Important or Recent Updates
Historic Updates | Date |
---|---|
Updated guide for Container Manager | 22/05/2023 |
Moved from UI setup to Project Setup which is more flexible and easier to maintain. Added an addition element to the compose to restrict the container from gaining additional privilege. | 25/10/2023 |
Added FlareSolver to the Extras section of the guide | 10/11/2023 |
Guide amended to integrate Flaresolverr as a core piece of the project | 09/12/2023 |
What is Prowlarr and FlareSolverr?
Prowlarr is an application that combines your various indexers for Torrents and Usenet into one place, it then syncs all the indexer settings automatically with Sonarr, Radarr etc. FlareSolverr is an additional proxy which helps bypass Cloudflare protection that many indexers use.
If you plan on adding this to your GlueTUN VPN setup see the left menu for the alternative guide.
Let’s Begin
In order for you to successfully use this guide please complete these two guides and come back here.
- Step 2: Setting up a restricted Docker user
- Step 3: Setting up a Docker Bridge Network
Folder Setup
Let’s start by getting some folders set up for the containers to use. Open up File Station create the following.
Folders
/docker/projects/prowlarr-flaresolverr-compose/docker/prowlarr
Container Manager
Next we are going to set up a ‘Project’ in Container Manager. Open up Container Manager and click on Project then on the right-hand side click ‘Create’.
In the next screen we will set up our General Settings, enter the following:
Section | Setting |
---|---|
Project Name: | prowlarr-flaresolverr |
Path: | /docker/projects/prowlarr-flaresolverr-compose |
Source: | Create docker-compose.yml |
Next we are going to drop in our docker compose configuration copy all the code in the box below and paste it into line ‘1’ just like the screenshot.
What on earth is a Docker Compose?Docker Compose allows us to define how Docker should set up one or more containers within a single configuration file. This file is yaml formatted and Container Manager uses the Projects feature to manage them.
YAML
services: linuxserver-prowlarr: image: linuxserver/prowlarr:latest container_name: prowlarr environment: - PUID=1234 #CHANGE_TO_YOUR_UID - PGID=65432 #CHANGE_TO_YOUR_GID - TZ=Europe/London #CHANGE_TO_YOUR_TZ - UMASK=022 volumes: - /volume1/docker/prowlarr:/config ports: - 9696:9696/tcp network_mode: synobridge security_opt: - no-new-privileges:true restart: always flaresolverr: image: flaresolverr/flaresolverr:latest container_name: flaresolverr environment: - TZ=Europe/London #CHANGE_TO_YOUR_TZ ports: - 8191:8191 network_mode: synobridge security_opt: - no-new-privileges:true restart: always
Environment Variables
We need to make some changes in order for the container to have the correct permissions to save its configuration files and to have access to your media.
Variable | Value |
---|---|
PUID | (required) The UID you obtained in the user setup guide should be entered here |
PGID | (required) The GID you obtained in the user setup guide should be entered here |
TZ | (required) Your timezone wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_tz_database_time_zones |
Click ‘Next’
You do not need to enable anything on the ‘Web portal settings’ screen click ‘Next’ again.
On the final screen click ‘Done’ which will begin the download of the container images and once downloaded they will be launched!
The image will now be downloaded and extracted. You should see ‘Code 0’ when it has finished.
The Project should now be running with a Green status
Firewall Exceptions
(Skip if you don’t have the Firewall configured)
If you have enabled and configured the Synology Firewall you will need to create exceptions for any containers that have a Web UI or have any incoming or outgoing connections.
Make a note of the ports used in the compose section of the guide, these will be the ones you need to create exceptions for.
(Please note this is a generic section and will not show the specific ports used in this guide however it applies in the same way)
Also, I would like to refer people to the great guide on getting the Firewall correctly configured over on WunderTechs site.
Head into the Control Panel
> Security
> Firewall
, from here click Edit Rules
for the profile you set up when you enabled the Firewall.
Next click on Create
and you will see the screen below. Source IP and Action will be automatically selected to All and Allow, I will leave it up to you as to your own preference on whether you want to lock down specific Source IPs from having access. In this example we will leave as All.
You will now choose ‘Custom‘ and then the Custom
button
Now select Destination from the drop-down menu, most web based containers require TCP access but check the guide as it will show the port and protocol. Then add comma separated ports. Then press OK.
Click OK a couple of times to get back to the main screen. You will see by default the new rule is added to the bottom of the list. You must always have your Block All rule last in the list as the rules are applied top down so move your container up.
You have now completed the Firewall changes and can continue with the guide.
Container set up complete
You should now be able to access Prowlarr via the IP of your NAS followed by the port 9696
e.g. 192.168.0.40:9696
FlareSolverr Setup
Once you have set up Prowlarr and the Indexers you want to use, you can then add FlareSolverr to the ones that require it.
Go to Settings > Indexers > Click + then select FlareSolverr
Once added enter the details as per the screenshot below – ensure you keep note of the ‘Tags’ as this is what you will add to an actual indexer to tell it to use FlareSolverr.
There are 3 possible connection options to use, try from top to bottom.
http://localhost:8191/
http://172.20.0.1:8191/
http://YOUR-NAS-IP:8191/
You then tag each indexer that requires FlareSolverr
FAQ
Prowlarr can’t connect to my Arrs or Download Client
When setting up the connection between Prowlarr and Radarr/Sonarr/Lidarr some users have reported getting a time-out when using the NAS IP. If this happens try using the Gateway IP of the Synobridge network, which should be ‘http://172.20.0.1’. (you can see this in the Container Manager UI in Networks)
Looking for some help, join our Discord community
If you are struggling with any steps in the guides or looking to branch out into other containers join our Discord community!
Buy me a beverage!
If you have found my site useful please consider pinging me a tip as it helps cover the cost of running things or just lets me stay hydrated. Plus 10% goes to the devs of the apps I do guides for every year.