The complete guide to building your personal self hosted server for streaming and ad-blocking.

Captain’s note: This OC was originally posted in reddit but its quality makes me wants to ensure a copy survices in lemmy as well.


We will setup the following applications in this guide:

  • Docker
  • AdguardHome - Adblocker for all your devices
  • Jellyfin/Plex - For watching the content you download
  • Qbittorrent - Torrent downloader
  • Jackett - Torrent indexers provider
  • Flaresolverr - For auto solving captcha in some of the indexers
  • Sonarr - *arr service for automatically downloading TV shows
  • Radarr - *arr service for movies
  • Readarr - *arr service for (audio)books
  • lidarr - *arr service for music
  • Bazarr - Automatically downloads subtitles for Sonarr and Radarr
  • Ombi/Overseer - For requesting movies and tv shows through Sonarr and Radarr
  • Heimdall - Dashboard for all the services so you don’t need to remember all the ports

Once you are done, your dashboard will look something like this.

Heimdall Dashboard

I started building my setup after reading this guide https://www.reddit.com/r/Piracy/comments/ma1hlm/the_complete_guide_to_building_your_own_personal/.

Hardware

You don’t need powerful hardware to set this up. I use a decade old computer, with the following hardware. Raspberry pi works fine.

Hardware

Operating system

I will be using Ubuntu server in this guide. You can select whatever linux distro you prefer.

Download ubuntu server from https://ubuntu.com/download/server. Create a bootable USB drive using rufus or any other software(I prefer ventoy). Plug the usb on your computer, and select the usb drive from the boot menu and install ubuntu server. Follow the steps to install and configure ubuntu, and make sure to check “Install OpenSSH server”. Don’t install docker during the setup as the snap version is installed.

Once installation finishes you can now reboot and connect to your machine remotely using ssh.

ssh username@server-ip 
# username you selected during installation
# Type ip a to find out the ip address of your server. Will be present against device like **enp4s0** prefixed with 192.168.

Create the directories for audiobooks, books, movies, music and tv.

I keep all my media at ~/server/media. If you will be using multiple drives you can look up how to mount drives.

We will be using hardlinks so once the torrents are downloaded they are linked to media directory as well as torrents directory without using double storage space. Read up the trash-guides to have a better understanding.

mkdir ~/server
mkdir ~/server/media # Media directory
mkdir ~/server/torrents # Torrents

# Creating the directories for torrents
cd ~/server/torrents
mkdir audiobooks  books  incomplete  movies  music  tv 

cd ~/server/media
mkdir audiobooks  books  movies  music  tv

Installing docker and docker-compose

Docker https://docs.docker.com/engine/install/ubuntu/

# install packages to allow apt to use a repository over HTTPS
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install \
    apt-transport-https \
    ca-certificates \
    curl \
    gnupg \
    lsb-release
# Add Docker’s official GPG key:
curl -fsSL https://download.docker.com/linux/ubuntu/gpg | sudo gpg --dearmor -o /usr/share/keyrings/docker-archive-keyring.gpg
# Setup the repository
echo \
  "deb [arch=amd64 signed-by=/usr/share/keyrings/docker-archive-keyring.gpg] https://download.docker.com/linux/ubuntu \
  $(lsb_release -cs) stable" | sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/docker.list > /dev/null
# Install Docker Engine
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install docker-ce docker-ce-cli containerd.io
# Add user to the docker group to run docker commands without requiring root
sudo usermod -aG docker $(whoami) 

Sign out by typing exit in the console and then ssh back in

Docker compose https://docs.docker.com/compose/install/

# Download the current stable release of Docker Compose
sudo curl -L "https://github.com/docker/compose/releases/download/1.29.2/docker-compose-$(uname -s)-$(uname -m)" -o /usr/local/bin/docker-compose
# Apply executable permissions to the binary
sudo chmod +x /usr/local/bin/docker-compose

Creating the compose file for Adguard home

First setup Adguard home in a new compose file.

