cmd | ||
pkg | ||
.dockerignore | ||
.drone.yml | ||
.gitignore | ||
.markdownlint.yaml | ||
Dockerfile | ||
go.mod | ||
go.sum | ||
LICENSE | ||
manifest.tmpl | ||
README.md | ||
renovate.json |
tarr
The tarr project contains small binaries / tools for interacting with *arr applications. The tools are helpful in a kubernetes environment to retrofit missing functions of the *arr applications.
Note
Instead of compiling the tarr applications by yourself, use the tarr container image instead. More described below.
autharr
The binary autharr
is a small program to extract from a config.xml
or config.yaml
the API token. The token is
written to the standard output. Alternatively, it can also be written to a file.
With regard to exportarr, it can be helpful in the Kubernetes environment to extract the token and use it for other API queries. For example for healthchecks. It therefore solve the following problem.
$ autharr /etc/bazarr/config.yaml
do7IuHiewooFaiyu
$ autharr /etc/lidarr/config.xml
aeteipei4Meing5i
Alternatively, the --watch
flag can be set. This monitors the config file and writes the API token to the defined
output in the event of changes.
$ autharr --watch /etc/bazarr/config.yaml
baGohkie9EL5Tahr
oov1liQuaiki1lar
vaeGa9Cheeheev2I
Pipe the output direct into a file. Exit the program by Ctrl+C.
$ autharr --watch /etc/bazarr/config.yaml /tmp/bazarr/token
^C
$
healarr
The binary healarr
is a small program to check if the *arr application is healthy. Some *arr applications does not
have implemented a dedicated REST endpoint for healthchecks or like the liveness or readiness probe. Instead will be
called the API for a status, which returns 200 if the *arr instance is healthy.
healarr
uses the internal packages from autharr
to extract the API token from a config file. Alternatively can
directly passed the API token as flag.
$ if healarr bazarr https://bazarr.example.com --config /etc/bazarr/config.xml; then
> echo "Healthy"
> else
> echo "Unhealthy"
> fi
Healthy
container-image
The container image docker.io/volkerraschek/tarr
contains all tarr applications. The command below is an example to
start autharr
of the container image volkerraschek/tarr
via docker. autharr
is watching for changes of the API
token. Any change will be written to the standard output.
Note
Adapt the volume mount, if you want to write the token to file on the host system.
$ docker run \
--rm \
--volume /etc/bazarr:/etc/bazarr:ro \
docker.io/volkerraschek/tarr:latest \
autharr --watch /etc/bazarr/config.yaml