Bittorrent App Change Download Location How to Seed Moved Or Renamed Files in Bittorrent
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bittorrent app change download location How to Seed Moved or Renamed Files in BitTorrent. BitTorrent etiquette dictates that once you've downloaded files, you also seed them to help others' downloads go quickly. If you need to move or rename your download, everything's thrown off. Reader Jake Champion explains how to seed after moving or renaming files. This feature is available in uTorrent version 1.8 and later. You can not change file names and keep seeding with earlier versions of uTorrent. You can use this guide if you move or rename the folder in addition to changing file names. It is possible to change file (and folder) names because they are not really parts of the files. They are like ''labels'' that tell the computer where to find the content of the files. After such changes, you need to retarget the files in uTorrent if you want to keep seeding the torrent. The procedure for doing this is the same no matter if the torrent is already loaded in uTorrent, or if you add it as a new torrent. Seed Renamed Files. 1. If the torrent is already loaded in uTorrent, right-click it and choose ''Stop'' (if it is not already stopped). If you are adding a new torrent with changed file names, make sure that you add it in stopped mode (or stop it very quickly if you fail to do this). 2. Select the torrent, then click the ''Files'' tab in the lower pane. (If you have no lower pane, click ''Options'' and check ''Show detailed info''.) 3. Right-click a file and choose ''Relocate. '' from the menu. (If you have also changed the folder name, or moved the folder, you need to browse to the right folder.) 4. When you are in the right folder, simply click the new file name for the file, then click ''Save''. Be careful that you really choose the right file: sometimes uTorrent and Explorer show the files in different order. You will see the changed file name in the file list in uTorrent. 5. Optional: When you have changed all the file names to the new names, you may want to right-click the torrent and choose ''Force re-check'' in order to be sure that all the files were pointed to the right new names. 6. Right-click the torrent and choose ''Start'' (or ''Force Start'' if you want to make sure the torrent does not get queued). Seed Files Inside a Renamed or Moved Folder. 1. Stop the torrent by right-clicking it and choosing ''Stop''. 2. In uTorrent, right-click the torrent and choose ''Advanced - Set Download Location. '' 3. Browse to the moved and/or re-named folder, click OK. 4. Optional: If you have re-named the folder and want to change the name of the torrent, so that the new name shows in uTorrent, too, select the torrent and (left-)click it again. (or select the torrent and press F2) 5. Optional: If you want to be really sure you got it right, right-click the torrent and choose ''Force Re-Check''. When it stops checking, uTorrent should say that 100% is done. 6. Right-click the torrent and choose ''Start'' (or ''Force Start'' if you want to make sure the torrent does not get queued). I use this along with Lifehacker's previous guide to setting up a seeding media center as to eliminate having two of each download, since my hard drive space is nearly filled up. Set Up a Fully Automated, Torrent-Seeding Media Center. We've featured a fully automated media center set-up before, but Lifehacker reader Andre has… Bittorrent app change download location. Modified on: Mon, 18 Jun, 2018 at 7:53 PM. Start with a search. Tap on the magnifying glass in the upper-right corner of the screen in portrait (vertical) mode, and then enter a search term. Your browser will open. Start searching for what you’d like to download. Remember that you are looking for a torrent file (file ends in .torrent) or magnet link. Tap on the .torrent file or magnet link, and our app will open and prompt you to select the files you wish to download within the torrent. Choose a download location, then tap ‘Add.’ Move half-finished Bittorrent Downloads to another drive. When you are running low on disk space while downloading files using the Bittorrent protocol and applications like uTorrent or qBittorrent, you may sometimes need to make room for downloads or other activities on the drive. One option that you have that can be quite useful in this regard is to move some of the half-finished downloads to another drive. While you can do that temporarily to free up space, you can also move them there permanently to continue downloading the torrent to your computer. Most Bittorrent clients come with options to do so in a handful of easy to follow steps. The downloads continue right from the position they have been in before the move, so that you do not have to download everything again. I'm going to show how this is done in uTorrent and qBittorrent. Most Bittorrent clients should offer similar options, and while the menu items that you need to click on may differ, the way is always the same. uTorrent. Locate the download that you want to move to another drive in the uTorrent client. Right-click the download and stop it. This pauses downloads for the moment. Right-click the torrent again and select Advanced > Set Download location from the context menu. Pick a folder on the other drive Right-click the torrent and select Start. qBittorrent. Right-click the torrent download that you want to move and select Pause from the context menu (there is no stop). Right-click the torrent and select Set Location from the menu. Right-click the torrent in the qBittorrent software and select resume. Qbittorrent moves the files and folders of each torrent automatically to the new destination so that you do not have to move the files manually. Generally speaking. Stop or pause the torrent download Select the "move to another location option" Move the torrent files and folders from the old location to the new drive Start or resume the download again. You can use the method to quickly free up space on a drive where Bittorrent downloads make up a sizable part of the drive's available storage. Update : The uTorrent client just like qBittorrent moves the data that has already been downloaded to the new location automatically. About Martin Brinkmann. Related content. Microsoft retires OneDrive's Fetch Files feature. Torrent client Transmission 3.00 is out. Bittorrent Client qBittorrent 4.1.7 is out. uTorrent Web First Look. Ignite 2017: big list of OneDrive changes announced. Latest uTorrent comes with a Game Store. Comments. this is kinda old feature (probably seen from utorrent ver. 2.2 and above), but the task does not require YOU to do the “move files”, utorrent does it for you, I tried it many times and never faild. all you have to do is set the new location from the advanced options menu. Are you sure you need to move the files your self martin? You are right, I just tried it again and the file contents were moved automatically. Updating the article now. question! what to do when you have to move hundreds of partial downloads? answer: take your time ja manually change the path for every single torrent. let say 10sec for one torrent. ;) brute force is the key :)) about three years ago, my utorrent (v1.8 or something) crahsed to bsod my homeserver and literally: everything (download history and active downloads) was gone within few seconds. at that time my download history consisted about 5k of torrents. i was quite sad and disappointed and hopeless, cause manually recreate the known.dat file (utorrent history file) was the first and only solution that come to my mind. and a such operation would take a huge amount of time and “handwork” ;P ok, if hrere is a hard way, there should be a smart way also: i started to dig into *.dat file structure to possibily make a script that would help me. but after some time i gave up, cause my programming skills doesn’t met the task requirements i made. and then i saw a light in the other side of tunnel: i found a tool named BEncode Editor.exe ;) some play with new tool and i was able within and hour to resurrect the whole file ;) the must-have companion to utorrent for non-newbies(!) is available freely from http://forum.utorrent.com/viewtopic.php?id=31306 and it’s almost perfect tool to edit most download queue parameters (file and torrent locations, names, etc) Great tip, thanks so much for sharing the link. … and ALWAYS make backup BEFORE editing … cause little fingermistake in search-replace task and utorrent checks every torrent (including already downloaded ones) and makes it errorenous! but downloaded parts list is NOT editable with BEncode Editor (when you don’t have the downloaded file anymore, to make the torrent finished again, for such task, you should know resume.dat binary structure and use hex editor!) with this tool i solved the problem with windows xp and ntfs file system (probably fat32 also) when downloaded *.torrent files are moved into other folder that active queue files. (the same type problem was with firefox 2.x bookmarks files also). during (some?) file operation by other programs (than explorer.exe) some explorer.exe thread locks (ie touches) the subjective file for a little time (more files in folder, longer delay! example: how much takes explorer to show files when in folder is 10 files? but when it has 8000 files?), but this actions prevents utorrent to successfully move completed *.torrent files from one folder to another.