

You will also see the container has assigned ports for the actual torrent connections, we are going to change them to a 6881 TCP and UDP connections. Leave the Network tab as is you do not need to change anythingĭeluge uses port 8112 for the web interface, so change the local port in line with this. Now type /data/torrents into the ‘mount path’ You now need to enter /config into the the ‘mount path’Ĭlick Add Folder again and this time select the ‘data/torrents’ folder and click Select. File/FolderĬlick on Add Folder, click on the ‘docker’ folder and create a new sub-folder called ‘deluge’ select this folder and click ‘select’

#Deluge client download download
We can now move onto the volume tab in which we will be specifying the directories where Deluge will store its configuration files and where to download torrents as per the table below. On the first tab enable ‘Auto Restart’ this will ensure Deluge will automatically start up whenever you reboot your NAS. Next up we are going to click on the ‘Advanced Settings’ button, this will take you to a new window with a number of tabs which we are going to work through. You will now see the initial setup screen, you can change the name of the container, we are not going to change the resource limitations. In Docker click on the ‘Image’ tab, in the list of your containers select the ‘linuxserver/deluge’ image and click on ‘Launch’ You can check the status of the download over on the ‘Image’ tab. The pop-up box will ask which version you want to download, make sure you choose ‘Latest’ from the list of available versions. Open up Docker within DSM and navigate to the ‘Registry’ section and search for ‘deluge’ in the search box and download the ‘linuxserver/deluge’ image.
#Deluge client download how to
Fixed port settings section and added notes around plug-insĪdded an extra plugin and note on how to enable themĭeluge is a lightweight torrent downloader, it has a number of built-in plugins to help organise your downloads and a full web interface.
