Skip to content

Deluge with GlueTUN VPN in Container Manager on a Synology NAS

Important or Recent Updates
Historic UpdatesDate
New DSM7.2 Container Manager Update (Beta/RC)26/04/2023
Added watchtower labels to the compose to allow updates and changed the proxies to off by default06/05/2023
Removed the Watchtower ‘Depends On’ Labels as they do not successfully update the GlueTUN container. Added an Exclusion label to the GlueTUN container, so it can just be manually updated.11/05/2023
Update includes: Firewall Input Ports for when your provider offers port forwarding, also a note in relation to volumes and added PUID/PGID settings for GlueTUN14/06/2023
Update for Wireguard Kernel Module Install which reduces overall CPU usage for Wireguard connections
Please note if you previously followed this guide you can follow the new section to update your existing set up.
21/09/2023
Added Health checks to dependent containers25/09/2023
Added an addition element to the compose to restrict the container from gaining additional privileges and umask environment variable25/10/2023
Swapped YAML to use Wireguard by default
(Thanks Bob)
Enhanced the TUN script to only run if the TUN is not detected
(Thanks Andy for the original suggestion)
22/01/2024
Added – UPDATER_PERIOD=24h variable in order to ensure the latest server lists for your provider all pulled once a day27/04/2024
Historic Updates

A small note to remember about updates in this guide I set GlueTUN to use the ‘latest’ version tag, sometimes it has updates which break things, so if you have an issue after an update roll back to the most recent full stable release from this page, so for example as of July 2024 that would be image: qmcgaw/gluetun:v3.38

What are Deluge and GlueTUN?

Deluge is a lightweight torrent downloader, it has a number of built-in plugins to help organise your downloads and a full web interface, GlueTUN is the Docker container that has pre-configured VPN connections for numerous VPN providers.

Before you start check the GlueTUN Wiki to see if your provider is on the supported list.

Also, if you are yet to choose a provider have a look at the Reddit list of recommended suppliers as could save you a headache when trying to seed. I currently use AirVPN which has nice easy port forwarding unlike some others. This is my affiliate link if you fancy signing up.

Let’s Begin

In this guide I will take you through the steps to get Deluge up and running in Docker and a separate GlueTUN VPN container. By having a separate container for the VPN connection we can use it in the future for other applications such as Prowlarr, this is useful if you have torrent indexers blocked in your country.

As the Synology DSM GUI does not support some of the functions we need for this tutorial we will be using Docker Compose. This is not as complicated as it might seem!

In order for you to successfully use this guide please complete the three preceding guides

Folder Setup

Let’s start by getting some folders set up for the containers to use. Open up File Station create the following.

Folders
/docker/projects/vpnproject-compose
/docker/gluetun
/docker/deluge



Setting up the TUN start up script

In order for the VPN connection to work we need to make sure the TUN Interface is available to make the connection to a VPN provider. In order to ensure it is available even after a reboot we will set up a small ‘script’.

Open up Control Panel and then click on Task Scheduler


Next click on Create, Triggered Task then User Defined Script.


Enter the following:

SectionSetting
Task:VPNTUN
User:root
Event:Boot-up
EnabledTick


On the Task Settings tab copy and paste the code below in the ‘User-Defined script’ section. It will look like screenshot.

Bash
#!/bin/sh -e

insmod /lib/modules/tun.ko


You can now press OK and agree to the warning message. Next run the script which will enable the TUN device.

You can now move on to the next step.

Wireguard Kernel Module
(Recommended for Performance & Reduced CPU Resource not required for OpenVPN)

The default Gluetun Wireguard setup uses a ‘Userspace’ implementation of Wireguard which requires higher CPU resources. For example a 40MiB download via qBittorrent uses up to 176% in CPU (1.7 Cores) on my 1821+.

By installing the appropriate Kernel Module this reduces down to 1 or 2% which frees up the CPU for other tasks.

BlackVoid.club have put together a Kernel Module for Synology which allows Gluetun to use the lower level Kernel to perform Wireguard duties make sure you drop them a thanks as this would not be possible without them!