Docker compose uses a yml file. All of the files contain version and services object.

Create a directory for keeping the compose files.

mkdir ~/server/compose
mkdir ~/server/compose/adguard-home
vi ~/server/compose/adguard-home/docker-compose.yml

Save the following content to the docker-compose.yml file. You can see here what each port does.

version: '3.3'
services:
    run:
        container_name: adguardhome
        restart: unless-stopped
        volumes:
            - '/home/${USER}/server/configs/adguardhome/workdir:/opt/adguardhome/work'
            - '/home/${USER}/server/configs/adguardhome/confdir:/opt/adguardhome/conf'
        ports:
            - '53:53/tcp'
            - '53:53/udp'
            - '67:67/udp'
            - '68:68/udp'
            - '68:68/tcp'
            - '80:80/tcp'
            - '443:443/tcp'
            - '443:443/udp'
            - '3000:3000/tcp'
        image: adguard/adguardhome

Save the file and start the container using the following command.

docker-compose up -d

Open up the Adguard home setup on YOUR_SERVER_IP:3000.

Enable the default filter list from filters→DNS blocklist. You can then add custom filters.

Filters

Creating the compose file for media-server

Jackett

Jackett is where you define all your torrent indexers. All the *arr apps use the tornzab feed provided by jackett to search torrents.

There is now an *arr app called prowlarr that is meant to be the replacement for jackett. But the flaresolverr(used for auto solving captchas) support was added very recently and doesn’t work that well as compared to jackett, so I am still sticking with jackett for meantime. You can instead use prowlarr if none of your indexers use captcha.

jackett:
    container_name: jackett
    image: linuxserver/jackett
    environment:
      - PUID=1000
      - PGID=1000
      - TZ=Asia/Kolkata
    volumes:
      - '/home/${USER}/server/configs/jackett:/config'
      - '/home/${USER}/server/torrents:/downloads'
    ports:
      - '9117:9117'
    restart: unless-stopped
prowlarr:
		container_name: prowlarr
    image: 'hotio/prowlarr:testing'
    ports:
      - '9696:9696'
    environment:
      - PUID=1000
      - PGID=1000
      - TZ=Asia/Kolkata
    volumes:
      - '/home/${USER}/server/configs/prowlarr:/config'
    restart: unless-stopped

Sonarr - TV

Sonarr is a TV show scheduling and searching download program. It will take a list of shows you enjoy, search via Jackett, and add them to the qbittorrent downloads queue.

sonarr:
    container_name: sonarr
    image: linuxserver/sonarr
    environment:
      - PUID=1000
      - PGID=1000
      - TZ=Asia/Kolkata
    ports:
      - '8989:8989'
    volumes:
      - '/home/${USER}/server/configs/sonarr:/config'
      - '/home/${USER}/server:/data'
    restart: unless-stopped

Radarr - Movies

Sonarr but for movies.

radarr:
    container_name: radarr
    image: linuxserver/radarr
    environment:
      - PUID=1000
      - PGID=1000
      - TZ=Asia/Kolkata
    ports:
      - '7878:7878'
    volumes:
      - '/home/${USER}/server/configs/radarr:/config'
      - '/home/${USER}/server:/data'
    restart: unless-stopped

Lidarr - Music

lidarr:
    container_name: lidarr
    image: ghcr.io/linuxserver/lidarr
    environment:
      - PUID=1000
      - PGID=1000
      - TZ=Asia/Kolkata
    volumes:
      - '/home/${USER}/server/configs/liadarr:/config'
      - '/home/${USER}/server:/data'
    ports:
      - '8686:8686'
    restart: unless-stopped

