Docker container for FileBot
This is a Docker container for FileBot.
The GUI of the application is accessed through a modern web browser (no installation or configuration needed on client side) or via any VNC client.
FileBot is the ultimate tool for organizing and renaming your movies, tv shows or anime, and music well as downloading subtitles and artwork. It's smart and just works.
Table of Content
- Docker container for FileBot
Quick Start
NOTE: The Docker command provided in this quick start is given as an example and parameters should be adjusted to your need.
Launch the FileBot docker container with the following command:
docker run -d \
--name=filebot \
-p 5800:5800 \
-v /docker/appdata/filebot:/config:rw \
-v $HOME:/storage:rw \
jlesage/filebot
Where:
/docker/appdata/filebot
: This is where the application stores its configuration, log and any files needing persistency.$HOME
: This location contains files from your host that need to be accessible by the application.
Browse to http://your-host-ip:5800
to access the FileBot GUI.
Files from the host appear under the /storage
folder in the container.
Usage
docker run [-d] \
--name=filebot \
[-e <VARIABLE_NAME>=<VALUE>]... \
[-v <HOST_DIR>:<CONTAINER_DIR>[:PERMISSIONS]]... \
[-p <HOST_PORT>:<CONTAINER_PORT>]... \
jlesage/filebot
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
-d | Run the container in background. If not set, the container runs in foreground. |
-e | Pass an environment variable to the container. See the Environment Variables section for more details. |
-v | Set a volume mapping (allows to share a folder/file between the host and the container). See the Data Volumes section for more details. |
-p | Set a network port mapping (exposes an internal container port to the host). See the Ports section for more details. |
Environment Variables
To customize some properties of the container, the following environment
variables can be passed via the -e
parameter (one for each variable). Value
of this parameter has the format <VARIABLE_NAME>=<VALUE>
.
Variable | Description | Default |
---|---|---|
USER_ID |
ID of the user the application runs as. See User/Group IDs to better understand when this should be set. | 1000 |
GROUP_ID |
ID of the group the application runs as. See User/Group IDs to better understand when this should be set. | 1000 |
SUP_GROUP_IDS |
Comma-separated list of supplementary group IDs of the application. | (unset) |
UMASK |
Mask that controls how file permissions are set for newly created files. The value of the mask is in octal notation. By default, this variable is not set and the default umask of 022 is used, meaning that newly created files are readable by everyone, but only writable by the owner. See the following online umask calculator: http://wintelguy.com/umask-calc.pl |
(unset) |
TZ |
TimeZone of the container. Timezone can also be set by mapping /etc/localtime between the host and the container. |
Etc/UTC |
KEEP_APP_RUNNING |
When set to 1 , the application will be automatically restarted if it crashes or if user quits it. |
0 |
APP_NICENESS |
Priority at which the application should run. A niceness value of -20 is the highest priority and 19 is the lowest priority. By default, niceness is not set, meaning that the default niceness of 0 is used. NOTE: A negative niceness (priority increase) requires additional permissions. In this case, the container should be run with the docker option --cap-add=SYS_NICE . |
(unset) |
CLEAN_TMP_DIR |
When set to 1 , all files in the /tmp directory are delete during the container startup. |
1 |
DISPLAY_WIDTH |
Width (in pixels) of the application's window. | 1280 |
DISPLAY_HEIGHT |
Height (in pixels) of the application's window. | 768 |
SECURE_CONNECTION |
When set to 1 , an encrypted connection is used to access the application's GUI (either via web browser or VNC client). See the Security section for more details. |
0 |
VNC_PASSWORD |
Password needed to connect to the application's GUI. See the VNC Password section for more details. | (unset) |
X11VNC_EXTRA_OPTS |
Extra options to pass to the x11vnc server running in the Docker container. WARNING: For advanced users. Do not use unless you know what you are doing. | (unset) |
ENABLE_CJK_FONT |
When set to 1 , open source computer font WenQuanYi Zen Hei is installed. This font contains a large range of Chinese/Japanese/Korean characters. |
0 |
Data Volumes
The following table describes data volumes used by the container. The mappings
are set via the -v
parameter. Each mapping is specified with the following
format: <HOST_DIR>:<CONTAINER_DIR>[:PERMISSIONS]
.
