Discarr: disc rip → Sonarr/Radarr pipeline, no npm deps [GPL-3.0] (git.opensourcesolarpunk.com)
from pyr0ball@reddthat.com to selfhosted@lemmy.world on 27 May 11:02
https://reddthat.com/post/66423883

MakeMKV gives you a pile of VOB files. Sonarr wants a clean named MKV in the right folder. The gap between those two is always a manual dance. Figure out which season it is, rename it, drop it in the right place, trigger a rescan.

Discarr fills that gap: it’s a small Node.js web UI (no npm packages, pure built-ins) that handles the VIDEO_TS / BDMV / ISO → arr import chain.

What it does:

Requirements: Node.js 18+, ffmpeg + ffprobe. HandBrake optional. Docker image bundles both plus openssh-client.

Still early, issues and PRs welcome.

Forgejo (primary): git.opensourcesolarpunk.com/…/discarr GitHub (mirror): github.com/pyr0ball/discarr

#selfhosted

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deafboy@lemmy.world on 28 May 06:31 next collapse

What is the point of Sonarr/Radarr in this workflow?

If you get a proper mkv file from this tool, why not just put it in your media library for your media player to discover?

ExperiencedWinter@lemmy.world on 28 May 06:48 next collapse

I’ve never used this software, so just guessing here, but if radar/sonarr are not aware of the mkv file they will attempt to find the media which would result in duplicate files

pyr0ball@reddthat.com on 28 May 07:05 collapse

Sonarr/Radarr occasionally grab disk rips as they’re the only format available for certain titles, but they can’t be directly imported without conversion. This fills that gap cleanly.

sakphul@discuss.tchncs.de on 28 May 08:09 next collapse

I don’t get this part

MakeMKV gives you a pile of VOB files

For me MakeMKV gives me a single or multiple (depending on how many I choose) .mkv files for the video files vailable on a DVD/BlueRay. I can then decide to use them as they are, or run them through Handbrake to convert to my desired format.

Isn’t this the case on your side?

pyr0ball@reddthat.com on 28 May 10:04 collapse

Sure, but that takes a lot of time and effort when you have a complicated stack, so it’s nice to be able to handle it in two clicks instead of setting up an entire encode queue while cross referencing all my metadata so I get episodes mapped right. Often a series session will take me upward of 30 minutes to set up an encode queue manually. With Discarr, it takes me 30 seconds

Edit: this came out of many attempts to create a single script that could post-process torrents, unpacking archives or converting disk images dynamically. The trouble is that dvd formatting for series follows no standards whatsoever, and really requires a human to map the titles. Discarr automates everything except that, and surfaces the title and episode queues side-by-side to allow quick identification and assignment

sakphul@discuss.tchncs.de on 28 May 23:28 collapse

This is all correct and i get it. I was wondering about the VOB part for MakeMKV. Because I never get a VOB Out of MakeMKV.

pyr0ball@reddthat.com on 29 May 13:38 collapse

Ah, well you see the explanation for that is pure ignorance. I’ve only ever used handbrake myself and was trying to help another friend who apparently uses makeMKV wrong or something or is bad at explaining to me xD

sakphul@discuss.tchncs.de on 30 May 07:37 collapse

Ok got it. Thanks for the reply!

keyez@lemmy.world on 29 May 01:59 collapse

It’s been a while but I used automatic-ripping-machine for a long time and worked well. Definitely going to take a look at this in the coming weeks.