Thank you very much for the explanation!! Excellent video ☺ Is there another way to do it? Because there are trackers that prohibit sharing the same torrents from the same IP address, which can cause me to get banned from those trackers
Most people use a VPN when torrenting. I've never heard of a tracker banning people just because of the IP. In my case, my PC was connecting using my real IP and the NAS using the VPN IP.
@@techbytetips Thank you very much for the answer, it's a private tracker so they have more selective rules than an open tracker, I also wanted to ask if I can somehow give access to docker to download to a folder inside "home"
Hi @@Shaked662, Unfortunately, if you are using a Synology NAS with QBitTorrent, there is no way to create the torrent directly in there. You might be able to find another container image that allows you to do it but I am not familiar with any. I don't know why your private tracker is giving you "issues" as I've seen multiple private and well known trackers where people use the same VPNs.
@@techbytetips Hi, I wanted to update that I was able to do what I wanted and I will explain how, at first all the media of my plex was in "home" the problem is with docker it is not possible to install files in this folder, so I moved everything to a folder called "media" as you did in the video, After that, in order to transfer the sharing of the torrent to qBittorrent in docker, I stopped sharing the same torrent from the computer, I re-downloaded the torrent from the website and uploaded it for sharing via qBittorrent in docker to the same location where the files are in "media" and that's it, now it works😀
Are you trying to expose the applications to the public internet? If it is accessible only in your local network, it is unnecessary. It makes setup more complicated if you try to put an SSL certificate on them.
@@NTblog As long as you have control over the router to expose the NAS, I can show you how to do that in another video. It would take the following: 1. Expose the router's port 80/443 to the NAS 2. Use Let's Encrypt certificates for SSL 3. Use the Application proxy in the NAS to redirect the traffic to the containers after doing the SSL termination
Thank you very much for the explanation!! Excellent video ☺
Is there another way to do it? Because there are trackers that prohibit sharing the same torrents from the same IP address, which can cause me to get banned from those trackers
Most people use a VPN when torrenting. I've never heard of a tracker banning people just because of the IP. In my case, my PC was connecting using my real IP and the NAS using the VPN IP.
@@techbytetips Thank you very much for the answer, it's a private tracker so they have more selective rules than an open tracker, I also wanted to ask if I can somehow give access to docker to download to a folder inside "home"
Hi @@Shaked662,
Unfortunately, if you are using a Synology NAS with QBitTorrent, there is no way to create the torrent directly in there. You might be able to find another container image that allows you to do it but I am not familiar with any.
I don't know why your private tracker is giving you "issues" as I've seen multiple private and well known trackers where people use the same VPNs.
@@techbytetips Hi, I wanted to update that I was able to do what I wanted and I will explain how, at first all the media of my plex was in "home" the problem is with docker it is not possible to install files in this folder, so I moved everything to a folder called "media" as you did in the video, After that, in order to transfer the sharing of the torrent to qBittorrent in docker, I stopped sharing the same torrent from the computer, I re-downloaded the torrent from the website and uploaded it for sharing via qBittorrent in docker to the same location where the files are in "media" and that's it, now it works😀
@@Shaked662 Thanks for sharing
Hopefully in the future, we can create torrents right on Nas without using this method. I have large data to share so this method makes it difficult.
Totally agree. Maybe another torrent container has the option. I just like QBitTorrent and I normally don't create torrents myself.
I love you
If possible, please make a video showing how to access qbittorrent via https instead of http. Sincerely thank you
Are you trying to expose the applications to the public internet? If it is accessible only in your local network, it is unnecessary. It makes setup more complicated if you try to put an SSL certificate on them.
@@techbytetips I access it from an external network. Just curious to learn, not too necessary. Thanks for your feedback.
@@NTblog As long as you have control over the router to expose the NAS, I can show you how to do that in another video.
It would take the following:
1. Expose the router's port 80/443 to the NAS
2. Use Let's Encrypt certificates for SSL
3. Use the Application proxy in the NAS to redirect the traffic to the containers after doing the SSL termination