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Episode 1.3 Torrent
1.3.5: 26/06/08: Belated release of signed version.1.3.4: 09/12/06: Fix 1.3.3 for Java 1.4 users.1.3.3: 06/12/06: Reduced thread usage, prioritize torrent file guessing.1.3.2: 06/10/03: Fixes console UI bug.1.3.1: 06/09/22: Fixes timer and display bug.1.3.0: 06/09/17: Fixes scroll bug.1.2.9: 06/09/11: Proper version display. Updated plugin api.1.2.8: Fix for invalid regular expression causing feed loading to fail. Support for self-signed ssl certificates.1.2.6: Improvements, see Changelog.1.2.5: Minor fixes and improvements.1.2.4: More fixes, see Changelog.1.2.3: Fixes and Improvements.1.2.2: ETag and Last-Modified HTTP headers now used. And more (read changelog.txt).1.2.1: Fixes compatibility with previous versions.1.2: Johan Frank has taken over the plugin development. Fixes and improvements.! Configuration file is NOT compatible with 1.1, you will need to re-enter feeds and filters! Use 1.2.1! Requires Java version 5.0 (also known as 1.5).1.1: initial version.
Start by registering a RSS feed in the tab "RSS Feeds". Make sure the links link to torrent files, and not a new HTML page.The "Update time" is how often this feed is checked. It depends on how often the feeds are updated, but usually, between 60-120 minutes should suffice. The minimum value is 5 minutes, to avoid overloading the server.
If no torrents appear in the list in the subscription dialog, but they show up fine in your web browser, the problem is likely that the web server requires some cookies. The cookies are added automatically by the browser, but you'll have to add them manually to YaRSS2.There are a lot of guides on how to find the correct cookie values (most torrent sites that require cookies have some guide or forum thread where this is explained).
You can send a test email to see if your email settings works.In a thin client/daemon setup, the test email is sent from the client machine, but the real emails sent by YaRSS2 when adding torrents are sent from the daemon, so if you have problems sending emails it might be caused by issues on your server.
SickChill is an automatic Video Library Manager for TV Shows.It watches for new episodes of your favorite shows, and when they are posted it does its magic: automatic torrent/nzb searching, downloading, and processing at the qualities you want.
Poster/banner/fanart downloads, and NFO/TBN generationConfigurable automatic episode renaming, sorting, and other forms of processingSearches TheTVDB.com and AniDB.net for shows, seasons, episodes, and metadataEpisode status management allows for mass failing seasons/episodes to force retriesDVD Order numbering to return results in DVD order instead of Air-By-Date orderAllows you to choose which indexer to have SickChill fetch its show info from when importingAutomatic XEM Scene Numbering/Naming for seasons/episodesSpecials and multi-episode torrent/nzb supportImproved handling of failed downloadsReal SSL certificate validation
Taiga is an open-source desktop application for Windows. It automatically detects the anime videos you watch on your computer and synchronizes your progress with online services. It helps you manage your anime library, discover new series, share watched episodes and download new ones.
Share the current episode you're watching by updating your Discord rich presence, posting a tweet to your Twitter account, sending a message to IRC channels, or making an HTTP request to any URL. Learn more
As long as the site provides a consistent way to detect the anime title and the episode number in its URL or page title, it's possible. Some services such as Hulu and Netflix aren't supported because it's technically not possible to detect the episodes this way. Let us know if you have another service in mind.
Spamming every watched episode to Twitter can annoy your followers, which is why the default format string is set up to work only when you watch the first or the last episode of a series. To change this behavior, you can use one of the following strings instead:
Before checking for new torrents, you may set up some filters in order to automatically select the ones you're interested in and discard the others. Each filter consists of one or more conditions, and an action to be performed on torrents that match those conditions, such as, "if the video resolution is less than 720p, discard the torrent". It's possible to limit a filter to one or more anime in your library.
Discard and Select actions work the way you'd expect, whereas Prefer is a bit more complicated: If it's a general filter, torrents that don't match the filter are discarded. If it's a limited filter, torrents that match the filter are selected, and torrents that don't match the filter are discarded.
