My solution uses qBittorrent with Glutun and it works great. My Docker Compose file is based on this one https://github.com/TechHutTV/homelab/blob/main/media/arr-compose.yaml. I simply removed some of the services I didn’t need. I recommend watching his YouTube video(Same video on Odysee) if you can’t get it to work.
I am trying to have a QBitTorrent Docker container that is accessible on my local network and connects to WireGuard. I know this is a basic question, and I’m sorry if I’m wasting your time. I am using a separate user for this that i have add to the docker group.
I can’t access the web interface what have i configured wrong.
Here is my docker compose file.
---
services:
qbittorrent:
image: lscr.io/linuxserver/qbittorrent:latest
container_name: qbittorrent
environment:
- PUID=1001
- PGID=1001
- TZ=Europe/London
- WEBUI_PORT=8080
- TORRENTING_PORT=6881
volumes:
- /home/torrent/torrent/:/config
- /home/torrent/download/:/downloads
network_mode: service:wireguard
depends_on:
- wireguard
restart: always
wireguard:
image: lscr.io/linuxserver/wireguard
container_name: wireguard
cap_add:
- NET_ADMIN
- SYS_MODULE
environment:
- PUID=1001
- PGID=1001
- TZ=Europe/London
ports:
- 51820:51820/udp
volumes:
- /home/torrent/wireguard/:/config
- /home/torrent/wireguard/london.conf/:/config/wg0.conf
sysctls:
- net.ipv4.conf.all.src_valid_mark=1
restart: always
Move the ports you are exposing from the qbit container to the wireguard container. The VPN container should be the only one exposing ports in this case.
But like someone else said, the gluetun image works really well for this.
Thanks for the suggestion. This is what I ended up doing, and it works really well.