![]() With Sickrage I had to instally Python and do a bunch of command line tweaks to get the back end running. Speaking as someone who started with Sickbeard, jumped to Sickrage and then to Sonarr, I give full thumbs up to Sonarr for a few reasons.įor me, the first noticeable improvement was installation, which was a snap compared to Sickrage. So far I haven’t listed a lot of “real” advantages and this post starts to look too fanboy-ish, or like a raving madman, depending on your point of view. I really don’t want to knock the competition, but for me it’s a fact that sonarr is miles ahead. I was so impressed that I moved 100+ shows over to sonarr on the same day and kicked sickbeard out the window. So initially I thought “ok, let’s give this a go for this single show”. I don’t even watch it myself anymore, because (personal opinion!) it really sucks hairy butt in the later seasons, but other people in the house still enjoy it. I stumbled upon this program because I was tired of having to fix American Dad. ![]() If it’s not feasible, they will explain why, or give an alternative, or consider it for the long run and put a card on their trello board. Their responses are so fast… It’s not the first time that I thought about “oooh this feature would be nice” and post my idea, to have one of the devs reply to say it will be available in the next (dev branch) update. I’ve seen people with the most complex issues post a question here, and the devs will do anything in their power to understand the issue and fix it, or a user with the same setup will chime in with pointers/solutions. My absolute favorite: the dev team and community.For example the use of RSS, the different philosophy around backlog searches… Looking at the same questions that keep coming back, I can tell that former sickbeard users may have an issue with this. I find it far more intuitive than how sickbeard works. It’s so far ahead of sickbeard, it’s not even playing in the same league. I have to be honest, this was already version 2.x, I don’t know what 1.x looked like or what features it had. Then I discovered sonarr (called nzbdrone), and I gave it a go. I used to use sickbeard because there was nothing else, and everyone was using it. Trying not to speak for others, but I think anyone here feels sonarr is better for one way or another, otherwise we wouldn’t be here right? sickchill.json ip4_addr="vnet0|192.168.1.47/24" defaultrouter="192.168.1.I think it’s a question that will only provoke biased answers. sickchill.json dhcp=on bpf=yes vnet=on -accept Once a testing plugin is installed, it will be added to the Plugins → Installed Plugins page of the UI where it can be managed like any other plugin. While in the iocage-ix-plugins directory, you can install the desired testing plugin using the command specified for that plugin. If you have never cloned this repository from your FreeNAS system, run this command from Shell: To install a testing plugin, you will need the latest copy of the iocage-ix-plugins git repository. Try this install Sickchill as a plugin? here is the instructions and guide: # medusa_datadir: Data directory for Medusa (DB, Logs, config)Ĭommand_args="$ # medusa_dir: Directory where Medusa lives. # medusa_group: The group account Medusa daemon runs as what # medusa_user: The user account Medusa daemon runs as what # medusa_enable (bool): Set to NO by default. # Add the following lines to /etc/rc.conf.local or /etc/rc.conf ![]()
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