While on first glances it looks like a long installation process the page details a number of methods. I recommend having a read taking note of warnings and also if you want to build your own module it tells you how.

The TLDR is below.

  1. Find your model of NAS under the correct DSM version section (If you are following this guide it will be 7.2) and download the pre compiled .spk file
  2. Head into Package Center and click ‘Manual Install’ on the top right and install the .spk file and untick the box to run after install
  3. Reboot
  4. SSH Into your NAS (Just like in the User Setup guide) and elevate yourself to root by typing sudo -i and entering your password
  5. Enter this command and press enter to start up the module /var/packages/WireGuard/scripts/start

You should now be able to see the WireGuard package running in Package Center. Please note while I will try my best to support in relation to this module I may have to refer you on if it is a specific technical issue.

When you have GlueTUN running check the log for this line [wireguard] Using available kernelspace implementation, and you know it is working. (Does not apply to OpenVPN)

On to the next part.

Container Manager

Next we are going to set up a ‘Project’ in Container Manager, a project is used when you want multiple containers to all be loaded together and often rely on each other to function. In our case we want Deluge to load and talk to the GlueTUN VPN container.

Open up Container Manager and click on Project then on the right-hand side click ‘Create’

In the next screen we will set up our General Settings, enter the following:

SectionSetting
Project Name:vpn-project
Path:/docker/projects/vpnproject-compose
Source:Create docker-compose.yml

Next we are going to drop in our docker compose configuration copy all the code in the box below and paste it into line ‘1’ just like the screenshot


YAML
services:
  gluetun:
    image: qmcgaw/gluetun:latest
    container_name: gluetun
    cap_add:
      - NET_ADMIN
    devices:
      - /dev/net/tun:/dev/net/tun
    ports:
      - 8888:8888/tcp # HTTP proxy
      - 8388:8388/tcp # Shadowsocks
      - 8388:8388/udp # Shadowsocks
      - 8112:8112/tcp # port for deluge
    volumes:
      - /volume1/docker/gluetun:/gluetun
    environment:
      - PUID=1234 #CHANGE_TO_YOUR_UID
      - PGID=65432 #CHANGE_TO_YOUR_GID
      - TZ=Europe/London #CHANGE_TO_YOUR_TZ
      - VPN_SERVICE_PROVIDER=NAMEOFYOURPROVIDER
      - VPN_TYPE=wireguard #change as per wiki
      - WIREGUARD_PRIVATE_KEY=YOUR-PRIVATE-KEY #remove if using openvpn
      - WIREGUARD_PRESHARED_KEY #For AIRVPN remove if not required
      - WIREGUARD_ADDRESSES=10.x.x.x #IP V4 Only - remove if using openvpn
      - SERVER_COUNTRIES=VPNSERVERCOUNTRY #Change based on the Wiki
      - HTTPPROXY=off #change to on if you wish to enable
      - SHADOWSOCKS=off #change to on if you wish to enable
      - FIREWALL_OUTBOUND_SUBNETS=172.20.0.0/16,192.168.0.0/24 #change this in line with your subnet see note on guide.
#      - FIREWALL_VPN_INPUT_PORTS=12345 #uncomment this line and change the port as per the note on the guide
      - UPDATER_PERIOD=24h
    network_mode: synobridge
    labels:
      - com.centurylinklabs.watchtower.enable=false
    security_opt:
      - no-new-privileges:true
    restart: always
      
  linuxserver-deluge:
    image: linuxserver/deluge:latest
    container_name: deluge
    environment:
      - PUID=1234 #CHANGE_TO_YOUR_UID
      - PGID=65432 #CHANGE_TO_YOUR_GID
      - TZ=Europe/London #CHANGE_TO_YOUR_TZ
      - DELUGE_LOGLEVEL=error #optional
      - UMASK=022
    volumes:
      - /volume1/docker/deluge:/config
      - /volume1/data/torrents:/data/torrents
    network_mode: service:gluetun # run on the vpn network
    depends_on:
      gluetun:
        condition: service_healthy
    security_opt:
      - no-new-privileges:true
    restart: always
    


What is a Docker Compose?!

