I did this with notepad using samba, but I guess some sudo mkdir and sudo nano will get the job done. Then you have to create a config.yml file for flexget at /home/osmc/.config/flexget/config.yml Then flexget refused to work properly, but I fixed that by updating to the latest version:Īt some point pip stopped working for me, but I fixed it using get-pip.py, but i guess uninstalling and reinstalling would have worked.
If I remember correctly, I installed python-pip (required to install flexget):Īnd install transmissionrpc (needed for flexget to control transmission) Other than the systemd rvice not working just yet, I should be good to go! (Once I get a torrent client running.) The EXE should be inside the Program Files folder. Otherwise why would uTorrent have an EXE in the appdata folder That doesn't make sense. Also, based on your screenshot, that DOES look like a virus.
I use Deluge on my laptop when needed, and I have a Transmission Server on my FreeNAS server. Update: Well, the good news is that I tried installing flexget on OSMC for the hell of it and it actually worked. Deluge or Transmission are both open source and free. Maybe that’s something you OSMC gurus can work on eventually It’s just that I’ve never had any luck getting Flexget working. In either case, I guess if we could get Flexget working, it would give that functionality to whatever torrent client ends up being used. I can’t speak for Transmission’s RSS support (or lack thereof), as I’ve never really combined the two. The Transmission server ran well for me on a Raspberry Pi 1. I ended up switching to Transmission, whose first-billed feature is “uses fewer resources than other clients.” It also has the aforementioned client–server separation my preferred client is transmission-remote-gtk on the PC and Transdroid on the phone. I initially chose Deluge because of the client–server separation it offers, but I found Deluge to be pretty resource-intensive on the machine I had it on (which wasn’t a full-scale PC, but was still more powerful than a Pi).