Community Apps

Browse our large and growing catalog of applications to run in your Unraid server. 

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Community-built

All the applications you love—built and maintained by a community member who understands what you need on Unraid. Love a particular app or plugin? Donate directly to the developer to support their work.

Created by a Legend

Andrew (aka Squid) has worked tirelessly to build and enhance the experience of Community Apps for users like you.

Moderated and Vetted

Moderators ensure that apps listed in the store offer a safe, compatible, and consistent experience. 


Tunarr's Icon

Create live TV channels from media on your Plex servers, and more! Access your channels by adding the spoofed Tunarr HDHomerun tuner to Plex, Jellyfin, or Emby. Or utilize generated M3U files with any 3rd party IPTV player app. Tunarr is a fork of dizqueTV. **Nvidia GPU Use:** Using the Unraid Nvidia Plugin to install a version of Unraid with the Nvidia Drivers installed and add **--runtime=nvidia** to "extra parameters" (switch on advanced view) and copy your **GPU UUID** to **NVIDIA_VISIBLE_DEVICES.** **Intel GPU Use:** Edit your **go** file to include **modprobe i915**, save and reboot, then add **--device=/dev/dri** to **"extra parameters"** (switch on advanced view)

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tvh-iptv-config

Media ServersVideo

TVH-IPTV-Config - A simple IPTV config frontend for playlist filtering providing a M3U proxy for Plex, Emby, Jellyfin and (of course) Tvheadend. TVH-IPTV-Config (TIC) attempts to provide a simple IPTV config frontend for a Tvheadend (TVH) backend. In addition to this, it provides HDHomeRun tuner emulation, an HLS playlist proxy/caching and custom channel mapping from multipl playlist sources. Note: This template is a stand-alone installation of TIC and requires that you, the user, also install and maintain a seperate Tvheadend container. Currently, only TVH v4.3+ is tested and supported, though 4.2.8 may work fine. You will need to ensure you have the 'XMLTV URL grabber' module installed with your TVH server. If you want to run TIC without managing your own TVH backend, then you should look at using the "tvh-iptv" template which provides an AIO docker container solution. Features: Easily import/configure channels from playlists. Assign and locally cache logos per channel. Assign EPG sources for each channel. Configure channel numbers and ordering for channels. Configure multiple stream sources per channel. Manage and search through playlists that contain tens of thousands of streams without crashing the UI. Provide an ffmpeg buffer for your streams so multiple devices playing back the same stream will only use one playlist connection. Serve an HDHomeRun emulator for each playlist so Plex, Emby, and Jellyfin can connect to it an saturate the number of configured connections per playlist. Automatically fetch missing metada for your EPG programme schedule like icons, description, etc. Configure and automatically actively maintain a Tvheadend backend for IPTV without the fuss. Automatically generate IPTV networks in TVH per playlist configured with a number of connections allowed. Automatically manage a custom EPG based on channel selection. Automatically create muxes in TVH for each stream asssociated with a configured channel. Configure muxes with FFmpeg pipes to improve compatibility and provide a local buffer. Automatically map mux services to channels in TVH. Automaticlaly configure optimal streaming and timeseries settings. Automaticlaly configure optimal recording settings. Much more little tweaks behind the scenes... How it works: Tvheadend(https://www.tvheadend.org/), AKA "TVH", is a TV streaming server and recorder supporting, among other things, IPTV input sources. Tvheadend offers the HTTP (VLC, MPlayer), HTSP (Kodi, Movian) and SAT>IP streaming and there are a bunch of clients out there to use as clients for watching. The catch is that on its own, Tvheadend can be complicated to setup for IPTV. Once you read through all the documentation and forum posts on how to do it, it works well. But that is a steep learning curve. In addition to this, if you were to just throw a IPTV playlist of thousands of channels at the thing, well... good luck with that mess. To get it working really well, there is a lot of mouse clicking here and there and perhaps the odd ffmpeg pipe to configure on each MUX and... who as time for that! TIC should make life easy(ish) when setting up IPTV on Tvheadend. Advanced Configuration: LIMIT CPU USE: 1) Toggle this Docker Container template editor to "Advanced View". 2) In the "Extra Parameters" field, add "--cpus='1'". This value depends on the number of cores available to the container. To limit to 50%, set this value to 0.5 * n cores. If you have 2 cores available to this container, "--cpus='.5'" will equal 25% of that available CPU resources. To limit the CPU cores available to the continer, use "CPU Pinning" LIMIT RAM ALLOCATION: 1) Toggle this Docker Container template editor to "Advanced View". 2) In the "Extra Parameters" field, add "--memory='1g'". Tvheadend and TIC can use on average around 100Mib - 500 Mib of RAM for various tasks. Even though limiting RAM is unnecessary as this container should not ever need more that 1GB RAM it is good practice to do so.

Watchlistarr's Icon

Watchlistarr

Media ServersVideo

Sync RSS Plex watchlists in realtime with Sonarr and Radarr https://github.com/nylonee/watchlistarr