Readarr - Books and AudioBooks

# Notice the different port for the audiobook container
readarr:
    container_name: readarr
    image: 'hotio/readarr:nightly'
    ports:
      - '8787:8787'
    environment:
      - PUID=1000
      - PGID=1000
      - TZ=Asia/Kolkata
    volumes:
      - '/home/${USER}/server/configs/readarr:/config'
      - '/home/${USER}/server:/data'
    restart: unless-stopped

readarr-audio-books:
    container_name: readarr-audio-books
    image: 'hotio/readarr:nightly'
    ports:
      - '8786:8787'
    environment:
      - PUID=1000
      - PGID=1000
      - TZ=Asia/Kolkata
    volumes:
      - '/home/${USER}/server/configs/readarr-audio-books:/config'
      - '/home/${USER}/server:/data'
    restart: unless-stopped

Bazarr - Subtitles

bazarr:
    container_name: bazarr
    image: ghcr.io/linuxserver/bazarr
    environment:
      - PUID=1000
      - PGID=1000
      - TZ=Asia/Kolkata
    volumes:
      - '/home/${USER}/server/configs/bazarr:/config'
      - '/home/${USER}/server:/data'
    ports:
      - '6767:6767'
    restart: unless-stopped

Jellyfin

I personally only use jellyfin because it’s completely free. I still have plex installed because overseerr which is used to request movies and tv shows require plex. But that’s the only role plex has in my setup.

I will talk about the devices section later on.

For the media volume you only need to provide access to the /data/media directory instead of /data as jellyfin doesn’t need to know about the torrents.

jellyfin:
    container_name: jellyfin
    image: ghcr.io/linuxserver/jellyfin
    environment:
      - PUID=1000
      - PGID=1000
      - TZ=Asia/Kolkata
    ports:
      - '8096:8096'
    devices:
      - '/dev/dri/renderD128:/dev/dri/renderD128'
      - '/dev/dri/card0:/dev/dri/card0'
    volumes:
      - '/home/${USER}/server/configs/jellyfin:/config'
      - '/home/${USER}/server/media:/data/media'
    restart: unless-stopped

plex:
    container_name: plex
    image: ghcr.io/linuxserver/plex
    ports:
      - '32400:32400'
    environment:
      - PUID=1000
      - PGID=1000
      - TZ=Asia/Kolkata
      - VERSION=docker
    volumes:
      - '/home/${USER}/server/configs/plex:/config'
      - '/home/${USER}/server/media:/data/media'
    devices:
      - '/dev/dri/renderD128:/dev/dri/renderD128'
      - '/dev/dri/card0:/dev/dri/card0'
    restart: unless-stopped

Overseer/Ombi - Requesting Movies and TV shows

I use both. You can use ombi only if you don’t plan to install plex.

ombi:
    container_name: ombi
    image: ghcr.io/linuxserver/ombi
    environment:
      - PUID=1000
      - PGID=1000
      - TZ=Asia/Kolkata
    volumes:
      - '/home/${USER}/server/configs/ombi:/config'
    ports:
      - '3579:3579'
    restart: unless-stopped

overseerr:
    container_name: overseerr
    image: ghcr.io/linuxserver/overseerr
    environment:
      - PUID=1000
      - PGID=1000
      - TZ=Asia/Kolkata
    volumes:
      - '/home/${USER}/server/configs/overseerr:/config'
    ports:
      - '5055:5055'
    restart: unless-stopped

Qbittorrent - Torrent downloader

I use qflood container. Flood provides a nice UI and this image automatically manages the connection between qbittorrent and flood.

Qbittorrent only needs access to torrent directory, and not the complete data directory.

qflood:
    container_name: qflood
    image: hotio/qflood
    ports:
      - "8080:8080"
      - "3005:3000"
    environment:
      - PUID=1000
      - PGID=1000
      - UMASK=002
      - TZ=Asia/Kolkata
      - FLOOD_AUTH=false
    volumes:
      - '/home/${USER}/server/configs/qflood:/config'
      - '/home/${USER}/server/torrents:/data/torrents'
    restart: unless-stopped

Heimdall - Dashboard

There are multiple dashboard applications but I use Heimdall.