The code we just dropped into Container Manager defines how we want each of the container’s setup. It is broken down into sections such as ports we want to access, which folders we want the container to use and what some variables to define where we live and settings for the container known as ‘Environment’ variables.

We will now make some important edits!

IDs and Timezone

First look for the lines below, they appear twice each, these control the containers access to our filesystem and also the user the containers run as.

VariableValue
PUID(required) The UID you obtained in the user setup guide
PGID(required) The GID you obtained in the user setup guide
TZ(required) Your timezone wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_tz_database_time_zones

Ports and Proxies

In the top Gluetun section you will notice that we have some additional ports assigned for a http proxy and Shadowsocks Proxy – this means you can direct traffic from other devices or applications on your network through the container! If you want to use these change the following.

VariableValue
HTTPPROXYoff (default) on (enabled)
SHADOWSOCKSoff (default) on (enabled)

Firewall Outbound Subnet

This section controls your ability to access the UIs of any containers running through the GlueTUN containers network.

Default Value
      - FIREWALL_OUTBOUND_SUBNETS=172.20.0.0/16,192.168.0.0/24

The first part ‘172.20.0.0/16’ don’t edit as this is our ‘synobridge’ network and allows other containers such as Radarr to access the download client.

We need to change the second IP after the , this allows us to access the WebUI and containers via out local network.

This IP address (subnet) is easy to figure out. If you NAS IP is 192.168.0.27 your subnet is 192.168.0.0/24 (notice I just changed the last number before the /24 to 0)

Firewall Input Ports

This part is # commented out by default, if your VPN provider offers port forwarding remove the # from the start of the line and change the port number(s) in line with the ones provided to you. This will also be the port used within the download client and will help overall connectivity.

If you do update this make sure you change the Listening Port in Deluge when setting up.

Default Value
      - FIREWALL_VPN_INPUT_PORTS=12345,56789

Volumes

By default, I have assumed you have your config files stored on /volume1 if these are located on another volume amend these lines accordingly.

Default Value
      - /volume1/docker/gluetun:/gluetun
      - /volume1/docker/deluge:/config
      - /volume1/data/torrents:/data/torrents      

Watchtower Exclusion

You don’t need to change this, I added a label to avoid Watchtower automatically updating the GlueTUN container as it will always break the overall project which can be inconvenient if you are not around to fix it. You can update the container using the mini guide on the left menu of the site.

Default Value
    labels:
      - com.centurylinklabs.watchtower.enable=false


Important – Provider Specific Edits

This next bit is important and if you don’t pay attention to the details you will have a harder time connecting up to your VPN provider

Open up the GlueTun Wiki and in the list find your provider.

Let’s use AirVPN as our example.

On the page you will see a number of key sections highlighting the variables that work with AirVPN. This is important as they can vary per provider so read everything on your providers page. (See the FAQ for the steps to get AirVPN Wireguard Details)

Key differences are generally the SERVER_COUNTRIES / SERVER_CITIES etc as they will vary so use the correct setting, your provider should have a list of Countries and Cities they support.

I have provided some common defaults in the compose for you, but you need to amend them in line with your providers page.

Default Value
      - VPN_SERVICE_PROVIDER=NAMEOFYOURPROVIDER
      - VPN_TYPE=wireguard
      - WIREGUARD_PRIVATE_KEY=YOUR-PRIVATE-KEY
      - WIREGUARD_ADDRESSES=10.x.x.x
      - SERVER_COUNTRIES=VPNSERVERCOUNTRY

If your provider is not supported, you can make a request on GitHub to add it, or you can follow the custom providers guidance on GlueTUNs WIKI.

Once you have checked for your provider, make the appropriate edits to the compose accordingly.

That completes the edits to the compose!

Click ‘Next

You do not need to enable anything on the ‘Web portal settings’ screen click ‘Next’ again

On the final screen click Done which will begin the download of the container images and once downloaded they will be launched!

The images will now be downloaded and extracted. You should see ‘Code 0’ when it has finished.

You will now see your vpn-project running both containers should have a green status on the left-hand side.

