TLDR: Is there a way I can just choose files to seed automatically instead of downloading again first?

Pretty new to using torrents and I have a bunch of files I’ve been able to download over time through magnet links. Some of which I was unable to seed for long periods of time so removed but would like to be able to still seed them again.

It doesn’t look like I have torrent files for them and I tried copying the. Torrent file to another folder when using magnets to see if I could get it from that. I was able to get some from that but it seems to just start a Download again. Can anyone explain this process a little bit better for me so I can offer up my files at later times too?

  • junusdenised420@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    8 days ago

    Yes, is possible and not tha hard, you add the torrent back into your client pause it (or dont even let it start downlaing) and point it to the already downloaded files by changeing the download folder, after that just varify the files in the client, it sould see the already downloaded files and verify that they are the same once that is done you can continue seeding.

    • JackAttack@lemmy.dbzer0.comOP
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      8 days ago

      Ah okay. That would make sense. I assume this does require the actual torrent file though or does this also work by using the magnet link and doing the same process?

      • empireOfLove2@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        8 days ago

        If the tracker(s) defined in the mag link are still active and have the torrent metadata, then yes a magnet link should also work fine; you just have to add the magnet link, wait for the torrent to update with the torre t name/size in your client before pausing, then do the folder redirect.

  • Xanza@lemm.ee
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    8 days ago

    If you already have the exact files, sure. If not, then no.

      • ChaoticNeutralCzech@feddit.org
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        8 days ago

        Renames are OK in pretty much all clients.

        • Open .torrent file
        • Select destination directory
        • Add Paused
        • Right-click each file/directory in the “Content” tab and rename
        • Recheck to make sure all files are found by the client and their contents have not changed; select “Do not Download” for missing or incomplete files, the correct chunks will still be seeded
        • Start seeding

        You can also use a torrent file editor to get the file names right before importing into a client. Useful for batch operations.

      • Xanza@lemm.ee
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        8 days ago

        Yes. The hash has to be the same. They have to be identical files down to the last bit. Otherwise when you go to recheck the torrent, it’ll only be a partially completed torrent and you can only seed what you have finished.

        • ChaoticNeutralCzech@feddit.org
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          8 days ago

          Nope, file names can be different. It’s only the contents that are hashed. If there is a difference, the entirety of every affected chunk is unseedable and the chunk needs to be redownloaded (if allowed by the use). Then there’s the infohash that includes filenames but that’s not important.

          • Xanza@lemm.ee
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            8 days ago

            This entirely depends on your client and the version of libtorrent that it uses. To say with exactitude you would need to know these things. Since we don’t, it’s more accurate to say that it breaks torrent verification.

            Additionally, there are renames which can still break verification. Like changing file extensions.

            • ChaoticNeutralCzech@feddit.org
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              8 days ago

              I’m willing to take the risk. It’s like saying “your web browser supports WebGL”.

              How does changing an extension break verification? It’s just a rename again. I have successfully changed an extension using qBittorrent before. Via its web interface, even!

      • ShepherdPie@midwest.social
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        8 days ago

        Yes you’ll need everything to be exactly as you received it including extra things like .txt files and the like. This is to prevent someone from replacing a legitimate file with something malicious.

        • ChaoticNeutralCzech@feddit.org
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          8 days ago

          You’re wrong. Partially. Stand by while I illustrate.

          File names are not included in content hashes.

          Let’s first see how a torrent file is created, using quick-and-dirty bitmaps I just drew. File sizes will be in whole MiB (1 MiB = 1 pixel width) for convenience.

          🚧 UNDER CONSTRUCTION 🚧

          So you have a file tree you wanna share.

          The client will arrange the files in some order. I think you can create a valid torrent file with any ordering but let’s just assume it’s by path, alphabetical. (Sizes are not to scale)

          Now file contents are concatenated.

          Then split into 14MiB chunks (in practice 16MiB but I forgot to account for border while drawing lol) and zero-padded (grey) to fill the last chunk.

          🚧 FOR INTERNAL USE 🚧 cuz I'm too lazy to transfer the text to my PC using a more reasonable method

          Externally, You can also omit .nfo files etc. but the whole chunk will not be seeded because

          • Hoimo@ani.social
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            6 days ago

            So when I download only some files from a torrent, it’s likely that I can’t seed all of those files to the next person? I have done partial leeches before and left them seeding under the impression that I could at least seed exactly those files if anyone else wanted them. If that’s impossible (or at least unlikely to work because of chunking), then I might download the whole thing next time (or just leave the swarm).

            • ChaoticNeutralCzech@feddit.org
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              6 days ago

              Your client must have downloaded entire chunks, including parts of adjacent files to those you wanted. I think most clients will discard them but it’s possible they are stored somewhere hidden to enable seeding them again.

              It’s always better to seed something even if it’s not an entire file. Peers are usually upload-bandwidth-limited so being another person providing just a few chunks helps download speeds. Unless you meddle with their progress files, torrent clients will not announce (offer for download) chunks they cannot reassemble. Only people who have 100% of the data are listed as “seeders” in the swarm.

  • Kissaki@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    8 days ago

    Depends on your torrent client. Be careful that the client does not accidentally overwrite your files, replacing the completed content.

    In qBittorrent you add the torrent without starting the download, and then let it or make it re-check [existing] files. it should then progress the check to completion with the correct files and file names in place.

    If you have the torrent added and then put/move the files correctly, you can use the context menu “force re-check”.

    When you then start that complete torrent, you’re seeding.

  • Droolio@feddit.uk
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    8 days ago

    If you can’t find the original .torrent, one way to find it again is to use BiglyBT client’s Swarm Discoveries feature to search its DHT for the exact file size in bytes (of the main media file within). You may be able to find one or more torrents and simultaneous seed them with Swarm Merging too.

    As well as the force recheck method others have mentioned, you can also tell BiglyBT to use existing files elsewhere when adding the torrent, which can copy the data onto there for you without risking overwriting the original files.

  • Yppm@lemy.lol
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    8 days ago

    Can’t help with your question, but thank you for your service.