The help messages are classified with tags. A tag starts with#. For example, type --help=#http to get the usage for theoptions tagged with #http. If non-tag word is given, print theusage for the options whose name includes that word. AvailableValues: #basic, #advanced, #http, #https, #ftp,#metalink, #bittorrent, #cookie, #hook, #file, #rpc,#checksum, #experimental, #deprecated, #help, #allDefault: #basic
file renamer basic keygen torrent
In multi file torrent, the adjacent files specified by this option mayalso be downloaded. This is by design, not a bug.A single piece may include several files or part of files, and aria2writes the piece to the appropriate files.
Before getting torrent metadata from DHT when downloading withmagnet link, first try to read file saved by--bt-save-metadata option. If it is successful, then skipdownloading metadata from DHT.Default: false
Save meta data as ".torrent" file. This option has effect only whenBitTorrent Magnet URI is used. The file name is hex encoded infohash with suffix ".torrent". The directory to be saved is the samedirectory where download file is saved. If the same file alreadyexists, meta data is not saved. See also --bt-metadata-onlyoption. Default: false
If true or mem is specified, when a file whose suffix is .torrent or contenttype is application/x-bittorrent is downloaded, aria2 parses it as a torrentfile and downloads files mentioned in it.If mem is specified, a torrent file is not written to the disk, but is justkept in memory.If false is specified, the .torrent file is downloaded to the disk, butis not parsed as a torrent and its contents are not downloaded.Default: true
Pause downloads created as a result of metadata download. There are3 types of metadata downloads in aria2: (1) downloading .torrentfile. (2) downloading torrent metadata using magnet link. (3)downloading metalink file. These metadata downloads will generatedownloads using their metadata. This option pauses these subsequentdownloads. This option is effective only when--enable-rpc=true is given.Default: false
Save the uploaded torrent or metalink meta data in the directoryspecified by --dir option. The file name consists of SHA-1hash hex string of meta data plus extension. For torrent, theextension is '.torrent'. For metalink, it is '.meta4'. If false isgiven to this option, the downloads added byaria2.addTorrent() or aria2.addMetalink() will not besaved by --save-session option. Default: true
You can also specify arbitrary number of torrent files and Metalinkdocuments stored on a local drive. Please note that they are alwaystreated as a separate download. Both Metalink4 and Metalink version3.0 are supported.
You can specify both torrent file with -T option and URIs. By doingthis, you can download a file from both torrent swarm andHTTP(S)/FTP/SFTP server at the same time, while the data fromHTTP(S)/FTP/SFTP are uploaded to the torrent swarm. For single filetorrents, URI can be a complete URI pointing to the resource or if URIends with /, name in torrent file in torrent is added. For multi-filetorrents, name and path are added to form a URI for each file.
aria2 uses a control file to track the progress of a download. Acontrol file is placed in the same directory as the downloading fileand its file name is the file name of downloading file with .aria2appended. For example, if you are downloading file.zip, then thecontrol file should be file.zip.aria2. (There is a exception for thisnaming convention. If you are downloading a multi torrent, itscontrol file is the "top directory" name of the torrent with .aria2appended. The "top directory" name is a value of "name" key in "info"directory in a torrent file.)
Normally if you lose a control file, you cannot resume download. Butif you have a torrent or metalink with chunk checksums for the file,you can resume the download without a control file by giving -V optionto aria2c in command-line.
This method adds a BitTorrent download by uploading a ".torrent" file.If you want to add a BitTorrent Magnet URI, use the aria2.addUri()method instead. torrent must be a base64-encoded string containing thecontents of the ".torrent" file.uris is an array of URIs (string). uris is used forWeb-seeding. For single file torrents, the URI can be a complete URIpointing to the resource; if URI ends with /, name in torrent fileis added. For multi-file torrents, name and path in torrent areadded to form a URI for each file.options is a struct and its members are pairs of option name and value.See Options below for more details.If position is given, it must be an integer starting from 0. The newdownload will be inserted at position in the waiting queue. Ifposition is omitted or position is larger than the current size of thequeue, the new download is appended to the end of the queue.This method returns the GID of the newly registered download.If --rpc-save-upload-metadata is true, theuploaded data is saved as a file named as the hex string of SHA-1 hash ofdata plus ".torrent" in the directory specified by --dir option. E.g. a file name might be0a3893293e27ac0490424c06de4d09242215f0a6.torrent. If a file with thesame name already exists, it is overwritten! If the file cannot be savedsuccessfully or --rpc-save-upload-metadata is false,the downloads added by this method are not saved by --save-session.
