Radarr manual import workflow
from dmention7@lemm.ee to selfhosted@lemmy.world on 07 Mar 00:04
https://lemm.ee/post/57494311

For background, i have a few hundred torrented movies that I have been downloading to / seeding directly from a folder structure set up for Plex/Jellyfin. Media library is a mix of ripped and downloaded content. Till now I have been using a client on my desktop to manage the files on my media server, but now qbittorent and radarr live on the media server where they should be.

I struggled for a bit to get qbittorent and radarr set up and hardlinking properly, and am now ready to start migrating all those torrents into the proper location. What I’m doing works, but it feels like I’m doing something the long way.

Here’s what I’m currently doing:

If that’s more or less the best way to do it, I will chug through since it seems to be working. It just seems like adding the movie before importing is superfluous, since radarr has no problem matching up the media file the correct movie once it has been added.

TIA!

#selfhosted

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catloaf@lemm.ee on 07 Mar 01:47 next collapse

Yes, there’s no need to do all that. Point radarr at your existing library and use the library import page.

dmention7@lemm.ee on 07 Mar 03:32 collapse

Sure, that would get all the torrented content into radarr quickly, but I guess I should have stated that my intent is to continue seeding that content from the qbittorrent client on my media server.

Unless radarr is somehow smart enough to hardlink the opposite direction (from the media library back to torrents folder) and let qbittorrent know that content is ready to seed…?

catloaf@lemm.ee on 07 Mar 04:33 next collapse

Okay, in that case I would put all the media in the complete downloads folder and import all the torrents to qbittorrent in one go. You can tell it to watch a folder for new torrent files to import.

At that point I think you can do the library import I mentioned above. Go through all the radarr settings first to make sure it imports how you want it to. You’ll probably want the hard link option at least.

Then, you’ll want to disable monitoring on the existing media, because radarr will probably be unable to identify the quality, and it’ll assume it’s the worst quality tier and re-download it (assuming you have all that configured).

dmention7@lemm.ee on 07 Mar 04:51 collapse

Thanks, that makes sense.

I’ve been going cross-eyed staring at the Trash guides and Servarr wiki trying to get hardlinks and all the file paths working correctly (stupid simple fix in the end), so a little nudge in the right direction is appreciated.

FunkFactory@lemmy.world on 10 Mar 10:46 collapse

Are hardlinks directional? I thought they just resulted in 2 identical files that point to the same physical drive space, therefore only taking 1x disk space.

Once I realized Radarr was making those, I basically just mass-hardlinked my old torrent movies directory to my radarr media directory and used the import page.

dmention7@lemm.ee on 10 Mar 12:54 collapse

No you’re right, the hardlinks themselves are not directional. I just misunderstood the advice as meaning that Radarr would create a hardlinked file in my torrent folder, using the existing file in my media library. (It will not)

The part that was tripping me up was that it seemed like I had to manually add the movies to Radarr’s library before it would let me import any of my torrent files. Otherwise it would give me an error saying the movie was unknown.

I think I’m starting to get the hang of it though.

[deleted] on 07 Mar 04:50 collapse

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