Although Deluge is often overlooked, in reality, this Bittorrent client is one of the most robust and flexible. In fact, it is known as the king of customization. And once you try it, you might never go back, and there are many reasons why.
Deluge 2.0 is superior to Deluge 1.3 in terms of functionalities, features, and performance. Deluge 2.0 comes with performance updates that ensure the client can manage more torrents and with faster response times. Deluge v2.0 also includes new features such as multi-user support, automatic re-checks, new console UI, migration to GTK3, magnet pre-fetching, support to libtorrent 1.2, and more.
The Deluge bit torrent client comes with all the foundational features of a typical torrent client. As you will notice, when Deluge is missing something, a feature, a fix, etc., it will be only a matter of time before someone builds a plug-in or fixes the bug.
Remote access is one of the greatest features of the Deluge torrent client. It allows you to manage torrents remotely via a local client. To control Deluge remotely with a thin client, you have to prepare your remote Deluge machine to accept remote connections, so please follow this tutorial carefully.
Now you will notice that your torrents will begin downloading. And also, when you finish configuring your RSS feed, you can use your WebUI to check the status of torrents, or you can continue using your GTK over the remote desktop.
For instance, you might have the fastest bandwidth and best computer, but your ISP might be doing a great job blocking torrent traffic. Or, you are using Deluge VPN, but the VPN service provider is keeping your logs.
By default, Deluge communicates on port 58846. But, remember that this is signaling (communication) and not torrenting traffic. When it comes to data (torrenting traffic), Deluge uses random ports, usual ports between 50,000 and 65,000.
If you feel your communication with other torrent peers is limited, slow, or is simply never possible, your Deluge ports might be being blocked by a networking device. When the gateway, router, firewall, or proxy receives an incoming connection from an external remote client (a torrent peer), the device will not know where to forward it within your Local Area Network (LAN), so it discards it.
Regardless of what torrent client you use, using BitTorrent will always expose your information in some way or the other. All peers within the same swarm can easily see your data, including IP, country, OS, and even Deluge version. On top of that, even though you might be downloading legal Ubuntu files, your ISP will likely monitor and block all torrent activity.
As a brand new torrent user this is a God send. I have been looking for a how to guide to set what ever switches that may need to be set in deluge. Also, While I had the latest release I set in on my end to run in cojmpateable mode with os7 for windows not os1`0. But this article says it supports 7 thru 10.
Deluge appears to be a mess of false error messages, telling me that things are not working when they clearly are. My torrents are definitely downloading, even though there are allegedly port errors, and the port tests all fail.
I couldnt find the debug file on synology. I am actually running XPEnology. but nzb is reading at a better quality. If a add a tag for the most common torrent such as 720p or kickass if that will even work as a tag would hat help?
This is what manual search brings up. on all series nzb is at the top of the search but my usenet wont download them since they are older so for older episodes I want transmission to handle those downloads. I dont want to have to (but will if its the only way) do manual search for each episode. I would like for the older episodes to do an auto search and grab the torrent and not the nzb regardless of quality.
The matches in the torrent name are standardised into specific strings, according to scene rules where possible - 'WEBDL', 'WEB DL', and 'HDRip' are all converted to 'WEB-DL', for example. 'DDP51' becomes 'Dolby Digital Plus 5.1'. ['ita', 'eng'] becomes ['Italian', 'English'].To disable this, and return just what was matched in the torrent, run:
Submit a PR on the dev branch, including tests for what gets newly matched (if applicable), having run the pre-commit hooks. Please provide input torrent names in tests/files/input.json and full output json objects (with standardise=False) in tests/files/output_raw.json (where the fields encoder, excess, site, and episodeName don't have to be included). Also add the standardised output to tests/files/output_standard.json, only including fields that are changed, along with title.
Below are the additions that have been made to /u/divijbindlish's original repo, including other contributors' work. parse-torrent-title was initially forked from here, but a lot of extra work has been done since, and given that the original repo is inactive, it was unforked. 2ff7e9595c
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