Error: “gluetun is unhealthy”

At this stage if you receive an error relating to GlueTUN being unhealthy there is likely an error in the config file, this usually relates to the provider specific elements. If you check the logs for the GlueTUN container it will tell you why it couldn’t connect. If you get stuck drop me a comment with a copy of the logs via https://paste.drfrankenstein.co.uk.

Firewall Exceptions

(Skip if you don’t have the Firewall configured)

If you have the Synology Firewall enabled please see this additional guide for further info on exceptions and correct set up.

Final Deluge Setup

As we have used /data/torrents as the mount point for our downloads we need to make sure Deluge uses this same file path.

We are going to do this by just changing the directory settings within Deluge.

Open a new browser tab and go to your NAS IP address on port 8112 (e.g. 192.168.0.46:8112)

Deluge by default has the password of ‘deluge’ to access the web UI, you can change or remove this later in the settings.

Next you will connect to the Deluge back end, just select the host and click connect, it will remember this going forward.

Now you are in the UI click on Preferences at the top of the screen, we are going to change the various folders to the settings shown in the screenshot/table below

OptionFromTo
Download to:/root/Downloads/data/torrents/incoming
Move complete to:/root/Downloads/data/torrents/completed

Network

To be sure that Deluge only uses the TUN interface you next need to go to the Network options (second one down) and within the ‘Outgoing Interface’ enter ‘tun0’

Plugins

There are a couple of plugins you will want to enable. (If you are looking for something to unpack torrents that are zipped then follow the Unpackerr guide)

  • Autoadd – This allows you to pull in any torrents in the watch directory
  • Label – This allows Radarr/Sonarr to assigned labels and pull downloads into subdirectories – no additional configuration required for this plugin
  • Auto Remove Plus – Download the ‘AutoRemovePlus-2.0.0-py3.8.egg’ version from the Deluge forums and place it in the Plugins’ folder in /docker/deluge/plugins. It allows you to fine tune when to remove torrents and their associated data once downloaded. (You may need to stop and start the container for this to appear)
Autoadd Plugin Settings

AutoremovePlus Settings

That’s it you are completely set up! I recommend having a quick read through the FAQ as it covers some questions you may have!


FAQs

Q: How can I update the GlueTUN containers?

A: See the Updating Containers section on the menu.

Q: How do I get my AirVPN details?

Plaintext
## Obtaining your WireGuard or OpenVPN details

- Login to your AirVPN account and go to the Client Area
- Click on `VPN Devices` and create a new device named `GlueTUN` (you can name this anything)
- Back in the Client Area select `Config Generator` and select the following:
  - Linux
  - Turn on either WireGuard or OpenVPN
  - Choose the newly created `GlueTUN` device
  - Select your preferred Server or Region
- Click Generate and download the config file.

### WireGuard Config
- In the config file you only require the following

Address = 10.141.x.x/32 #Nothing after this part
PrivateKey = uFdxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
PresharedKey = 4s2xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

Q: How can I be sure the VPN connection is working?

A: Go to the TorGuard Check My Torrent IP site, right-click on the Green banner and copy the link (it’s a Magnet link) Then add this link into Deluge and start the torrent. Keeping the site open after a few seconds the site will show the IP address of the connection it finds. This will be of the VPN provider not your home IP. (Please note the torrent doesn’t actually download anything it’s purely doing an IP check)

Q: Everything seems to be connected but nothing is downloading.

Are you using TorGuard – If so they block torrents on their US servers. Change to another country – Also while you are at it, you may need to configure port forwarding in your TorGuard account.

Try grabbing the Ubuntu torrent as that is a sure fire way of testing as generally it has over 3k seeds.

Q: My container doesn’t seem to start on a reboot even with the TUN script.

A: I have seen this a few times and usually relates to the VPN not completing its connection fast enough before containers using the VPN start. You can try setting an additional startup script by doing the following.

