It tunnels everything that is bound to the same network (see the line with gluetun within the qbittorrent container.
And for anyone using a reverse proxy: that can run against the gluetun container with the bound containers port. (edit: in OPs example gluetun:8090 for qbittorrent web)
Only qbit
I have other stuff in that stack as well, like sonarr and radarr, that I cut out.
The network mode setting in docker acts as a bind. The port is exposed to the host in gluetun. If gluetun throws an error and shuts down, qBit WebUI is no longer accessible.
I’m not familiar with docker on Windows, but I believe it runs through a (well integrated) VM. Do you run it 24/7 on your desktop pc? If yes, do you notice a performance impact while e.g. gaming?
It’s surprising to me how docker managed to be the ultimate way to run services across all major OSs while only running on Linux specifically.
I run it on a dedicated machine that does all my media management. I’m transitioning to Linux eventually.
I started out using a pi and installed sonarr and radarr with mono. Then I switched to docker on my spare windows machine. Whenever I get a break in work I’ll switch to Linux completely.
Since my stuff is already containerized, it should be a painless transition… hopefully. I’ll probably wait until I get a new HDD to transition to a new format since all my stuff is NTFS.
https://pastebin.com/7S6QBsSY
I tried formatting it on here but it doesn’t work.
gluetun + qBit
The compose file creates both and binds qBit to gluetun. I also have port forwarding set up through AirVPN.
Does this only tunnel qbittorrent through the VPN or all traffic on the device?
Have exactly the same setup:
It tunnels everything that is bound to the same network (see the line with gluetun within the qbittorrent container.
And for anyone using a reverse proxy: that can run against the gluetun container with the bound containers port. (edit: in OPs example gluetun:8090 for qbittorrent web)
Only qbit I have other stuff in that stack as well, like sonarr and radarr, that I cut out.
The network mode setting in docker acts as a bind. The port is exposed to the host in gluetun. If gluetun throws an error and shuts down, qBit WebUI is no longer accessible.
This is the way, look no further
I also use glutun, works really well. Lots of VPNs are supported. Easy to add any docker container you want to it.
Stopped reading at C:
eh get fucked ya Linux fanboy. Go cry about which distro is best instead of putting me down for trying to help someone.
I’m not familiar with docker on Windows, but I believe it runs through a (well integrated) VM. Do you run it 24/7 on your desktop pc? If yes, do you notice a performance impact while e.g. gaming?
It’s surprising to me how docker managed to be the ultimate way to run services across all major OSs while only running on Linux specifically.
I run it on a dedicated machine that does all my media management. I’m transitioning to Linux eventually.
I started out using a pi and installed sonarr and radarr with mono. Then I switched to docker on my spare windows machine. Whenever I get a break in work I’ll switch to Linux completely.
Since my stuff is already containerized, it should be a painless transition… hopefully. I’ll probably wait until I get a new HDD to transition to a new format since all my stuff is NTFS.
Linux users when freedom of choice exists