Or it simply won't open the connections at all because the file hashs don't match. Or they could end up with half of your file and half of theirs, and a useless final product. At its best, anyone DLing the file will actually be DLing your file and be irritated to learn thay DLed a different file than what they intended. Repace the started file with your own and follow the exact file name." It won't work. If I'm reading this second part right, "You're gonna start the download and then close your torrent app. Now you need to change the Minimum Number of Available Seeds Simply set it to 0 under Seeding Goal. Once you booted back up and opened uTorrent, it would reestablish those peer connections. A reboot would only break the peer connections momentarily. If you DLed this file from BT yourself, then just put the torrent file and the DLed material in the same folder, and open the torrent with uTorrent, being sure to tell uTorrent what folder the files are in. A tracker keeps track of all the seeds and leachers for torrent files and links them together. This only stops when you remove the torrent or turn off seeding. As long as you leave your torrent seeding, you share the torrent files with multiple users. I am not sure if the mods would be happy with me posting the URL to a torrent site here, but you can find one easily enough by typing 'torrent' into google. Change Settings in Your Torrent Client First, open up your uTorrent client and head over to Options at the top left Next, click on Preferences Now, click on. As much as you may not need to know what seeding is, it is important to recognize its importance to the torrenting community. Private trackers are rough.What Sid means with his first comment is that you should find a website that hosts torrent files and runs a tracker. I have 1000 torrents active right now on my qBitTorrent. This might not be the case in your situation but something to be aware of if you didn't know. This is especially true when dealing with private trackers as there are a lot of seedboxes on private trackers. Just because your seeding something doesn't mean peers will actually download it from you. "The peers that are downloading might just be getting connected to other peers instead of you due to faster connection. Maybe I will try port forwarding as a hail marry. Been like this for me for years across multiple ISPs and clients (uTorrent and qbt). I suspect private trackers in general + my average connection speed is the issue mostly. Open this list of torrent trackers, then copy and paste some trackers into the trackers field in the mentioned window. Public trackers that underperform I end up being a leacher and not contributing.Ĭonsidered port forwarding but some upload traffic is getting through which makes me think that's not the issue. The list of trackers will appear at the top of this window. This is less of an issue for my private tracker since I get points for seeding time (I believe) that I can redeem for upload credits to keep my overall ratio but it's an annoying manual process periodically and I'm not really contributing. Unsure if that's true but maybe a factor? Thought I read a long time ago that trackers (or something in the chain) will prioritize faster peers, especially private trackers. Everything else is flat out zero for upload.Orange is the only private one that's had any upload at all and it's too little compared to the file size that the ratio is still zero.Blue are public and have had some success but minimal and are currently doing nothing.Set Force Resume on all torrents after each settings adjustment to try and "kickstart" them - no change.Checked all Connection Limits boxes and set to high values (1000 for all) - no change.Others were already unchecked - no change Unchecked the top two, default Connection Limits options.Already unchecked Torrent Queueing a few days ago - no change.
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