heimdall:
    container_name: heimdall
    image: ghcr.io/linuxserver/heimdall
    environment:
      - PUID=1000
      - PGID=1000
      - TZ=Asia/Kolkata
    volumes:
      - '/home/${USER}/server/configs/heimdall:/config'
    ports:
      - 8090:80
    restart: unless-stopped

Flaresolverr - Solves cloudflare captcha

If your indexers use captcha, you will need flaresolverr for them.

flaresolverr:
    container_name: flaresolverr
    image: 'ghcr.io/flaresolverr/flaresolverr:latest'
    ports:
      - '8191:8191'
    environment:
      - PUID=1000
      - PGID=1000
      - TZ=Asia/Kolkata
    restart: unless-stopped

Transcoding

As I mentioned in the jellyfin section there is a section in the conmpose file as “devices”. It is used for transcoding. If you don’t include that section, whenever transcoding happens it will only use CPU. In order to utilise your gpu the devices must be passed on to the container.

https://jellyfin.org/docs/general/administration/hardware-acceleration.html Read up this guide to setup hardware acceleration for your gpu.

Generally, the devices are same for intel gpu transcoding.

devices:
      - '/dev/dri/renderD128:/dev/dri/renderD128'
      - '/dev/dri/card0:/dev/dri/card0'

To monitor the gpu usage install intel-gpu-tools

sudo apt install intel-gpu-tools

Now, create a compose file for media server.

mkdir ~/server/compose/media-server
vi ~/server/compose/media-server/docker-compose.yml

And copy all the containers you want to use under services. Remember to add the version string just like adguard home compose file.

Configuring the docker stack

Start the containers using the same command we used to start the adguard home container.

docker-compose up -d

Jackett

Navigate to YOUR_SERVER_IP:9117

Add a few indexers to jackett using the “add indexer” button. You can see the indexers I use in the image below.

Indexers

Qbittorrent

Navigate to YOUR_SERVER_IP:8080

The default username is admin and password adminadmin. You can change the user and password by going to Tools → Options → WebUI

Change “Default Save Path” in WebUI section to /data/torrents/ and “Keep incomplete torrents in” to /data/torrents/incomplete/

Create categories by right clicking on sidebar under category. Type category as TV and path as tv. Path needs to be same as the folder you created to store your media. Similarly for movies type Movies as category and path as movies. This will enable to automatically move the media to its correct folder.

Sonarr

Navigate to YOUR_SERVER_IP:8989

  • Under “Download Clients” add qbittorrent. Enter the host as YOUR_SERVER_IP port as **8080,** and the username and password you used for qbittorrent. In category type TV (or whatever you selected as category name(not path) on qbittorent). Test the connection and then save.
  • Under indexers, for each indexer you added in Jackett
    • Click on add button
    • Select Torzab
    • Copy the tornzab feed for the indexer from jackett
    • Copy the api key from jackett
    • Select the categories you want
    • Test and save
  • Under general, define the root folder as /data/media/tv

Repeat this process for Radarr, Lidarr and readarr.

Use /data/media/movies as root for Radarr and so on.

The setup for ombi/overseerr is super simple. Just hit the url and follow the on screen instructions.

Bazarr

Navigate to YOUR_SERVER_IP:6767

Go to settings and then sonarr. Enter the host as YOUR_SERVER_IP port as 8989. Copy the api key from sonarr settings→general.

Similarly for radarr, enter the host as YOUR_SERVER_IP port as 7878. Copy the api key from radarr settings→general.

Jellyfin

Go to YOUR_SERVER_IP:8096

  • Add all the libraries by selecting content type and then giving a name for that library. Select the particular library location from /data/media. Repeat this for movies, tv, music, books and audiobooks.
  • Go to dashboard→playback, and enable transcoding by selecting as VAAPI and enter the device as /dev/dri/renderD128

Monitor GPU usage while playing content using

sudo intel_gpu_top

Heimdall

Navigate to YOUR_SERVER_IP:8090

Setup all the services you use so you don’t need to remember the ports like I showed in the first screenshot.

