![]() Copy the code for the batch file and save as sonarr-autosubber.No idea how you could possibly have achieved that, but you should definitely play the lottery. Accidentally permanently setting an environment variable is quite unusual and really bad luck. That change had it appear to Filebot & Java that it was working on the same volume / filesystem and the program ran without a problem and moved my files where I expected. The value of FILEBOTOPTS must be a valid JVM option, e.g. Add filebot to your system’s PATH (Environment Variable) setting If you set FILEBOTOPTS to invalid option values, then FileBot will crash on startup.Download ( ) and install Filebot (it’s a Java application, so it’s cross-platform!).START “Searching subtitle(s)…” /WAIT filebot -script “E:\Scripts\oovy” “%sonarr_episodefile_path%” -lang %1 If you're using the free version, then that's provided as is, and if something doesn't work you'll need to figure it you yourself. :: Invoke Filebot to search for subtitle(s) by hash (strict mode). If you purchase FileBot, then it'll just work, and you get support if something doesn't. :: Sonarr needs to run as an application. :: Filebot.exe needs to be in your system’s PATH (Environment Variable) setting!!! Since Plex doesn’t support ISO 639-3 language codes, the script converts the ISO 639-3 codes to ISO 639-2/B codes. The script also works with manual imports (Sonarr -> Wanted -> Manual Import). If it doesn’t find a subtitle, Filebot simply ends. nl,en,frįilebot searches by hash to ensure the correct subtitle is indeed downloaded. For multiple languages add them as a comma-separated list (without spaces!) eg. Your preferred language is added as an argument in Sonarr, using 2-letter ISO 639-1 language code eg. Run Sonarr as an application! NOT as a Windows Service! Sonarr as a service doesn’t seem to fire custom scripts.Īfter importing a downloaded episode the script invokes Filebot to search and download the correct subtitle file in SRT format.Windows OS (it’s probably pretty easy to port to Mac or Linux). ![]()
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