this post was submitted on 17 Jul 2023
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yes, when adding the torrent in your client, save it to the same place and run a recheck. it'll see what's missing and download it
Oh cool! I had considered that as maybe being an option but I wasn't sure if it would actually work or not. I can't afford a VPN right now so I wasn't going to try, I figured I'd go ahead and ask so when I can get one running I can jump right in.
Now, will it know the difference between "missing" and "corrupt"?
If you are using torrent then yeah, each file will be checked and the bad parts redownloaded.
Missing or corrupted does not matter.
Each torrent divides its content in a lot of small parts. Correct one are kept, anything else redownloaded. Simple and effective.
Awesome thank you so much. I'm glad it is going to be easy to fix then.
Now, one thing I'm not sure of is: how do I find the exact torrent to use? By now there's no way I have a magnet link or torrent file, and due to file renaming for my media library I doubt I'd be able to identify an exact release anyway.
Make a best guess and run it on a (renamed) copy of the video. If it tries to redownload 100% of it then it isn't the right one. It's a little tedious but it'll work.
In my experience downloading completely legitimate Linux ISOs and nothing considered illegal ever in my life, you have to add the torrent and start it so it gets peers and creates the files, then pause it and replace the file you're working on renaming it as needed, then run the rescan. You'll know a couple minutes later if it's the right one.
Hmm fair enough. I suppose by looking at the encoding and container formats I can probably narrow it down to a couple choices for each one.
Yep, filesize is probably going to be your best bet here. Just keep in mind site sometimes report filesize differently, so a lot of time you'll have to guess if its close enough to be the same file, also factoring in other stuff that get packed like cut samples or tracker promo txt's.