edit: a working solution is proposed by @Lifebandit666@feddit.uk below:

So you’re trying to get 2 instances of qbt behind the same Gluetun vpn container?

I don’t use Qbt but I certainly have done in the past. Am I correct in remembering that in the gui you can change the port?

If so, maybe what you could do is set up your stack with 1 instance in, go into the GUI and change the port on the service to 8000 or 8081 or whatever.

Map that port in your Gluetun config and leave the default port open for QBT, and add a second instance to the stack with a different name and addresses for the config files.

Restart the stack and have 2 instances.


Has anyone run into issues with docker port collisions when trying to run images behind a bridge network (i think I got those terms right?)?

I’m trying to run the arr stack behind a VPN container (gluetun for those familiar), and I would really like to duplicate a container image within the stack (e.g. a separate download client for different types of downloads). As soon as I set the network_mode to ‘service’ or ‘container’, i lose the ability to set the public/internal port of the service, which means any image that doesn’t allow setting ports from an environment variable is stuck with whatever the default port is within the application.

Here’s an example .yml:

services:
  gluetun:
    image: qmcgaw/gluetun:latest
    container_name: gluetun
    cap_add:
      - NET_ADMIN
    environment:
      - VPN_SERVICE_PROVIDER=mullvad
      - VPN_TYPE=[redacted]
      - WIREGUARD_PRIVATE_KEY=[redacted]
      - WIREGUARD_ADDRESSES=[redacted]
      - SERVER_COUNTRIES=[redacted]
    ports:
      - "8080:8080" #qbittorrent
      - "6881:6881"
      - "6881:6881/udp"
      - "9696:9696" # Prowlarr
      - "7878:7878" # Radar
      - "8686:8686" # Lidarr
      - "8989:8989" # Sonarr
    restart: always

  qbittorrent:
    image: lscr.io/linuxserver/qbittorrent:latest
    container_name: "qbittorrent"
    network_mode: "service:gluetun"
    environment:
      - PUID=1000
      - PGID=1000
      - TZ=CST/CDT
      - WEBUI_PORT=8080
    volumes:
      - /docker/appdata/qbittorrent:/config
      - /media/nas_share/data:/data)

Declaring ports in the qbittorrent service raises an error saying you cannot set ports when using the service network mode. Linuxserver.io has a WEBUI_PORT environment variable, but using it without also setting the service ports breaks it (their documentation says this is due to CSRF issues and port mapping, but then why even include it as a variable?)

The only workaround i can think of is doing a local build of the image that needs duplication to allow ports to be configured from the e variables, OR run duplicate gluetun containers for each client which seems dumb and not at all worthwhile.

Has anyone dealt with this before?

  • @UberMentch@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    I am also currently dealing with this same exact issue, I’m wanting to run multiple instances of Lidarr for MP3 / FLAC libraries with Gluetun. I don’t have an answer (I haven’t put in the time to try and solve it yet), so apologies if I got your hopes up. I’m just here to confirm that others have this issue too!

    Edit: Regarding that documentation, it seems like it’s not saying that changing the port breaks it, it’s just that you have to set both sides of the mapping to be the same. The default is 8080, so instead of 8080:8080, change the mapping to 8081:8081. That’s how I’m reading it, anyways.

    I should also mention that the closest that I got to fixing this was to boot up my 2nd Lidarr container separately, setting the port in the Lidarr WebUI console to something different (8687, for example), and then attach it to my Gluetun docker compose file. I did a docker compose pull to update my stack, then docker compose up -d for it. You might try this approach, and tinker around with it. I just haven’t had time to really play with this “solution”

    Edit 2: Played more with the solution I mentioned, and that LifeBandit666 found. We both gave the same solution, and the solution seems to work. Just don’t be a dumbass, and remember to do application configuration to your container (unlike me, who, after putting the container into my Gluetun docker compose file, forgot that I didn’t do application configuration and just saw a bunch of errors with Lidarr).

    • archomrade [he/him]OP
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      10 months ago

      nah, it seems like it’s a known problem, no worries. There’s an unresolved issue open on the gluetun github about it. I just figured someone would have had a workaround at this point since I see people recommend separate client instances to keep things organized all the time.