Updating docker images

With docker compose updates are very easy.

  • Navigate to the compose file directory ~/server/compose/media-server.
  • Then docker-compose pull to download the latest images.
  • And finally docker-compose up -d to use the latest images.
  • Remove old images by docker system prune -a

What’s next

  • You can setup VPN if torrents are blocked by your ISP/Country. I wanted to keep this guide simple and I don’t use VPN for my server, so I have left out the VPN part.
  • You can read about port forwarding to access your server over the internet.
  •  Tiritibambix   ( @Tiritibambix@lemmy.ml ) 
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    9 months ago

    This is a freaking great guide. I wish I had this wonderful resource when I started selfhosting. Thanks for this.

    People might also want to have a look at pihole as an alternative to adguard for add blocking. It is awesome.

    I prefer homepage over heimdall. It is more configurable, but less noob friendly.

    Jellyseer is a fork of overseer that integrates very well with jellyfin. Reiveer is promising for discovering and adding content.

  • I find Organizrr to be much more comprehensive dashboard. And Lol at running plex just to use overseerr but still streaming with Jelly 😂 just use Jellyseerr, delete plex/over, and save a TON of system resources.

  •  neosheo   ( @neosheo@beehaw.org ) 
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    269 months ago

    Nice. Just want to point out that there is jellyseerr for jellyfin as an alternative to overseerr.

    There is also reiverr which is new which allows managing sonarr,radarr, and jellyfin (basically it providers an interface to watch jellyfin content and also add episodes and movies to sonarr/radarr. I use reiverr for me as admin but it doesnt do requests as of now so i keep jellyseerr for my users

    There is also watchtower on docker that automatically updates your images

    And finally there is rdt-client (real-debrid torrent client) which is a real debrid client that pretends to be qbittorrent and allows sonarr/radarr to download from real debrid instead of torrenting it

  • Thank you for putting in the effort!

    Yet… I don’t get why using the *Arr stack and Plex is so popular. Plex is annoying as fuck and tries to shill you their paid bullshit at every corner. The Arr stack is buggy and having a separate system for recommendations and requests and for library management is super cumbersome for me. Compare that with Stremio… I could never convince the wife to use Plex with overseer at all. Stremio is super convenient.

    Im just saying this because I spent my weekend getting another Arr stack running after years of absence and noticed that the whole thing is as convoluted and fiddly as ever and that really got me wondering why people just take this as the industry standard for torrenting.

      • I might just do that when I find the time. It’s way too unknown imho. Yes, it’s not the right choice if you want to keep everything you watched, but for everything you want to watch once and be done with, it’s a better solution in my opinion.

    •  ribboo   ( @ribboo@lemm.ee ) 
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      209 months ago

      People keep saying this about Plex, yet I’ve received one pop up about paying them during the last 6 months. That was while I tried to use a pay feature. Not once otherwise.

      There are plenty of apps that I can’t use due to their annoyance when you’re in the free tier. Plex have not bothered me in the least.

      Why am I not using streamio? Well, we have an Apple TV so that’s tough. Might get something else down the line, but I pirate to save money, not to save money on entertainment and spend it on equipment instead.

    •  neosheo   ( @neosheo@beehaw.org ) 
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      139 months ago

      Arr and stremio serve different purposes. If you just want to watch content yourself then do stremio.

      If you want to keep certain movies yourself and want to supply a streaming service to friends and family then arr is better.

      Arr has ability to watch your content with no internet.

      If your into foss software arr is also way to go

    •  Kekin   ( @Kekin@lemy.lol ) 
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      69 months ago

      With the Arr stack I like that I can select which torrents I want to download. I don’t know if that’s possible with Stremio?

