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Sonarr in Container Manager on a Synology NAS


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UpdateDate
New guide update for DSM7.2 and Container Manager29/04/2023
Historic updates now at the end of the guide.

What is Sonarr?

Sonarr is used to search, download and organise your TV shows in conjunction with your preferred Usenet or Torrent downloaders and indexers.

Let’s Begin

In this guide I will take you through the steps to get Sonarr up and running in Docker.

As usual, it’s important you complete the three preceding guides which will get your folder structure and docker, user and bridge network setup.

Downloading the Sonarr Image

Open up Container Manager within DSM and navigate to the ‘Registry’ tab and search for ‘Sonarr’. In the list of available containers select the one made by Linuxserver as shown below then click ‘Download’.

The pop-up box will ask which version you want to download, make sure you choose ‘Latest’ from the list of available versions.

You will automatically be taken to the ‘Image’ tab once the download has completed select the image and click ‘Run’.

General Settings

Next you will be greeted with the General Settings screen, this is where you can start specifying some of your preferences.

You can change the name of the container to anything you like, and you may want to enable Auto Restart as this will ensure Sonarr starts automatically if you reboot your NAS.

We won’t need to change any other settings on this screen. We are now going to work through the remain settings. Click on Next.

Port Settings

We won’t be changing any of the ports the container uses. You can repeat the one shown on the right side of the settings page which is the internal Container Port onto the left side which is the Local Port which is the one you will access in your browser. Now move to the next section.

Volume Settings

We will now be specifying the directories where Sonarr will store its configuration files and where to find our media and downloads.

Click on ‘Add Folder’ select the ‘docker’ folder and create a new sub-folder called ‘sonarr’ select this folder and click ‘select’

Repeat this process to add the /data folder.

You will notice the section next to each folder is blank, we need to add a ‘Mount Path’ which maps the folders to a folder within the container. Use the ones shown below.

File/FolderMount path
/docker/sonarr/config
/data/data

We can now move to the next section.

Environment (PGID,  PUID and Timezone)

Next we are going to set up a couple of environment variables that docker will use to allow the container access to our files and folders and also to tell it where we live in the world.

Click the Add button, and fill in the following details as per the table/screenshot.

VariableValue
PUIDThe UID you obtained in the user setup guide
PGIDThe GID you obtained in the user setup guide
TZYour timezone wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_tz_database_time_zones

Capabilities

Nothing to change here leave at the default selection.

Network

In the Network section choose the ‘synobridge’ from the drop-down menu that we created earlier.

Execution Command / Links

Leave both of these section with their default settings.

Summary

You have now completed the setup of the container.

You will be shown an overall summary of the settings we have specified, this is a good time to double-check everything is correct. Finally, click on Done and the container should start to boot.

You should now be able to access Sonarr via the IP of your NAS followed by the port 8989

e.g. 192.168.0.40:8989

Key Settings and FAQ

Now you have set up Sonarr there are some key settings you will need to set as these often catch new users out. I will add more as they come up.

Media Management / Root Folders (Settings>Media Management)

Sonarr refers to the place(s) you keep your TV shows as Root Folders. These are where Sonarr will ultimately move your series episodes to once they finish downloading.

AppRoot Folder
Sonarr/data/media/tv

Download Clients (Settings > Download Clients>Remote Path Mappings)

While most of the settings on this page are self-explanatory something that has caught people out if the Remote Path Mappings setting. If you are hosting all your services on the same NAS do not add any settings here.

I can’t get Sonarr to Connect to my Download Client!

When setting up your preferred download client or Prowlarr etc. Usually you will use the IP of your NAS, however if for whatever reason this is not working you can use http://172.20.0.1 which is the IP of the ‘synobridge’ gateway.

Docker Compose

You can use the below code saved as sonarr.yml in the ‘/docker’ share, this will do the entire process above in one quick command via SSH. Ensure you change the variables to your own.

YAML
services:
  Sonarr:
    image: linuxserver/sonarr:latest
    container_name: sonarr
    environment:
      - PUID=YOURPUID
      - PGID=YOURPGID
      - TZ=Europe/London
    volumes:
      - /volume1/docker/sonarr:/config
      - /volume1/data:/data
    ports:
      - 8989:8989
    network_mode: synobridge
    restart: unless-stopped

Bash
sudo docker-compose -f /volume1/docker/sonarr.yml up -d
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19 Comments

  1. Roger Roger

    HI,
    I have a question about Sonarr and sabnzbd.
    I search for an episode in Sonarr, this gets downloaded in sabnzbd. If the file is ready, the file moves to the correct folder. ( data/media/tv
    But in Sonarr is stays in the queue.
    If I refresh the series in Sonarr, the episode turns green and within seconds it turns orange again.
    In the log files it says: acces to path is denied, but all permissions are ok.

    Thank in advance

    • Dr_Frankenstein Dr_Frankenstein

      Hey Roger, have the files actually moved to the final media folder? If so it can sometimes take a little while for the queue to update and then vanish, If the arrow is Amber it should show what the actual reason for the error is when you hover over it.

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