

With great power comes great responsibility. It can access any file and run any command on your Linux system. This is the super admin account that can do anything and everything with the system. A lot of placeholder text you can have to autofill as default, this doesn't so I was just letting people know that.In Linux, there is always a super user called root. It's placeholder example text the box itself is blank by default


Prowlarr and radarr both did, I haven't tried the others yet.It's placeholder example text the box itself is blank by default This issue was previously squashed I thought. Which app threw that error? It should have only been Prowlarr which runs as its own user/group since it does not need any access to the library or download folders. I believe I stated it wasn't optimal, just what I got to work in the very first bolded line. If everything is running as say radarr:radarr then that means either nothing will work because permissions are not configured correctly or you have permissions as 777/666 which is extremely insecure and should never be done. It kept exiting telling me the group "prowlarr" didn't exist. The Group does not need to be created, the script creates the applicable group that you tell it to. If it's Deluge, select that, set the name to Deluge, and then all you should need to change is whatever password you've updated it to. Then select the download client you're using. This next part is for Prowlarr and the other *arr Applications as well.Ĭlick on Settings > Download Clients and under "Download Clients" click the plus button. Now when you go back to the service you added it should now only be missing one item which is the download client. Test it and you should get a green checkmark, then click save. Copy that and paste it into the "ApiKey" back on the Prowlarr page. So for example if you're adding Sonarr, go over to your Sonarr web interface, to go Settings > General and under "Security" you'll see API Key. Then go to whichever app it is and get the API Key.

I put the Sync level to full and then just set the Prowlarr Server to your localhost:port and the same for whatever *arr service you're linking it to (notice it doesn't autofill the suggestions for some reason so I had to actually type out the defaults it had listed). Then go to Settings > Apps > ApplicationsĬlick the button for this and select the application you want to add. To set an indexer go to Indexers, click add indexer, and choose the one you want. By default Prowlarr is localhost:9696 and Sonarr is localhost:8989. Once you set up each of your *arr services and run them they should have given you the address/port to reach the web interfaces. Then on the ipleak page it will show you the ip address of for your torrent. Just click activate, copy the url, and in Deluge click "add" then "url" and paste in the url. Note, you can check your torrent's ip address using and at the bottom there is a "Torrent Address detection". Just make sure you read to the bottom of the page so that you're grabbing the right port / address. It's pretty much just copying and pasting your information into the Socksv5 w/ Auth setting in Deluge > Preferences > Proxy. NordVPN's official guide to setup a proxy on Deluge can be found here. With Deluge I mainly just connected to the daemon, then made sure to go into the proxy settings and add my NordVPN account. You can do that under Preferences > Interface. The first message you'll get when you pull up the Deluge web interface will be able to change the password. Now that everything is installed you can link them all together.