Head into Control Panel and go to Task Scheduler Click Create > Triggered Task > User Defined Task

SectionSetting
Task NameDockerVPNBootUp
UserRoot
EventBoot Up
Pre TaskSelect the VPNTUN script from the drop-down that you created at the start of the guide

In the ‘Task Settings’ tab enter the following and then click Save

Bash
sleep 120
docker-compose -f /volume1/docker/projects/vpnproject-compose/compose.yaml down 
wait
docker-compose -f /volume1/docker/projects/vpnproject-compose/compose.yaml up -d

Q: How can I add additional services to the VPN container?

A: Adding additional containers to the VPN network is very easy. As you can see in the example below I have added Prowlarr to the bottom of the compose. The only amendments are that the ‘network_mode’ uses the Gluetun container and the ports for Prowlarr have been moved up to the Gluetun containers ports section.

Also see the separate Prowlarr guide on the left menu for setting up FlareSolver (In the Extras section)

YAML
      - 9696:9696 # add this to the ports section of GlueTUN
#add the below to the bottom of the compose
  linuxserver-prowlarr:
    image: linuxserver/prowlarr:latest
    container_name: prowlarr
    environment:
      - PUID=1234 #CHANGE_TO_YOUR_UID
      - PGID=65432 #CHANGE_TO_YOUR_GID
      - TZ=Europe/London #CHANGE_TO_YOUR_TZ
      - UMASK=022
    volumes:
      - /volume1/docker/prowlarr:/config
    network_mode: service:gluetun # run on the vpn network
    depends_on:
      gluetun:
        condition: service_healthy
    security_opt:
      - no-new-privileges:true
    restart: always

How can I use the Deluge ‘Thin Client’ aka Desktop Client?

This is fairly straight forward. First add the Daemon Port into the GlueTUN ports section so it is exposed and can be connected to.

YAML
      - 58846:58846 #Deluge Daemon

Save and Build the VPN Project, and then we need to allow a user access to the Deluge server.

Within /docker/deluge there is an AUTH file. Open this file using your favourite text editor and add a second line under the ‘localclient’

YAML
your-username:password1:10

Changing the your-username to whatever username you want to use followed after the : by a password you want. Leave the :10 this grants access to the Daemon.

Save the file and you should now be able to connect.

More will be added as questions come up



Looking for some help, join our Discord community

If you are struggling with any steps in the guides or looking to branch out into other containers join our Discord community!

Buy me a beverage!

If you have found my site useful please consider pinging me a tip as it helps cover the cost of running things or just lets me stay hydrated. Plus 10% goes to the devs of the apps I do guides for every year.

Published inDockerDownload Tools 7.2Synology

118 Comments

  1. Jamie Jamie

    HI! Thanks for your detailed instructions. It took me all day but I now have it up and running.

    Two problems if you can help me with them that would be excellent!

    First is I can add torrents but they are not downloading! Just stuck at 0%. Down the bottom of the deluge web portal I have icons stating
    2 (200): 0.0KiB/s:0.0KiB/s 1.8KiBs/0.06KiB/s:IPX.X.X.X(looks like VPN IP):1366GiB

    Second is I can connect to Deluge Daemon in chrome browser via 10.0.0.25:8112 but I can’t seem to connect using the Deluge PC app or Android app I have (both worked with an old Docker image of binhex Delugevpn). Do I attempt to connect to hostname 10.0.0.25:8112 or 127.0.0.1:58846? Neither seem to work. What do I put in username? I only seem to have a password.

    This is my log https://paste.drfrankenstein.co.uk./?2fc81343e6c5d676#8Lxj2bgraWiDRFwdZfpzeGUGVjxMWYquqBBhCRiatCzN

    Thanks!!

    • Dr_Frankenstein Dr_Frankenstein

      Hey, so on point 1 I would test using a popular well seeded torrent such as the Ubuntu ISO just in case the ones you tried to have no seeds. You log suggest a healthy connection and the bits at the bottom of Deluge suggest the same plus permissions should be good as the free space shows.

      From a Deluge Daemon perspective I was trying to find the steps I shared with someone before on getting connected, you likely need to expose the additional port for the daemon by adding it to the GlueTUN ports secton. And then use the NAS IP for the connection.

