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(https://wiki.servarr.com/t) (https://wiki.servarr.com/login) Browse (https://wiki.servarr.com/) Home Applications (https://wiki.servarr.com/en/radarr) Radarr (https://wiki.servarr.com/en/sonarr) Sonarr (https://wiki.servarr.com/en/lidarr) Lidarr (https://wiki.servarr.com/en/readarr) Readarr (https://wiki.servarr.com/en/whisparr) Whisparr (https://wiki.servarr.com/en/prowlarr) Prowlarr Contribute (https://wiki.servarr.com/en/donate) Donate (https://wiki.servarr.com/en/bug-report) Report a Bug Suggest a Feature (https://github.com/Servarr/Wiki) Github Support (https://radarr.video/discord) Discord / (https://wiki.servarr.com/en/radarr) radarr / (https://wiki.servarr.com/en/radarr/installation) installation / (https://wiki.servarr.com/en/radarr/installation/linux) linux Radarr Linux Installation Linux installation guide for Radarr Page Contents Linux Debian / Ubuntu Last edited by Administrator 12/08/2024 ¶ Linux ¶ Debian / Ubuntu Note: Raspberry Pi OS and Raspbian are both flavors of Debian ¶ Easy Install For the Debian / Ubuntu / Raspbian beginners there isn't an Apt Repository or Deb package. If you want an easy life, follow this community provided and maintained Easy Install script for a base Debian (Raspbian / Raspberry Pi OS) / Ubuntu install. For the official installation instructions that are 'Hands on' follow the Debian / Ubuntu Hands on Install steps further below. (https://wiki.servarr.com/install-script) Please see the *Arr Community Installation Script Radarr uses a bundled version of ffprobe for media file analysis and does not require ffprobe or ffmpeg to be installed on the system. If Radarr says ffprobe is not found this can typically be fixed with a reinstall. ¶ Debian / Ubuntu Hands on Install It is assumed you have a basic knowledge of linux or the ability to google / learn as necessary. Otherwise it is suggested to use an OS you know and understand You'll need to install the binaries using the below commands. The steps below will download the stable version (master release branch) Radarr and install it into /opt Radarr will run under the user radarr and group media ; media is the commonly suggested group to run the *Arrs, download clients, and media server under.Radarr's configuration files will be stored in /var/lib/radarr Ensure you have the required prerequisite packages: sudo apt install curl sqlite3 Copy Installation Prerequisites The below instructions are based on the following prerequisites. Change the instructions as needed to suit your specific needs if necessary.* The user radarr is created* The user radarr is part of the group media * Your download clients and media server run as and are a part of the group media * Your paths used by your download clients and media server are accessible (read/write) to the group media * You created the directory /var/lib/radarr and ensured the user radarr has read/write permissions for it for it* Previous/existing installations were using the master release branch noted on the (https://wiki.servarr.com/radarr/faq) FAQ or you update master in the download URL By continuing below, you acknowledge that you have read and met the above requirements. Download the correct binaries for your architecture. You can determine your architecture with dpkg --print-architecture AMD64 use arch=x64 ARM, armf, and armh use arch=arm ARM64 use arch=arm64 wget --content-disposition 'http://radarr.servarr.com/v1/update/master/updatefile?os=linux&runtime=netcore&arch=x64' Copy Uncompress the files: tar -xvzf Radarr*.linux*.tar.gz Copy Move the files to /opt/ sudo mv Radarr /opt/ Copy Note: This assumes you will run as the user radarr and group media . You may change this to fit your usecase. It's important to choose these correctly to avoid permission issues with your media files. We suggest you keep at least the group name identical between your download client(s) and Radarr. Ensure ownership of the binary directory. sudo chown radarr:radarr -R /opt/Radarr Copy Configure systemd so Radarr can autostart at boot. The below systemd creation script will use a data directory of /var/lib/radarr . Ensure it exists or modify it as needed. For the default data directory of /home/$USER/.config/Radarr simply remove the -data argument. Note: that $USER is the User Radarr runs as and is defined below. cat << EOF| sudo tee /etc/systemd/system/radarr.service > /dev/null [Unit] Description=Radarr Daemon After=syslog.target network.target [Service] User=radarr Group=media Type=simple ExecStart=/opt/Radarr/Radarr -nobrowser -data=/var/lib/radarr/ TimeoutStopSec=20 KillMode=process Restart=on-failure [Install] WantedBy=multi-user.target EOF Copy Reload systemd: sudo systemctl -q daemon-reload Copy Enable the Radarr service: sudo systemctl enable --now -q radarr Copy (Optional) Remove the tarball: rm Radarr*.linux*.tar.gz Copy Typically to access the Radarr web GUI browse to http://{Your server IP Address}:7878 Radarr uses a bundled version of ffprobe for media file analysis and does not require ffprobe or ffmpeg to be installed on the system. If Radarr says Ffprobe is not found this can typically be fixed with a reinstall. If Radarr did not appear to start, then check the status of the service: sudo journalctl --since today -u radarr Copy ¶ Uninstall To uninstall and purge: Warning: This will destroy your application data. sudo systemctl stop radarr sudo rm -rf /opt/Radarr sudo rm -rf /var/lib/radarr sudo rm -rf /etc/systemd/system/radarr.service sudo systemctl -q daemon-reload Copy To uninstall and keep your application data: sudo systemctl stop radarr sudo rm -rf /opt/Radarr sudo rm -rf /etc/systemd/system/radarr.service sudo systemctl -q daemon-reload Copy Powered by (https://wiki.js.org/) Wiki.js