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Joined 12 days ago
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Cake day: March 23rd, 2025

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  • So i’ve been trying to set this up this exact thing for the past few weeks - tried all manner of different Nginx/Tailscale/VPS/Traefik/Wireguard/Authelia combos, but to no avail

    I was lost in the maze

    However, I realised that it was literally as simple as setting up a CloudFlare Tunnel on my particular local network I wanted exposed (in my case, the Docker network that runs the JellyFin container) and then linking that domain/ip:port within CloudFlare’s Zero Trust dashboard

    Cloudflare then proxies all requests to your public domain/route to your locally hosted service, all without exposing your private IP, all without exposing any ports on your router, and everything is encrypted with HTTPS by default

    And you can even set up what looks like pretty robust authentication (2FA, limited to only certain emails, etc) for your tunnel

    Not sure what your use case is, but as mine is shared with only me and my partner, this worked like a charm




  • I’ve literally just set this all up and it’s working now after some tinkering, so here’s what I found out. Assuming you have correctly configured the sonarr/qbitorrent api keys and credentials:

    When you make a TV show request in Sonarr, it will automatically add the torrent to your download client (e.g qbitorrent)

    qbitorrent will then download the file to wherever you specify (e.g. /torrents/completed)

    periodically, Sonarr will scan that /torrents/completed folder, and if it finds the tagged TV show, it will either copy or hard link that video file to your specified media folder (e.g. /media/tv-shows)

    JellyFin will do the same, periodically scanning your media folders to see if there are any updates

    EDIT: also if you are using docker containers, make sure that Sonars native /downloads folder is pointed at the same external folder your qBitTorrent is downloading files in