Container path | Permissions | Description |
---|---|---|
/config |
rw | This is where the application stores its configuration, log and any files needing persistency. |
/storage |
rw | This location contains files from your host that need to be accessible by the application. |
Ports
Here is the list of ports used by the container. They can be mapped to the host
via the -p
parameter (one per port mapping). Each mapping is defined in the
following format: <HOST_PORT>:<CONTAINER_PORT>
. The port number inside the
container cannot be changed, but you are free to use any port on the host side.
Port | Mapping to host | Description |
---|---|---|
5800 | Mandatory | Port used to access the application's GUI via the web interface. |
5900 | Optional | Port used to access the application's GUI via the VNC protocol. Optional if no VNC client is used. |
Changing Parameters of a Running Container
As seen, environment variables, volume mappings and port mappings are specified while creating the container.
The following steps describe the method used to add, remove or update parameter(s) of an existing container. The generic idea is to destroy and re-create the container:
- Stop the container (if it is running):
docker stop filebot
- Remove the container:
docker rm filebot
- Create/start the container using the
docker run
command, by adjusting parameters as needed.
NOTE: Since all application's data is saved under the /config
container
folder, destroying and re-creating a container is not a problem: nothing is lost
and the application comes back with the same state (as long as the mapping of
the /config
folder remains the same).
Docker Compose File
Here is an example of a docker-compose.yml
file that can be used with
Docker Compose.
Make sure to adjust according to your needs. Note that only mandatory network ports are part of the example.
version: '3'
services:
filebot:
build: .
ports:
- "5800:5800"
volumes:
- "/docker/appdata/filebot:/config:rw"
- "$HOME:/storage:rw"
Docker Image Update
If the system on which the container runs doesn't provide a way to easily update the Docker image, the following steps can be followed:
- Fetch the latest image:
docker pull jlesage/filebot
- Stop the container:
docker stop filebot
- Remove the container:
docker rm filebot
- Start the container using the
docker run
command.
Synology
For owners of a Synology NAS, the following steps can be use to update a container image.
- Open the Docker application.
- Click on Registry in the left pane.
- In the search bar, type the name of the container (
jlesage/docker-filebot
). - Select the image, click Download and then choose the
latest
tag. - Wait for the download to complete. A notification will appear once done.
- Click on Container in the left pane.
- Select your FileBot container.
- Stop it by clicking Action->Stop.
- Clear the container by clicking Action->Clear. This removes the container while keeping its configuration.
- Start the container again by clicking Action->Start. NOTE: The container may temporarily disappear from the list while it is re-created.
unRAID
For unRAID, a container image can be updated by following these steps:
- Select the Docker tab.
- Click the Check for Updates button at the bottom of the page.
- Click the update ready link of the container to be updated.
User/Group IDs
When using data volumes (-v
flags), permissions issues can occur between the
host and the container. For example, the user within the container may not
exists on the host. This could prevent the host from properly accessing files
and folders on the shared volume.
To avoid any problem, you can specify the user the application should run as.
This is done by passing the user ID and group ID to the container via the
USER_ID
and GROUP_ID
environment variables.
To find the right IDs to use, issue the following command on the host, with the user owning the data volume on the host:
id <username>
Which gives an output like this one:
uid=1000(myuser) gid=1000(myuser) groups=1000(myuser),4(adm),24(cdrom),27(sudo),46(plugdev),113(lpadmin)
The value of uid
(user ID) and gid
(group ID) are the ones that you should
be given the container.
Accessing the GUI
Assuming that container's ports are mapped to the same host's ports, the graphical interface of the application can be accessed via:
- A web browser:
http://<HOST IP ADDR>:5800
- Any VNC client:
<HOST IP ADDR>:5900
Security
By default, access to the application's GUI is done over an unencrypted connection (HTTP or VNC).
Secure connection can be enabled via the SECURE_CONNECTION
environment
variable. See the Environment Variables section for
more details on how to set an environment variable.
When enabled, application's GUI is performed over an HTTPs connection when accessed with a browser. All HTTP accesses are automatically redirected to HTTPs.
When using a VNC client, the VNC connection is performed over SSL. Note that few VNC clients support this method. SSVNC is one of them.
