Lidarr
nix-vulnerability-scanner | Lidarr | |
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1 | 122 | |
19 | 3,361 | |
- | 2.5% | |
0.0 | 9.8 | |
over 2 years ago | 4 days ago | |
Nix | C# | |
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
nix-vulnerability-scanner
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What Are Your Most Used Self Hosted Applications?
Initially I spent a lot of time as I used it as an opportunity to learn Nix/NixOS. I used Nix intentionally as it's a rolling release and also it's declarative and intended for reproducible deployments, so I don't need to deal with an OS like Ubuntu that slowly gets crufty and out of date and needs a clean-up or upgrade or complete re-install. And if I do need to re-install, it should be mostly a one-liner.
For security there are these scanners:
https://github.com/flyingcircusio/vulnix
https://github.com/andir/nix-vulnerability-scanner
I also run all services in docker and my network uses VLANs behind an OPNSense firewall. I use Wireguard as a pinch point into my network to access most services. So I'm not too worried about the security aspect.
Upgrading on Nix is pretty easy - just bump your lock file and it will get the latest packages, assuming you are on the unstable channel. But unstable does break on occasion. You an also use the latest stable release of Nix and selectively choose unstable packages, which is probably the way to go. I rarely need to fix anything - it's pretty stable. It only starts eating time when I want to add or upgrade some element to the system, but I always make sure to never do any action that isn't captured in Nix config and backed up, so that I don't have to come back and figure out what exactly I did or how something works again. It's been fine. Nix has a pretty steep learning curve, but considering its power, I think it's absolutely worth it.
Lidarr
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Moving full time to Plexamp
I highly recommend Lidarr for organization/naming of your library. It's usually associated with piracy, but I just use it to maintain my self-ripped library and ensure that Plex has no issues discovering all my media.
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Yo Ho, Yo Ho, a pirates life for me!! Recent streaming services, prices and shows getting butchered, finally decided its time. Here's how a basic self-hosted 'Netflix' would look like. Fully automated once its setup. Using only a makeshift homelab server from second hand parts.
Lidarr: Manages music libraries.
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Most "Private" Streaming Service?
Lidarr + Jellyfin?
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🦙 Llama - It really kicks the amps' ass (Plexamp inspired Music Player)
Lidarr handles your music downloads, sorts them and adds the correct metadata for your library to be picked up by Jellyfin. It will also upgrade your media if a better version is found. https://lidarr.audio/ there is also lidarr extended, which has extra features https://github.com/RandomNinjaAtk/docker-lidarr-extended
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Other windows drive instalation issue
This method doesn't help at all, or I am doing something entirely wrong.
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Honest answer, is Spotify replaceable with Plex?
Lidarr (Music): https://github.com/Lidarr/Lidarr Lidarr can also pull down new album releases for artists, but that's something I usually have turned off (the artists I love I buy the CD for anyway).
- Display studio albums/lives/compilations separately?
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Looking for help sorting music files
Try https://lidarr.audio/
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Everytime when I ask someone what they watch movies on
Lidarr: Music
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Integrating SoulSeek into Jackett (and by extension, qbittorrent)
Just a side note there is lidarr that has webui that handles music, not tried soulseek looking at it now, so don't know if it's the same..
What are some alternatives?
Radarr - Movie organizer/manager for usenet and torrent users.
Headphones - Automatic music downloader for SABnzbd
homeserver-traefik-portainer - My homeserver setup. Everything managed securely using Portainer.
Podgrab - A self-hosted podcast manager/downloader/archiver tool to download podcast episodes as soon as they become live with an integrated player.
Joplin - Joplin - the secure note taking and to-do app with synchronisation capabilities for Windows, macOS, Linux, Android and iOS.
Readarr - Book Manager and Automation (Sonarr for Ebooks)
Kanboard - Kanban project management software
YoutubeDL-Material - Self-hosted YouTube downloader built on Material Design
Sonarr - Smart PVR for newsgroup and bittorrent users.
beets - music library manager and MusicBrainz tagger
Pinry - Pinry, a tiling image board system for people who want to save, tag, and share images, videos and webpages in an easy to skim through format. It's open-source and self-hosted.
overseerr - Request management and media discovery tool for the Plex ecosystem