      Also it doesn’t seem streamio is available for Apple TV. I would give it a try otherwise

    •  DrQuint   ( @DrQuint@lemm.ee ) 
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      39 months ago

      I wasn’t doing the whole “self host thing”, and just running things as needed, but I still got to a point where I questioned why I needed those for. I basically could do things faster by just manually searching on qBit’s external gui attached to Jackett’s trackers. The extra *arr step just made it more fiddly to setup, and gave me less control on the output.

      • On AndroidTV, Kodi (formerly XBMC) with the Jellyfin addon (or Jellycon addon if you’re only casting from another client, and don’t need to sync the libraries) is still a much better video player than the Jellyfin app for AndroidTV imo. It’s more versatile regarding video codecs, and so much more customizable. Also, I really like the Arctic Zephyr skin!

    • Ive been using free plex for years and ive not seen a peep about paying for anything… except on the login screen whomich i rarely see.

      I have a browser shortcut directly to my video content sorted into folders.

    •  Tau   ( @Tau@sopuli.xyz ) 
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      19 months ago

      Because if you are using Stremio (without Debris) sometimes you have to wait a long time for it to download the torrent and sometimes it doesn’t even load. I use Stremio when I want to watch the first episode of something and if I decide I want to watch the rest I add it trough Sonarr

  • I want to echo thanks for this, because this is such an incredible resource and it’s finally motivated my lazy ass to get to work setting up my server.

    Best community, thanks again for this excellent guide.

  •  bort   ( @bort@feddit.de ) 
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    9 months ago

    I recommend to use relevativ paths in the compose files. e.g.

      - '/home/${USER}/server/configs/heimdall:/config'
    

    becomes

      - './configs/heimdall:/config'
    

    you may want to add “:ro” to configs while you are at it.


    also I like to put my service in /srv/ instead of home.


    also I don’t see anything about https/ssl. I recommend adding a section for letsencrypt.


    when services rely on each other, it’s a good idea to put them into the same compose file. (on 2nd thought: I am not sure if you already do that? To me it is not clear, if you use 1 big compose file for everything or many small ones. I would prefer to have 1 big one)

    you can use “depends_on” to link services together.


    you should be consistent with conventions between configurations. And you should remove config-properties that serve no purpose.:

    • you don’t need to specifiy “container_name”, when it would be same name as the service
    • PUID=1000 and PGID=1000 shouldn’t be needed, I think.
    • sometimes you add explicit “:latest” to the version, and sometimes you don’t

    while you are at it, you may want to consider using an .env file where you could move everything that would differ between different deployment. e.g.

    • PUID
    • TZ
    • exposed ports, maybe

    consider using podman instead of docker. The configuration is pretty much identical to docker-syntax. The main difference is, that it doesn’t require a deamon with root privileges.


    you may want to consider to pin version for the containers.

    pro version pinning:

    • no unexpected changes, when you restart the container (e.g. because you accidentally pulled)

    con version pinning:

    • when you DO want to make an update, you have to spent 2 minutes to go to docker hub to find out which version you want.
  •  java   ( @java@beehaw.org ) 
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    69 months ago

    It’s nice to have everything in one place, but that’s not a complete guide. For instance, you mention Jellyfin and Plex, but from this text it’s impossible to figure out how they work, what’s the difference between these two and what should I choose. If you add a bit more context, it’ll be a great material!

    •  neosheo   ( @neosheo@beehaw.org ) 
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      59 months ago

      They are both media servers. Plex is closed source and requires you to make an account with them to use whereas jellyfin is open source and requires no account.

      Basically when you set them up you just pick a directory for movies and tv shows and any video files in that directory can be streamed thru the app or web ui

      I prefer jellyfin because of the differences i mentioned earlier but i use both (you can point them at the same directories). I haven’t really had any issues with jellyfin performance but run plex as a backup.

      Plex has plex shares too where you can stream other peoples content from your server. Idk if jellyfin has that feature

  •  clericc   ( @clericc@feddit.de ) 
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    69 months ago

    the hyphened “docker-compose” cmd is deprecated and does not receive updates anymore. Use “docker compose” (as in a subcommand of the docker cli) instead. You might docker compose files that the old thing refuses.

