I had a small media library for myself, and wanted to automate it a bit more, so implemented arr stack (prowlarr, radarr, lidarr), it seems to work but I’m not sure how to pick indexers. I have no experience with it, and I initially just picked a public one, but it barely ever seems to download something.
I’m a bit confused about it, should i just pick as many as I can? Or join a private one? But no idea where to start there.
Any advice or push in the right direction would be appreciated.
I would start by adding a couple more indexers but don’t go overboard. 3 or 4 should be good and then swap them out as needed. Also something to note is make sure you aren’t just “hit n run” on everything and seed properly.
I was confused about this. Then I remembered that torrenting exists in the *arr world.
I got away with using public indexers for years with very few issues. The occasional .lnk or .exe, but that was of no issue to my Linux Mint host other than having to manually mark the release as failed and find another.
Recently transitioned to a free private tracker after an invite and zero false positives since. Mostly downloading new releases for TV/Movies, often within hours of release.
There seem to be more and more .exes and .scrs lately.
RarBG was the worst for .scr
How does one get an invite to a private tracker is it based on seeding or something?
It was actually from https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/c/OpenSignups if I remember correctly.
Same story here.
Have two private trackers now, but started with just using the ones I had heard of, and removed a few that kept coming up short.
It works fine, but torrents died quite fast as most people don’t bother seeding there.
For new stuff it worked fine
youll have the best luck by adding a nzb indexer… ive enjoyed nzbgeek
its cheap and has decreased my time-to-mediacenter drastically… the public torrent indexers kinda pale in comparison.
i like to have them all in there, but the usenet/nzb stuff seems to flow the fastest as theres generally more likely a matching file of %quality.
The downside is that you also have to pay for a Usenet host. So someone trying to just go the $0 cost route, this wouldn’t apply to.
sure but usenet access is stupidly cheap. i think im payin like 1$/month.
i spend more on stickers.
What usenet provider are you getting such a good deal on?
I started by picking a lot of indexers, trying to cover my bases, but every search would take forever because it sifts through every match to find the best one for your criteria. In the end I pared it down to just to just a couple big ones that even I’ve heard of and it’s been fine 98% of the time.
I’ve always heard the private indexers are best, but I don’t have experience with them.
I wish Prowlarr supported having a pool of generic indexers that are regularly speed tested and only the top X are used for actual queries (one random query an hour to check response time shouldn’t hurt, and external searches can also provide for this statistic), either based on count/percentage or maximum response time.
That would alleviate the long queries on a very dynamic approach.
Since you’re using prowlarr, I recommend adding as many as you can. You’ll get some stall, but that’s the price you (don’t) pay. If you have the time, choose several baseurls for the failing indexers so you can get as many as possible.
Indexers and downloaders are distinct for newsgroups.
Public indexers are not good for Linux isos, you need a paid service now. They’re cheap and well worth it. Easynews and nzbgeek are good ones.
Paying to pirate things is wild. You absolutely don’t need to pay for anything. Get on private trackers, which have literally existed for decades at this point.
If time is worthless to you, sure.
Here I am, paying next to nothing, automated everything, living a life free from American fuckhead companies.
I used to do that until about 2015.
Even private trackers don’t come close to the coverage of newsgroups. Plus, nzb has the concept of releases, so you don’t have to guess at the quality.
I don’t have an issue with paying, I have an issue with paying for something I don’t want.








