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Updated Downloads and Importing (markdown)

Brian Di Palma 2020-07-17 08:31:50 +01:00
parent 7d997c37ed
commit 28fff48e0a

@ -22,7 +22,7 @@ Incorrect path issues are possible too, though less common in normal setups. The
The default user for a Windows service is **SYSTEM** which typically doesn't have access to your shares. Edit the service and set it up to run as your own user, see the FAQ entry [why can't Sonarr see my files on a remote server](https://github.com/Sonarr/Sonarr/wiki/FAQ#why-cant-sonarr-see-my-files-on-a-remote-server) for details.
## Mapped network drives are not reliable
While mapped network drives like `X:\` are convenient, they aren't as reliable as UNC paths like `\\server\share` and they're also not available before login. Setup Sonarr and your download client(s) so that they user UNC paths as needed. If your library is on a share, you'd make sure your root folders are using UNC paths. If your download client sends to a share, that is where you'll need to configure UNC paths since Sonarr gets the download path from the download client. It is fine to keep your mapped network drives to use yourself, just don't use them for automation.
While mapped network drives like `X:\` are convenient, they aren't as reliable as UNC paths like `\\server\share` and they're also not available before login. Setup Sonarr and your download client(s) so that they use UNC paths as needed. If your library is on a share, you'd make sure your root folders are using UNC paths. If your download client sends to a share, that is where you'll need to configure UNC paths since Sonarr gets the download path from the download client. It is fine to keep your mapped network drives to use yourself, just don't use them for automation.
## Docker and user, group, ownership, permissions and paths
Docker adds another layer of complexity that is easy to get wrong, but still end up with a setup that functions, but has various problems. Instead of going over them here, read this wiki article [for these automation software and Docker](https://old.reddit.com/r/usenet/wiki/docker) which is all about user, group, ownership, permissions and paths. It isn't specific to any Docker system, instead it goes over things at a high level so that you can implement them in your own environment.