Hi,

I’ve got a file that I torrented (Linux distro .mkv).

My goal is to seed that file again. I do not have the original torrent file anymore because I broke my server (multiple times) and lost data.

Is there a tool that searches for the right torrent? The tool should create a hash and compare the file’s hash with all the hashes of all the linux torrents from the sites I use. That’s at least how I imagine such a tool would work.

I got the torrent from a good private tracker and I was able to redownload the torrent file for that file but others were from public sources I can’t find.

  • @triplenadir@lemmygrad.ml
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    101 year ago

    best I can think of is internet search for the exact filename in quotes. AFAIK the hash is based on properties like torrent name which would he hard to guess maybe?

  • @toxictenement@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    49 months ago

    So, you have content of the torrent, but don’t know the original torrent it goes to, right?

    The first place I’d look would be bitsearch.to. It’s a pretty extensive dht network crawler that actually has a lot of rarbg archived. Be warned, you can’t use .'s or a few other ‘special’ characters, just replace them with spaces. If that fails to find anything, theres also btdig, but at this point you will probably want to install a program called jackett to search all public sites at the same time. Hopefully that would be a good tool for you.

    When you find the torrent the file is from, you may need to find additional files, like advertisement txt files for dead torrent trackers. You may have some luck finding these in other torrents, you just have to match the filesize really.

    If there aren’t any seeders whatsoever, magnet links won’t work. You will have to try and find the .torrent manually. You can pretty often find these on caching sites. The three I know of are itorrents.org, torrage.info, and btcache.me. Hopefully one of these still has the file.

    When you go to add the torrent, set the stop condition in qbittorrent to files checked. This checks the integrity of the files you have on disk against the torrent you opened. Just be sure to save it to the same folder. If it checks without a hitch, you should be able to start seeding. Remember to port forward!

  • @yeolsongarak
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    21 year ago

    From public trackers, should be as easy as creating a new torrent with some popular trackers out there. The file you have is the same as others so they should be able to find you via p2p, I think? Or if you have qBittorrent, it has a torrent search function, maybe the original torrent is in there.

    https://github.com/ngosang/trackerslist

  • lemmygrabber
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    1 year ago

    (Linux distro .mkv)

    What?

    EDIT: Oh wait I get it now. Sorry about that.

  • azron
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    11 year ago

    Your better off looking on the sites you are on and going through your history and redownloading the torrent file and have your client save it in the same place where the file is on your HD. It’ll verify the file and reseed. You cannot recreate the original torrent file from the files that were in the torrent the best you candko is create a new torrent file to distribute the file. Which isn’t what you want to do…