I’m looking to expand into having a online library and looking for some real world experiences and opinions. Ideally, looking for someone that worked well with docker and the various arrs.
I’m looking to expand into having a online library and looking for some real world experiences and opinions. Ideally, looking for someone that worked well with docker and the various arrs.
Readarr was orphaned, so most people switched to using LazyLibrarian. LL is kind of difficult to work with and you’ll typically see a lot of failures in the logs for various things. Instead, you could use Shelfmark which fulfills the same general purpose but is more straightforward.
For browsing/reading, most people use Calibre-Web. You can write a simple bash script to do periodic imports via calibredb. Just point the output directory of Shelfmark to the input directory for that command.
EDIT: I’m not sure if this exists in Headscale, but Tailscale also has Services you can setup so that something like
machine.some-domain.ts.net:8083can be mapped asbooks.some-domain.ts.net. For Kobo Sync or OPDS devices you can just download to local, but if you are just using an Android device, you can stream the book to the device via browser which is very nice.Chaptarr is a thoroughly re-worked fork of Readarr. It’s been working nicely for me. Not released publicly yet, but it’s going to be soon.
We’ll that’s a shame to hear that readarr was abandoned.
Chaptarr is a thoroughly re-worked fork of Readarr. It’s been working nicely for me. Not released publicly yet, but it’s going to be soon.
ShelfMark is the go-to option now. It’s also far better than Readarr was and works seamlessly with both Prowlarr and Anna’s Archive.
Chaptarr is a thoroughly re-worked fork of Readarr. It’s been working nicely for me. Not released publicly yet, but it’s going to be soon.
There is a fork of Readarr that works pretty well:
https://github.com/pennydreadful/bookshelf