      I think the people who do that just don’t use a VPN, but I have strong feelings against exposing my IP

      edit: that’s interesting. I’ve tried a few variations, but maybe I didn’t try that one

      • @UberMentch@lemmy.world
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        310 months ago

        Yeah, you and I have very similar use cases with this. Gluetun, VPN, download clients + *arr stack, I get it. I’ll be sure to update with a solution, if I spot one (when I get around to looking)!

        • archomrade [he/him]OP
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          110 months ago

          yea, i just tried a couple things to no avail:

          publish a new port in gluetun, e.g. - 8082:8082 then set webui port in the new instance:

          - environment:
            - WEBUI_PORT: 8082
          

          error on deployment

          Then I tried spinning up the new container separately, declaring the pots eg:

          - ports:
            - 8082:8082
          

          and then manually switching the network to gluetun and turning off the port declaration, and it still ends up on the default port. Bummer.

      • @couch1potato@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        110 months ago

        I just set up vpns in my router and use macvlan network for my dockers so I can route their individual ip addresses to whichever interface I want…

  • @ExcessShiv@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    110 months ago

    That’s really weird, I’m using the same image to run two instances of qbit behind gluetun without any issues whatsoever.

      • @ExcessShiv@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        310 months ago

        Yeah i pretty much stole this from someone else, although it only used a single torrent client so i just added another that looked the same. i’m not very skilled in docker, so some things may not be best practice (or even correct)

        qbittorrent:
            image: lscr.io/linuxserver/qbittorrent:latest
            container_name: qbittorrent
            network_mode: service:gluetun
            environment:
              - PUID=${APPUSER_PUID}
              - PGID=${APPUSER_PGID}
              - TZ=${TIME_ZONE_VALUE}
              - WEBUI_PORT=8084
            volumes:
              - ${PATH_TO_DATA}/qbit/config:/config
              - ${PATH_TO_COMPLETE}:/downloads
            restart: unless-stopped
            depends_on:
              - gluetun
        
          qbittorrentTL:
            image: lscr.io/linuxserver/qbittorrent:latest
            container_name: qbittorrentTL
            network_mode: service:gluetun
            environment:
              - PUID=${APPUSER_PUID}
              - PGID=${APPUSER_PGID}
              - TZ=${TIME_ZONE_VALUE}
              - WEBUI_PORT=8085
            volumes:
              - ${PATH_TO_DATA}/qbitTL/config:/config
              - ${PATH_TO_COMPLETE}:/downloads
            restart: unless-stopped
            depends_on:
              - gluetun
        
          gluetun:
            image: qmcgaw/gluetun
            container_name: gluetun
            networks:
              pirate_net:
            cap_add:
              - NET_ADMIN
              - SYS_MODULE
            environment:
              - VPN_SERVICE_PROVIDER=protonvpn
              - OPENVPN_USER=[USER]
              - OPENVPN_PASSWORD=[PASSWORD]
              - SERVER_COUNTRIES=[COUNTRIES]
              - VPN_PORT_FORWARDING=on
              - UPDATER_PERIOD=6h
            ports:
              - 8084:8084 # Qbit
              - 8085:8085 # QbitTL
              - 6881:6881
              - 6881:6881/udp
              - 8191:8191 # Flaresolverr
              - 9696:9696 # Prowlarr
              - 7878:7878 # Radarr
              - 8989:8989 # Sonarr
            volumes:
              - ${PATH_TO_DATA}/gluetun/config:/config
        
        networks:
          pirate_net:
            driver: bridge
        
        • archomrade [he/him]OP
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          110 months ago

          I might need to try this… I wonder if it makes a difference that the gluetun service is listed last. I noticed that trying to start the containers in the wrong order results in port collision errors, maybe this is why it works for you?

          • @N0x0n@lemmy.ml
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            10 months ago

            I think this has nothing to do with who is listed first/last !

            As you can see in this docker-compose, they are on 2 different web-ui ports, avoiding conflicts !

            • archomrade [he/him]OP
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              110 months ago

              Yup, I was only pointing out that i was having trouble doing the same thing in my docker compose (using the webui_port env variable did not avoid port collisions at deployment)

              I haven’t tried this particular compose outline though. It could also be the pirate_network they’re initiating or the depends_on variables they’re using, I just haven’t played around with it yet.

        • archomrade [he/him]OP
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          110 months ago

          Question: how are you deploying your arr apps? do you do that in a separate compose file?

  • @hex123456@sh.itjust.works
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    110 months ago

    I’ve run multiple copies of stacks with unique bridged networks. Then map the ports out to the host on different port numbers.