GID of a parent download. Some downloads are a part of anotherdownload. For example, if a file in a Metalink has BitTorrentresources, the downloads of ".torrent" files are parts of that parent.If this download has no parent, this key will not be included in theresponse.
Before running rTorrent, copy the example configuration file /usr/share/doc/rtorrent/rtorrent.rc to /.rtorrent.rc, and check out the related rTorrent wiki page that has a modern basic configuration file.
The schedule2 option has rTorrent watch a particular directory for new torrent files. Saving a torrent file to this directory will automatically start the download. Remember to create the directory that will be watched (e.g. mkdir /watch). Also, be careful when using this option as rTorrent will move the torrent file to your session folder and rename it to its hash value.
This service file has no restart because the author occasionally takes the drive in question offline, and rtorrent fails, shall we say, "suboptimally" when started in this scenario and loses many torrent specific settings such as the specific directories each torrent is stored in. In fact the symlinks that kick off rtorrent live on the relevant drive; if it is unmounted rtorrent cannot start. This use case of blocking rtorrent from starting is relevant to users who put the downloaded files on removable media such as NAS, USB or eSATA drives.
If multiple rtorrent instances are not needed and the rtorrent rc file is in the default location the above service file may be simplified. The entire file is included but only the ExecStart and ExecStop lines change.
rTorrent has the ability to pre-allocate space for a torrent. The major benefit is that it limits and avoids fragmentation of the filesystem. However, this introduces a delay during the pre-allocation if the filesystem does not support the fallocate syscall natively.
If you do not want to download a torrent immediately, and would prefer it to begin at a later time (to accomodate a data plan, for example), you can add the torrent to a specific directory and tell rtorrent to check that directory periodically, if a torrent file is present, rtorrent will start downloading at the appointed time:
In bittorrent's case a hash is used as content descriptor, where peers which have the content announce themselves on the DHT. If someone wants the file(s) they look up IP/Port pairs on the DHT, then contact the peers via a separate protocol and then download the data.
The help messages are classified with tags. A tag starts with #. For example, type --help=#http to get the usage for the options tagged with #http. If non-tag word is given, print the usage for the options whose name includes that word. Available Values: #basic, #advanced, #http, #https, #ftp, #metalink, #bittorrent, #cookie, #hook, #file, #rpc, #checksum, #experimental, #deprecated, #help, #all Default: #basic
In multi file torrent, the adjacent files specified by this option may also be downloaded. This is by design, not a bug. A single piece may include several files or part of files, and aria2 writes the piece to the appropriate files.
Before getting torrent metadata from DHT when downloading with magnet link, first try to read file saved by --bt-save-metadata option. If it is successful, then skip downloading metadata from DHT. Default: false
Save meta data as ".torrent" file. This option has effect only when BitTorrent Magnet URI is used. The file name is hex encoded info hash with suffix ".torrent". The directory to be saved is the same directory where download file is saved. If the same file already exists, meta data is not saved. See also --bt-metadata-only option. Default: false
If true or mem is specified, when a file whose suffix is .torrent or content type is application/x-bittorrent is downloaded, aria2 parses it as a torrent file and downloads files mentioned in it. If mem is specified, a torrent file is not written to the disk, but is just kept in memory. If false is specified, the .torrent file is downloaded to the disk, but is not parsed as a torrent and its contents are not downloaded. Default: true
Pause downloads created as a result of metadata download. There are 3 types of metadata downloads in aria2: (1) downloading .torrent file. (2) downloading torrent metadata using magnet link. (3) downloading metalink file. These metadata downloads will generate downloads using their metadata. This option pauses these subsequent downloads. This option is effective only when --enable-rpc=true is given. Default: false 2ff7e9595c
Comments