4.4 KiB
Make Invidious requests data from YouTube through a VPN using Gluetun (in case your IP is blocked)
This tutorial has been written by TheFrenchGhosty. He is better suited when looking for help about this tutorial.
Create the docker network (must be done outside of the compose file):
docker network create --subnet=172.80.0.0/16 gluetun_network
Note: We're not using the Gluetun default of 172.18.0.0/16, because it might already be used which causes Gluetun to not start with the error Error response from daemon: invalid pool request: Pool overlaps with other one on this address space
, if you have this issue with 172.80.0.0/16 just use a number higher than "80" (at the second byte) and apply the rest of the documentation accordingly
Create the compose file for Gluetun
-
Global setup: https://github.com/qdm12/gluetun-wiki/tree/main/setup
-
Provider setup: https://github.com/qdm12/gluetun-wiki/tree/main/setup/providers
services:
gluetun:
image: ghcr.io/qdm12/gluetun
container_name: gluetun
cap_add:
- NET_ADMIN
devices:
- /dev/net/tun:/dev/net/tun
ports:
# - 8888:8888/tcp # HTTP proxy # Useless
# - 8388:8388/tcp # Shadowsocks # Useless
# - 8388:8388/udp # Shadowsocks # Useless
- "127.0.0.1:3000:3000" # Invidious (use the Invidious ports configuration)
volumes:
- /docker/gluetun/data:/gluetun
environment:
- VPN_SERVICE_PROVIDER=<REDACTED>
- VPN_TYPE=openvpn # Use openvpn or wireguard
- OPENVPN_USER=<REDACTED>
- OPENVPN_PASSWORD=<REDACTED>
- SERVER_COUNTRIES=Germany # Use your server location
- UPDATER_PERIOD=24h
- TZ=Europe/Paris # Use your timezone
networks:
gluetun_network:
networks:
gluetun_network:
external: true
Make Invidious use gluetun
Add this to your DB:
networks:
gluetun_network:
ipv4_address: 172.80.0.22
Add this to the end of your compose (to make the Invidious-Postgres stack connect to gluetun):
networks:
gluetun_network:
external: true
Add this to the Invidious container:
network_mode: "container:gluetun"
Comment out the "- ports:" of the Invidious container (gluetun replaces it, reason why we configured it with the same value)
Update the Invidious config to use the new database address (since the network is "different", using the hostname wont work):
INVIDIOUS_CONFIG: |
db:
dbname: invidious
user: kemal
password: <REDACTED>
host: 172.80.0.22
port: 5432
Tell Gluetun to change IP daily (optional but recommended)
Don't forget to replace /path/to/
with a proper path
- Control server documentation https://github.com/qdm12/gluetun-wiki/blob/main/setup/advanced/control-server.md
Start by exposing the Gluetun control server internally (DO NOT EXPOSE IT EXTERNALLY, KEEP 127.0.0.1
), add this port mapping to Gluetun:
ports:
- 127.0.0.1:8000:8000/tcp # Control server
Write a script named restartvpn.sh
and add this content to it:
! Remember to replace /path/to/ with the path you want the log to go (either the script location, or /var/log/
) !
Note: 2>&1
sent STDERR to STDOUT, tee /path/to/restartvpn.log
will write the output of the script to /path/to/restartvpn.log (in the current directory) (while still printing it to the shell)
#!/usr/bin/env bash
echo "BEGIN $(date --rfc-3339=seconds)" 2>&1 | tee /path/to/restartvpn.log
curl -X GET "http://127.0.0.1:8000/v1/publicip/ip" 2>&1 | tee /path/to/restartvpn.log # Print the original IP
curl -X PUT -H "Content-Type: application/json" -d '{"status":"stopped"}' "http://127.0.0.1:8000/v1/openvpn/status" 2>&1 | tee /path/to/restartvpn.log # Stop OpenVPN
sleep 5
curl -X PUT -H "Content-Type: application/json" -d '{"status":"running"}' "http://127.0.0.1:8000/v1/openvpn/status" 2>&1 | tee /path/to/restartvpn.log # Start OpenVPN (changing the server it's connecting to)
sleep 5
curl -X GET "http://127.0.0.1:8000/v1/openvpn/status" 2>&1 | tee /path/to/restartvpn.log # Print the Gluetun status
curl -X GET "http://127.0.0.1:8000/v1/publicip/ip" 2>&1 | tee /path/to/restartvpn.log # Print the new IP
echo "END $(date --rfc-3339=seconds)" 2>&1 | tee /path/to/restartvpn.log
Run this daily using cron
Run crontab -e
and add a new cronjob:
@daily /path/to/restartvpn.sh