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Welcome to the torrentfile wiki!
torrentfile
is a command line utility for creating Bittorrent meta files, and many other features regarding torrent files.
- Create torrent files using any version (including hybrids)
- Display detailed information about a pre-existing torrent file
- Edit details of a torrent file
- Check torrent file/folder contents against a torrent file for percent completed and integrity.
- Create Magnet URI from torrent file.
There are multiple ways to download/install torrentfile
.
Using pip:
pip install torrentfile
Using git:
git clone https://github.com/alexpdev/torrentfile.git
cd torrentfile
python3 setup.py install
If you input torrentfile
in a terminal after installing will show you the available subcommands.
-h
: Does the same as torrentfile
Not all subcommands have the same options so entering any of them with -h
will show
their available options.
The only required argument to the create subcommand is the path to the torrent content.
Example: torrentfile create /path/to/content
The rest are all optional:
-a
, -t
, --announce
, and --tracker
all do behave the same. They add trackers to the
newly created torrent files tracker list. The option can be used more than once if needed or urls
can be listed in a row seperated by a single space. Example -t http://url1 http://url2 ...
. There
is not limit to the amount of trackers that can be added.
-w
and --web-seeds
similarly adds urls to the list of web-seeds for the torrent and behaves the same
as the options for the tracker list.
--comment
should be followed by text in quotations in order to leave a comment inside the meta file.
Example: --comment "Created for MyTrackerExample.com"
--source
is used for adding a source string. They are typically one word so quotes are usually
not needed, however if the source string has a space it will need to be quoted. Example: --source MyTrackerExample
-p
or --private
should be used if you are creating the torrent for a private tracker. When this option is enabled
DHT and multi-tracker protocol are disabled.
--piece-length
enables custom piece-length choice for the torrent. This option can be picky because the number either
must be a perfect power of two (e.g. 32768 or 524288) or the easier approach is to input the integer exponent between 14-29.
Example: --piece-length 14
or --piece-length 16384
. The even easier option is to ignore this option and let torrentfile
choose for you.
--meta-version
is how you select which version of the Bittorrent Protocol the torrent file is intended for.
Most clients are still using version 1, so that remains the default for now. The alternatives are version 2,
and version1 version2 hybrids.
Examples:
--meta-version 1
explicitly chooses version 1, and its also the default
--meta-version 2
explicitly chooses version 2
--meta-version 3
creates a version 1 & version 2 hybrid.
-o
and --out
can be used to specify where the torrent should be saved. Currently the default is to save it
adjacent to the torrent content. Using this option means you must supply the full path filename and all.
Example: torrent content path is at /home/user/torrents/content
the default would create /home/user/torrents/content.torrent
--cwd
or --current
simply changes the default save location to the current working directory.
Example: torrent content at /home/user/torrents/content
this option would save to ./content.torrent
--noprogress
option suppresses the progress bar that is shown by default to identify the amount of time is needed.
I think that's it for the create command.....
Precompiled binaries for linux and windows can also be found on the releases page.
If the latest binaries cannot be found, please open an Issue
Full documentation for the app including usage examples, the full API and other implementation details can be found on github pages