- Thank you :)
- I like to keep them seperate. Makes it easier to troubleshoot if some path goes haywire or what not. Also makes it easier to update one without stopping the other
- Yeah i will go through them and remove the version
The are stack itself is so low power that you absolutely can run it on a NAS like synology for example... I mean you can run a Plex server on a NAS and it actually works so...
In my case I have it seperated. I have a NAS that does absolutely nothing else besides being a NAS. I then have my mediaserver for the are stack and jellyfin.
So that could be your Pi, and the you get an old used Synology for example.
You're right, but introducing .env files would be an extra step for each and every docker process here.
This was meant as an absolutely fundamental basic setup. If you know your way around docker you also know what to improve from those guides.
Everyone who does not know this, can get the services up and running without extra steps.
It's a fork of it specifically for jellyfin instead of Plex, so yes 👍
Nice heads up
I don't think a raspberry pi is really suitable for huge amounts of storage. Ideally you should prefer some proper NAS device that also does some proper RAID configuration.
Happy to hear!
I updated the guides to include a link to my next guide: Jellyfin + Jellyseer in junction with sonarr / radarr. Make sure to refresh the page :)
I never really looked into readarr i'm sorry... maybe someone else can chime in? I've always found calibre web super annoying aswell
I saw you peeked inside my ssh key drawer last night step-LAN
I don't know the name anymore but there is an add in to mount external storage into a user storage
Maybe try symlinking it? But I don't know if nextcloud likes that 🤔
This is so sad lol