![]() ![]() Just remember, this is going to be a large share after a few months, so make sure you're not limiting to much. If you want to use certain drives for media, and certain drives for other stuff, fill out one of these fields. Include/Excluded Disks: here you can specify which disks unraid will or won't use for a share.Split level: 2 - that will keep all of a given tv show on one hard drive.Allocation Method: - read the wiki page on this if you like, I use high-water.Click Add Share and enter the following info:.If not, follow these steps to create a user share on your array for Media to be stored on. If you already have a user share created with media on it, skip this step. We have now created /mnt/cache/appdata that will survive reboots and won't be copied to our array. call it "appdata" and set the Use cache disk to "Only".On the web GUI, create a share that is cache only: If you have an SSD cache drive, I'd use option 2, but I'm going to continue this tutorial assuming we are using a cache drive folder.Ĭreate a folder on your cache drive that will not be copied to the array install a dedicated app drive (an old 40 gig HDD is lots) - this can be done using the SNAP plugin.put a folder on your cache drive that is dedicated for this purpose.The applications will keep your array drives spinning all the time, and wear then unnecessarily - again. It also isn't a good idea to store the app data on an array disk. The increased read and write load will shorten the life of your flash drive (by a lot - just don't do it). I would advise you NOT to use your flash drive for this. So unRAID applications are re-installed on each boot, however, we don't want to have to reconfigure them each time the server is booted, so we need a place on a disk for data directories. Creating a place for your applications to liveĪpplications are installed in to the /usr/local folder on linux, and that folder is on the RAM drive and won't survive a reboot. make your wife/girlfriend/dog happy to watch downloaded TV shows. ![]() set up SB and CP to move completed downloads to a media share on your array.set up SB and CP to pass download requests to your SAB install.create a folder for your apps to run out of that's not on your array.an account on a new indexing site (again, google around, but these are considerably harder to find now because of DMCA takedown enforcement).an account on a news group server (google around and find one you like that has the right data package for you).an unRAID server with version 5.0rc1 or higher - I'd recommend the newest.unRAID GUI or web UI - the unRAID web page located at or what ever your server is named.SAB - sabnzbd - the news group downloading software.CP - couchpotatp - the movie management software.SB - sickbeard - the TV show management software.I'm going to use the following conventions here - so you know what I mean: If you don't know what the linux terms are, please see my Introduction to the linux shell page. Torrents are just not worth the hassel in my mind, but if you want to use torrents, you'll need to use Transmission or uTorrent for downloading and that is not covered by this guide. Newsgroups will get you more consistent quality and download reliabilty - and in practice, depending on how much you use them, a newgroup set up with a moderate movie and TV show collection is only going to cost you $50 or $60 a year. From personal experience, I can advice you torrents just don't work as well. This guide is based on using Usenet News Group servers (that you need to pay for), not torrents. I have written this guide based on a long string of emails helping someone else get them set up, so I hope it's useful. Combine these with a media player like Plex or XBMC and you will have an media system that is the envy of all your friends. These 3 pieces of software automate the downloading and organizing of media on your server. Probably the most common use of unRAID servers is managing a home media collection. Creating a place for your applications to live ![]()
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