Jump to content

How to Make a Torrent - Other Helpful Tutorials - InviteHawk - Your Only Source for Free Torrent Invites

Buy, Sell, Trade or Find Free Torrent Invites for Private Torrent Trackers Such As redacted, blutopia, losslessclub, femdomcult, filelist, Chdbits, Uhdbits, empornium, iptorrents, hdbits, gazellegames, animebytes, privatehd, myspleen, torrentleech, morethantv, bibliotik, alpharatio, blady, passthepopcorn, brokenstones, pornbay, cgpeers, cinemageddon, broadcasthenet, learnbits, torrentseeds, beyondhd, cinemaz, u2.dmhy, Karagarga, PTerclub, Nyaa.si, Polishtracker etc.

How to Make a Torrent


Guest MkVraHLa963
 Share

Recommended Posts

Guest MkVraHLa963

Create a new Torrent

You can make a a new torrent easily using µTorrent's built-in torrent maker:

µTorrent menu > File > Create a New torrent

This opens the "Create a new .torrent" dialog box; all you need is to fill in the required information...

The Source

Here is where you specify the location of the content you wish to share. Before selecting the path chose whether you are sharing a single file or multiple ones. If you are making a torrent with more then one file, those files must be located in a single folder, with nothing else in it.

1.Select "Add a File" or "Add a directory."

2.Browse your way to the location of file or directory you would like to share.

The Tracker

A tracker is an application or script on a system that relays connection information about peers on a given torrent. However, it is most important since without it BitTorrent clients would not know how to find other clients sharing the same files. µTorrent knows which tracker to contact by reading the announce URL in the torrent. Trackers generally look like any other internet address (http//somewebaddress:portnumber/announce). If you need a tracker you may:

  • Check the site where you wish to upload the torrent.
  • Private sites usually provide their own tracker.
  • Public sites may also provide their own tracker, or include the URL of generic ones.
  • In a pinch, look at the properties of a torrent you have downloaded from the site you wish to use and copy the tracker from there (but in such a case wait to test the torrent out before uploading it to the site as even those tracker may require you to have registered the torrent with them first).

µTorrent supports HTTP and HTTPS (SSL) trackers. UDP trackers are not supported. µTorrent also supports torrents with multiple trackers; trackers from the same server (with similar URLs) must be grouped together and those from different servers separated by a blank line.

µTorrent contains an "embedded tracker" intended for people wishing to share with a small group for a short period of time. This should not be used for sharing torrent over public or private sites, but only for private stuff and over short periods of time (along the lines of family movies shared with friends and such).

  • The embedded tracker URL is: http://your_ip_address:port/announce (where your ip is your computer's ip address and port is µTorrent's listening port)
  • The embedded tracker must be enabled in: µTorrent menu > options > preferences > Advanced > bt.enable_tracker: set to "true".

Warning: Using the embedded tracker requires you to have the same IP address and the same port as long as the torrent is active. This means if you use a dynamic IP and randomized port and get disconnected from the internet, your IP and port will get reset, and the torrent will die.

Comments

You may add a comment about the torrent (in µTorrent these comments appear at the bottom of the general tab.)

Others

"Start Seeding" will automatically load the newly made torrent into µTorrent when you have completed the process. Some may wish to disable it if the site they are uploading to requires them to "re-download" the torrent for seeding (this occurs with some sites requiring passwords or cookies). If unchecked, you will need to load the torrent into µTorrent manually for seeding.

"Private Torrent" will disable DHT (Distributed Hash Table) and PEX (Peer EXchange), which are alternate means of getting peers from other peers instead of the tracker. This is particularly useful when the tracker is unavailable for some reason. However some private sites do not allow it because it keeps them from monitoring users' share ratio properly and allows members to share torrents with unregistered users.

Create and Save As...

This is the final step in making a torrent. For all intents and purposes it works just like saving a file in any other application.

You should save the torrent in an appropriate location, such as where your other torrents are located or in the folder of the torrent you are making (this will not affect the content).

Naming conventions:

You can name your torrent anything you want, but remember that other people need to search for it and find it. The name should be significant, and representative of the content. Calling it "My first torrent" will not tell anything about the content, and few people will take a chance and download it. You may have seen this naming convention around before:

"My Vacation movies_1996_CAM_MPG_BYME.torrent" which would translate as: "title_episode_quality_format_maker.torrent".

  • "Title" should be simple and descriptive if needed.
  • "Episodes" is a number used when dealing with sequential torrents. It can be a date, a release, or a label with season and episode (common formats include 102, 1x02, and s01e02, which all translate to season 1, episode 2).
  • "Quality" denotes the source or the type of file.
  • "Format" gives peers an indicator of what will be needed to use the content (xvid, doc, avi, mp3, iso, etc).
  • "Maker" shows the credits for the torrent and/or the content.

Remember, many operating systems limit file names to 256 characters so it's better to plan ahead.

Making your Torrent Available to Others

The most common way to do this is to upload it to a torrent site. If this was your intention you should have read up on the site's policies, rules and procedures of that site before uploading.

Uploading the .torrent

1.Using your web browser, go to the site (log in if needed).

2.Navigate your way to the upload page, and follow the instructions provided.

Some sites allow you to add comments and descriptions. Try to put something you would find useful as a peer.

Do not panic if the torrent just sits there without uploading, it may take a while for other people to notice the torrent and start downloading it. It may take longer if the content is something obscure with limited appeal.

Private Trackers

Some private sites will require you to download your own torrent from their site so you can seed it.

1. Download your torrent from the site and load it into µTorrent (it should go to download mode and show 0%.)

2. Stop the torrent, right-click on it, and select "Set Download Location" in the context menu under "Advanced".

3. Browse your way to where the content is located (i.e. the same path you specified when making the torrent) and open. For torrents with multiple files, make sure you point TO the containing folder and not IN it.

4. Start the torrent. µTorrent will start checking the files (% will rise rather quickly), and when it reaches 100% it will start seeding (the larger the torrent the longer this will take).

uTorrent.com

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest
This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Customer Reviews

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use.