  • Nice guide! However, I’ve always wondered if all of these even make sense. Like, can’t you just stream from the internet? I understand having thing on your physical storage device is an extra degree of freedom but it’s very rare for me watching something more then once. Also while you can technically run it off a Raspberry Pi, it’s not really recommended and you would need a separate PC which just adds to the cost. Meanwhile, with a simple app like Cloudstream, you can just get whatever you want whenever you want. The only advantage I see of the *arr +media server approach is not needing to connect to a VPN.

    EDIT: After reading the replys just realized I should have specified by streaming sites I mean the shady ones, in my country we use different words and I see how that can confuse some people

    • The nature of pirating means that specific media/torrents/indexes/domains are frequently down or unavailable. A solution today might be taken down or raided by authorities tomorrow.

      It’s just a little more stable/redundant to have media stored locally. Plus, by streaming from something like cloud stream, you’re not contributing to torrent seeding, not to mention that a turnkey solution is a large target for authorities, so it’s possible if not likely that it’ll stop working someday and you’ll have to find something else.

      It’s not for everyone certainly, but if you can afford it it’s a nice solution.

      1. You will probably not reach the level of quality with something like a pirate hoster.
        Either the content will have a lower bitrate or lower resolution.
      2. Foreign dub is hard to come by in decent quality.
      3. Yes storage and compute is surely more expensive but for some it’s a hobby and a learning experience
    •  shrugal   ( @shrugal@lemm.ee ) 
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      English
      39 months ago

      Personally I just think it’s easier to pick out the movies and shows I want to watch, and then be sure that they will be there once I sit down to watch them. No uncertainty, no hunting down a good stream or missing episode, everything is just there and ready. The process is very simple once everything is set up, and you can still delete video files after you watch them if you want to.

    • It’s all about use case. You don’t rewatch shows or movies, so maybe storing media isn’t for you. I’m often rewatching or just having background stuff playing, so it’s nice having it available.

      On top of that, I was tired of streaming services removing content. Netflix removing It’s Always Sunny actually got me started, and the subsequent removal of episodes from shows confirmed I made the right choice. I actually have control over my media, in that I can put a playlist of any number of shows together I want.

      I have playlists for 70’s-80’s shows like The Brady Bunch, The A-Team, Knight Rider, just hit shuffle and it’s 1,000 episodes of random nostalgia. I can set up programs like DizqueTV and set up my own TV channels on top of this. Why pick and choose a show when TV can pick for me?

      In regards to “the hardware” I ran my Plex server on a Pi3 for years. Unless you’re pushing 4k content or certain filetypes, the Pi is more than enough.

      In addition to all this, I’m not reliant on my internet. If power goes out partially, I still have access to my hard drives and have always been able to pop on a show or movie while I clean up in the dark. Or sometimes the internet just goes out and it’s really nice being unaffected.

      I think it’s been 7 or 8 years since I started in college, I’ve spent about $600 total on hard drives that I’m still using today? The money I’ve spent is invested into my server, rather than paying some service for something I can do myself. A service that has to submit to the will of the government, I was curious of the price range of Cloudstream and saw that they took the site and code down, so it’s just another streaming situation that’s no different, except the chance of payment being sent to the actual people who worked on the show is now completely gone. Even just $30/month after 5 years is $1,800.

      I pirate content because I can’t trust Netflix/Hulu/Disney to not fuck with their content. So why would I pay another 3rd party to do the same thing? Moreover, when I subscribe to these streaming services I can contribute to the metrics to say, “Hey, I want more It’s Always Sunny after S14!”.

      Finally - it’s a hobby as well. I like computers. Linux another the shit out of me but I’ve enjoyed setting up a server used for more than just media. On the Pi I would just search for what I wanted and add it as I see fit. Obviously, there’s the *arrs as well which can get it all automated for you. That’s a bit of setup on its own, but it’s fairly straightforward.