Certificates
Here are the certificate files needed by the container. By default, when they are missing, self-signed certificates are generated and used. All files have PEM encoded, x509 certificates.
Container Path | Purpose | Content |
---|---|---|
/config/certs/vnc-server.pem |
VNC connection encryption. | VNC server's private key and certificate, bundled with any root and intermediate certificates. |
/config/certs/web-privkey.pem |
HTTPs connection encryption. | Web server's private key. |
/config/certs/web-fullchain.pem |
HTTPs connection encryption. | Web server's certificate, bundled with any root and intermediate certificates. |
NOTE: To prevent any certificate validity warnings/errors from the browser or VNC client, make sure to supply your own valid certificates.
NOTE: Certificate files are monitored and relevant daemons are automatically restarted when changes are detected.
VNC Password
To restrict access to your application, a password can be specified. This can be done via two methods:
- By using the
VNC_PASSWORD
environment variable. - By creating a
.vncpass_clear
file at the root of the/config
volume. This file should contains the password in clear-text. During the container startup, content of the file is obfuscated and moved to.vncpass
.
The level of security provided by the VNC password depends on two things:
- The type of communication channel (encrypted/unencrypted).
- How secure access to the host is.
When using a VNC password, it is highly desirable to enable the secure connection to prevent sending the password in clear over an unencrypted channel.
ATTENTION: Password is limited to 8 characters. This limitation comes from the Remote Framebuffer Protocol RFC (see section 7.2.2). Any characters beyhond the limit are ignored.
Shell Access
To get shell access to a the running container, execute the following command:
docker exec -ti CONTAINER sh
Where CONTAINER
is the ID or the name of the container used during its
creation (e.g. crashplan-pro
).
Reverse Proxy
The following sections contains NGINX configuration that need to be added in order to reverse proxy to this container.
A reverse proxy server can route HTTP requests based on the hostname or the URL path.
Routing Based on Hostname
In this scenario, each hostname is routed to a different application/container.
For example, let's say the reverse proxy server is running on the same machine
as this container. The server would proxy all HTTP requests sent to
filebot.domain.tld
to the container at 127.0.0.1:5800
.
Here are the relevant configuration elements that would be added to the NGINX configuration:
map $http_upgrade $connection_upgrade {
default upgrade;
'' close;
}
upstream docker-filebot {
# If the reverse proxy server is not running on the same machine as the
# Docker container, use the IP of the Docker host here.
# Make sure to adjust the port according to how port 5800 of the
# container has been mapped on the host.
server 127.0.0.1:5800;
}
server {
[...]
server_name filebot.domain.tld;
location / {
proxy_pass http://docker-filebot;
}
location /websockify {
proxy_pass http://docker-filebot;
proxy_http_version 1.1;
proxy_set_header Upgrade $http_upgrade;
proxy_set_header Connection $connection_upgrade;
proxy_read_timeout 86400;
}
}
Routing Based on URL Path
In this scenario, the hostname is the same, but different URL paths are used to route to different applications/containers.
For example, let's say the reverse proxy server is running on the same machine
as this container. The server would proxy all HTTP requests for
server.domain.tld/filebot
to the container at 127.0.0.1:5800
.
Here are the relevant configuration elements that would be added to the NGINX configuration:
map $http_upgrade $connection_upgrade {
default upgrade;
'' close;
}
upstream docker-filebot {
# If the reverse proxy server is not running on the same machine as the
# Docker container, use the IP of the Docker host here.
# Make sure to adjust the port according to how port 5800 of the
# container has been mapped on the host.
server 127.0.0.1:5800;
}
server {
[...]
location = /filebot {return 301 $scheme://$http_host/filebot/;}
location /filebot/ {
proxy_pass http://docker-filebot/;
location /filebot/websockify {
proxy_pass http://docker-filebot/websockify/;
proxy_http_version 1.1;
proxy_set_header Upgrade $http_upgrade;
proxy_set_header Connection $connection_upgrade;
proxy_read_timeout 86400;
}
}
}
Support or Contact
Having troubles with the container or have questions? Please create a new issue.
For other great Dockerized applications, see https://jlesage.github.io/docker-apps.