will need to be installed to prevent DB corruption! Please see the Docker Desktop WSL 2 backend documentation for instructions on how to enable WSL2. The commands below will only work with WSL2 installed! {% endhint %}
First, create a volume to store the configuration data for Overseerr using using either the Docker CLI:
docker volume create overseerr-data
or the Docker Desktop app:
- Open the Docker Desktop app
- Head to the Volumes tab
- Click on the "New Volume" button near the top right
- Enter a name for the volume (example:
overseerr-data
) and hit "Create"
Then, create and start the Overseerr container:
docker run -d -e LOG_LEVEL=debug -e TZ=Asia/Tokyo -p 5055:5055 -v "overseerr-data:/app/config" --restart unless-stopped sctx/overseerr
If using a named volume like above, you can safely ignore the warning about the /app/config
folder being incorrectly mounted on the setup page.
To access the files inside the volume created above, navigate to \\wsl$\docker-desktop-data\version-pack-data\community\docker\volumes\overseerr-data\_data
using File Explorer.
{% hint style="info" %}
Docker on Windows works differently than it does on Linux; it runs Docker inside of a stripped-down Linux VM. Volume mounts are exposed to Docker inside this VM via SMB mounts. While this is fine for media, it is unacceptable for the /app/config
directory because SMB does not support file locking. This will eventually corrupt your database, which can lead to slow behavior and crashes.
If you must run Docker on Windows, you should put the /app/config
directory mount inside the VM and not on the Windows host. (This also applies to other containers with SQLite databases.)
Named volumes, like in the example commands above, are automatically mounted inside the VM. {% endhint %}
Linux
{% hint style="info" %} The Overseerr snap is the only officially supported Linux install method aside from Docker.
Currently, the listening port cannot be changed, so port 5055
will need to be available on your host. To install snapd
, please refer to the Snapcraft documentation.
{% endhint %}
To install:
sudo snap install overseerr
Updating: Snap will keep Overseerr up-to-date automatically. You can force a refresh by using the following command.
sudo snap refresh
To install the development build:
sudo snap install overseerr --edge
{% hint style="danger" %} This version can break any moment. Be prepared to troubleshoot any issues that arise! {% endhint %}
Third-Party
{% tabs %}
{% tab title="Gentoo" %} Portage overlay GitHub Repository.
This is now included in the list of Gentoo repositories, so can be easily enabled with eselect repository
Efforts will be made to keep up-to-date with the latest releases; however, this cannot be guaranteed.
To enable:
To enable using eselect repository
, run:
eselect repository enable overseerr-overlay
To install: Once complete, you can just run:
emerge www-apps/overseerr
To install the development build:
A live ebuild (=www-apps/overseerr-9999
) is also available. To use this, you will need to modify accept_keywords for this package:
emerge --autounmask --autounmask-write "=www-apps/overseerr-9999"
Once installed, you will not be notified of updates, so you can update with:
emerge @live-rebuild
or use app-portage/smart-live-rebuild
{% hint style="danger" %} This version can break any moment. Be prepared to troubleshoot any issues that arise! {% endhint %}
{% endtab %}
{% tab title="Swizzin" %}
{% hint style="danger" %} This implementation is not yet merged to master due to missing functionality. You can beta test the limited implementation or follow the status on the pull request. {% endhint %}
The installation is not implemented via Docker, but barebones. The latest release version of Overseerr will be used. Please see the swizzin documentation for more information.
To install, run the following:
box install overseerr
To upgrade, run the following:
box upgrade overseerr
{% endtab %}
{% endtabs %}