![]() ![]() A whole ecosystem around Usenet and the NZB file then grew until it became what it is today. An organisation called Newzbin created the NZB file which pointed to where files existed on the Usenet. Usenet eventually became a popular place to store and sort any kind of file. In summary, it were originally designed as a bulletin-board service. Although, this largely depends on the indexers you use and I've personally found this to be very rare if you ignore all. Torrents can have malicious or low quality files. Seeding is usually required while/before downloading Low amount of seeders will result in slow download speeds. More people know about torrents and have a basic understanding of how they work already. ![]() Torrents are well known method of downloading content. Setup and configuration to use Torrents is simple and can be automated! It doesn't require any paid subscriptions to any services for you to download your content! My take on the pros and cons of using torrents are: + Sonarr/Radarr detects the file has been complete, renames and copies the file to the appropriate media directory used by Plex.Deluge downloads the content and once complete, will copy the file over to a completed directory.Sonarr/Radarr adds the torrent file to Deluge and kicks off the download.Sonarr/Radarr communicates with torrent indexers.Use Sonarr/Radarr to select a media file to download.If not, read more here.Ī typical torrent setup using Sonarr/Radarr might work as follows: You probably know what torrents are and how they work. NOTE: this article assumes you've already set up Unraid/Sonarr/Radarr, follow the above article if you haven't. To me, Usenets were a new, different method to download media content! I decided to weigh up the pros and cons of torrents and Usenets by giving Usenets a go! Recently, I was surfing the web and discovered Usenets. This setup helped me automatically download and manage my media content. I suppose i need the Sonarr forum, right? :XĪnyway thank you so much for taking the time to reply.Last year I installed Unraid on my NAS in addition to Sonarr/Radarr/Deluge. do i just have a shit indexer that is indexing a very bad usenet provider that has none of the content i want? Actually this doesn't make sense, because why would manually forcing Sonarr to send files to NZBGet actually work. i guess what i don't understand is why i DON'T have loads of stuff (found by Sonar) just piling up in the NBZGet. Sonarr is just automation for pulling file information.(?) to the download client. NZBGet is effectively just the torrent client. (called "News-Server" in NZBGet) - actually hosts all the nzb files and provides connectivity to all the clients trying to download them This is perfect and explains a lot! Thank you!Ĭatalogs all the headers from the NZB Files everyone posts to Usenet providers. This article explains in short how all parts work. I have no "news-servers" configured in NzbGet (because that's what Sonarr is for if i understand correctly? - to tell NZbGet what to download, right?) but i have "DrunkenSlug" configured as an 'indexer' in Sonarr (which has RSS and Search green and enabled). but then the download queues in NBZGet and does nothing there instead. If i go try to manually search them in Sonarr, i can get them to queue in Sonar, which at least gives me hope that Sonarr and NBZGet are talking to each other correctly. so far as i can tell all the series are "monitored". Nothing moves to NBZGet's queue to download, nothing is even queued in Sonnar to say that it's found something it wants to download. I've added a bunch of series to Sonnar, but.they seem to do absolutely nothing. First time using NZBGet, first time using Sonarr. Have torrented (manually) for years from tpb, can't figure out wtf i'm doing, but would like to get auto tv series downloading happening from Sonarr to NBZGet. Really have nfi what i'm doing with this so apologies for noob questions. ![]()
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