I figured it out....
Here is what I did (I am sure there are more efficient ways)
1 - I left the I-am-PUID-0 setup how it is. What I mean is after I went through the guide and got it working I did not change anything to get RDT working.
2 - I created a new docker-compose for RDT that uses the rclone mount from the I-am-PUID-0 guide. I did this because when I had them combined into one compose, RDT would work but Zurg did not. If I have them separated as different docker setups they both work.
2a - Make sure you understand what the Download Path
and Mapped Path
are in RDT. The Download Path
is the path inside the Docker container where files are downloaded. Whereas the Mapped path
is the path on your host that is mapped to /data
in the container.
My docker compose for RDT is
# version: "3.8"
services:
rdt-client:
image: rogerfar/rdtclient
container_name: rdtclient
stdin_open: true # docker run -i
tty: true # docker run -t
volumes:
- /pd_zurg/mnt:/data # Ensure this matches the pd_zurg mount
environment:
- RCLONE_UID=1000
- RCLONE_GID=1000
- TZ=America/New_York # e.g., "America/New_York"
- DOWNLOAD_DIR=/data/downloads # Specify the download directory
ports:
- 6500:6500
devices:
- /dev/fuse:/dev/fuse:rwm
cap_add:
- SYS_ADMIN
security_opt:
- apparmor:unconfined
- no-new-privileges
restart: unless-stopped
With this setup Zurg is grabbing anything I download from Real Debrid and adding it my Plex server. RDT via Sonarr is grabbing whatever shows I tell Sonarr to download via Torbox. All that has to be done is add the downloads folder as another library in Plex and voila.
I am sure you could configure this to do more, I just wanted an option to grab shows on demand and make use of currently having two active debrid services. My use case is a bit odd and most likely not optimal for most but, hopefully this helps somebody.