      I will reply again with the steps…

    • Dr_Frankenstein Dr_Frankenstein

      I have added an extra item in the FAQ (at the bottom) which steps through the couple of changes to make to connect a desktop client.

      • Jamie Jamie

        Thanks so much for getting back to me and trying to problem solve!

        Issue one self resolved by itself. Funny thing was it was the ubuntu torrents which weren’t working and when I added a less savoury torrent everything suddenly just started working!

        But I still have issue number 2. I tried the binhex deluge and confirmed both the win and android app are still working.

        I am currently connected to the web app at 10.0.0.25:8112 and when I look in connection manager I can see Status connected @127.0.0.1:58846 version 2.1.1

        When I go to the win app… connection manager and try to connect to… host: 10.0.0.25, port 58846, username and password as per auth file, I have a circle with a cross through it in the “status” column. When I try to connect on my android app (on home wifi network) it says “connection refused. Is the deluge server running and configured to accept remote connections”.

        In the web app, Preferences… Daemon… Allow remote conections is checked and port is 58846.

        I’ve turned off my NAS firewall and any VPN connection.

        My auth file:
        localclient:a16a3655a93fXXXXXXXXXXX696ae5c81ca31:10
        DelXXXXXX1:PXXXXXXXXXXXXX23:10

        GlueTun log
        https://paste.drfrankenstein.co.uk./?4c3ad714fb97b002#JCto7G923bG86vKYZBPbsjDe84UyrY6DShE8QDjMqyFF

        Deluge log
        https://paste.drfrankenstein.co.uk./?4572bb42ed6c7ba3#9uNEZeDJ1x4rmXmojHqJg91CYfqk6GskNQEN92yGyBRa

        Any other ideas? The thing with these apps is that they are very useful to add magnet links straight from the web without having to use the NAS /web interface. Thanks again

        • Dr_Frankenstein Dr_Frankenstein

          OK cool for number 1 🙂

          Do you have the syno firewall on at all, could that be blocking the connection…
          I am just firing up a test container here in case the steps have changed..

          • Jamie Jamie

            Okay! I’ve figured it out! I don’t know if this is a bug or a feature. I started up my binhex Daemon to see if I could see why that works and yours doesn’t.

            The only difference was that under Preferences… Network… Incoming interface I had 10.24.112.111. I am not sure where that address came from. All my home IP addresses are 10.0.0.X.

            I booted up your GlueTun Deluge and put that address in the preferences and suddenly I could access Deluge on the web app/Android app/Win app!

            However, it gets weirder as, although I could access Deluge, now torrents had stopped working. I went back to the ubuntu torrents and they would download but not upload and “other” torrent would do nothing. I noticed that I now had an error in the bottom left… “Port Issue”. Then I played around with some addresses in the “incoming” section. 127.0.0.1 and 10.0.0.25. Not sure what it was but now all torrents are downloading but not uploading.

            So then I thought maybe go back to leaving “incoming” blank. And now it’s blank again but I can access via Android app and Win app. All torrents downloading, minimal uploading (like 8K), NO “port issue” in the bottom left.

            In Preferences… Network… Incoming port is set to random and when I test the port it gives the triangle error sign.

            Worth noting that my internet ISP uses CG-NAT which means I can’t forward ports out.

            Then I realised I am using a port forwarding service through PIA. Checking the log I found the port forwarding number is 5XXX8 and set that in the Deluge app. Now I have a tick when I “check Port”, even though that port is not forwarded in my router. Upload speed seems to have increased. Is here anyway that this port number can be set in Deluge automatically as I gather this PIA port can change from time to time.

            So basically I’m not really sure what I did to get it working. Jingled around with that “Incoming interface” and it seemed to work!

            • Dr_Frankenstein Dr_Frankenstein

              OK Glad its working! – From a port forwarding perspective the VPN is a tunnel and doesn’t touch your router at all so it has independent port forwarding for it, the router would only be opening / forwarding ports from your actual WAN IP.. But as you say with CGNAT it’s not really going to work anyway 🙂

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

drfrankenstein.co.uk – writing Synology Docker Guides since 2016 – Join My Discord!