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Sonarr and sabnzbd
Sonarr and sabnzbd






  1. #Sonarr and sabnzbd software
  2. #Sonarr and sabnzbd series
  3. #Sonarr and sabnzbd tv
  4. #Sonarr and sabnzbd download

In the second category, indexers are generally third-party services (NZBHydra is more of a meta-indexer). Radarr and CouchPotato work similarly, but for movies.

#Sonarr and sabnzbd software

Once an episode is downloaded, Sonarr then moves it to your library, typically renames it to conform to some specified format, and optionally notifies your media server software (Plex/Emby/whatever). It then searches one or more indexers (configured by you) for episodes you don’t have, sends those to appropriate downloading software (again, configured by you). It first finds that show in a database to see which episodes are known, then scans your hard drive for episodes you already have.

#Sonarr and sabnzbd tv

Sonarr acts somewhat as a DVR for TV shows–you tell it, for example, that you want Doctor Who.

sonarr and sabnzbd

In the first category, you have Sonarr, Radarr, and CouchPotato (the latter of which is defunct), and other similar software.

#Sonarr and sabnzbd download

In listing them together, you’re conflating three distinct tasks: the end-user cataloging/listing, the download indexing, and the actual downloading. But with that said, I’m familiar with most of the software you mention (except for FlexGet). If your objective is to do something without needing to pay, you’re probably out of luck, as finding a new server with good retention that’s free is pretty uncommon, at least in. The reply to this can easily serve as a new FAQ. Other app/client/service I should consider that serves as the above and is possibly better at it? As above? Or not? How does it compare to it? This guy here “needs” the “search for indexers” above to actually find stuff? No? Right? It claims to use “our favorite download software” (how?). So I guess even without newsgroup subscription, it makes sense to use it. Well its description is pretty stupid-proof, as it says it searches for movies from usenet and torrents (and you don’t bother with actual knowledge of the existence of trackers etc.). What makes it difference from Sonarr/Radarr? It is more generic? What does it mean that it is “compatible” with Sonarr/Radarr/NZBGet etc.? Do they need it to become “better” in some way?ĬouchPotato. I also don’t get how it “integrates” with clients (and what do these clients miss if they don’t integrate with FlexGet).

#Sonarr and sabnzbd series

Sonarr, searches for and downloads (?) series episodes, from newsgroups and actually some “indexers” (already first confusion although I can mostly understand the concept).įlexGet, advertises as a “multipurpose automation tool”, I fail to grasp practical uses, although the claim is pretty bold and really seems interesting. So let see what I can understand for each and PLEASE step in and correct me and fill the blanks. NOTE: I haven’t installed any of them to try it out yet, so this is a “virgin” take from info I find online.

sonarr and sabnzbd

If nothing serious can be done without one, please point this out to me and the thread stops there. IMPORTANT NOTE: I don’t plan to pay some newsgroup subscription. MY MAIN GOAL: Bother only with the select few (hopefully one or two) that can actually cover everything I need and add containers for them.

sonarr and sabnzbd

I am talking about the programs I list in the title and try to make a sense of them. I see various pieces of software (I hate the word “apps” as a tag to everything) that “relate” to this, but I have to say I am lost. Of course big chunk of these users are there “for the stuff”. Newsgroups seem to refuse to die and have die hard followers. OK disclaimer, I am rather old to remember newsgroups fine and actually used them… erm decades ago, but also someone who has given up using them for many years and can’t remember a bit about them, except those tree branches that form them and that I used to need software to read them.








Sonarr and sabnzbd