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Jackett converts torrent trackers to the feed format that Sonarr or Radarr can read and consume. In other words, it serves as API (Application Programming Interface) of torrent tracker websites. Here the APIs can be Sonarr, Radarr. Due to this purpose, Jackett really puts a jacket on the torrent websites.
As you can see, Jackett has process PID 10877 and takes a lot of memory: 119 MB memory (Radarr is 57.5 MB, Sonarr is 108.1 MB). It is listening to http://*:9117/ (yes, you can open :7878/ or replace localhost with your IP address). It is more clear in the text output below the screenshot: the torrent tracker definations are loaded from 3 places:
A private tracker is a torrent website that provides the same functionality as a public tracker but is invite-only. This means you need to be a member to view the contents of the site and download its torrents. A tracker can either be semiprivate, where you can create an account for free by just registering your details, or fully private, where another user has to invite you. Within a tracker, there is usually an extensive set of rules covering how much one can download, what kind of content one can upload, what precautions one must take when logging into the site, etc. Such rules and content vary from tracker to tracker, and go from rather liberal with little enforcement to ultraparanoid and autistic. Advantages of private trackers include:
Next up is reaching the elite userclass to unlock the invite forums. You actually get access at power user, but better trackers require you to be elite before asking for an invite. Some will have even more requirements, like a 6 month old account or more. The requirements for elite userclass are 50 uploads, 3 months of account age and 100GB of upload. The first two are easy, you can just upload shit from deezer, or transcode FLAC's with no mp3 version. Getting 100GB is tricky. Without a seedbox you'll likely get 1.00 ratio on your uploaded torrents so it will take considerably more than 50 FLACs. You can seed your initial uploads with a seedbox, which should get your better returns. You could also race by autosnatching. RED is very competitive however, so do this only if you have some experience using a seedbox and configuring it correctly. pay2win is an option, you can usually get 5-10GB filling a request for an album from bandcamp or similar. Another option is to use the "premier" plugin for Deluge, which manipulates the swarm and piece distribution to only upload a new piece once everyone in the swarm has the previous one, which means you upload 100% of the torrent to every single user. Proceed with extreme caution though, this plugin is not specifically banned on RED, but if autonstachers notice they are getting 0 upload from you they may add you to a blackl-, sorry, BLOCKlist. If no one autosnatches from you at all you will only ever get upload from permaseeding or requests.
Avoid clicking on any links that are posted in /ptg/. If you have to click on a link do it a day or two after. Avoid searching for any torrents that are posted on /ptg/. Staff members search the logs to find /ptg/ members. Keep a low profile and use your head.
Read the rules. Seriously, do it. Tracker staff are autistic, you get one account per lifetime and you don't want to start playing cat-and-mouse games with the admins that early. Most tracker rules are similar, and go on the lines of "Suck our dicks at all occasions; don't leak invites or torrent files to public places; don't trade or sell invites; don't be inactive" followed by specifics on content rules (what you may upload) and ratio rules (more on that later). Read all the details as there may be some specifics on each tracker. Some have exclusive content that you can't upload elsewhere; some prohibit the use of Tor or VPNs, or even expressively forbid that you log on from anywhere else than your home connection; and so on. Read it all so you don't get caught unawares on some autistic peculiarity.
Tracker with a soft economy use a ratio-based system complemented by bonus points. These points are typically earned by doing specific actions, the most common of which seeding for an X amount of GBs, regardless of whether someone is actually downloading it from you. Some trackers will reward you for uploading torrents, idling on IRC or doing any kind of activity that contributes to the tracker and the site as a whole. Most trackers have a soft economy, from AHD to PTP, from MAM to bB or AB. Another kind of soft economy is a ratio-based system with a large amount of freeleech torrents, i.e. torrents whose download stats aren't counted but still earn you upload credits. Such trackers include SHD, SCC or bB, AB and MAM (again). You won't have many problems if you don't download everything like a retard: just grab some freeleech or small torrents, wait for your amount of bonus points to passively increase, get upload credit when you can, use that upload credit to download more, etc. The more you snatch, the more you seed, the more points you earn, and eventually you'll have enough buffer to freely download what you want.
Trackers with a hard economy are ratio-based but provide little to no means of complementing one's upload amount, like bonus points or freeleech sections. As a result, there's only a limited amount of upload credit (which acts as tracker currency, there are whole academic papers about it if you're into that kind of stuff) in the whole tracker, and whatever credits you earn, someone else has to spend. Getting upload credit is quite hard and you might have to work on your ratio before being able to download whatever you want without hindrance. On the other hand, since nearly everyone is as tight on ratio as you are, everyone will be permaseeding everything and torrents will have an excellent retention.
Trackers such as Bibliotik have a hard economy, and most struggles you hear about getting one's ratio up will typically be on one of those trackers. There are four main methods to get upload credit, on top of permaseeding everything (which you should do in every tracker anyway - you're doing that, right?): getting a seedbox, filling requests, uploading your own content and jumping on popular torrent swarms early.
Economies that have no ratio requirements, but maintain a semblance of order and structure by relying solely on seedpoints, or bonus points, to function in a similar way to 'hard' ratio-only trackers. Rewarding long term seeding while at the same time disincentivizing pump-and-dump autosnatchers, seedpoints are used in ways other than to simply download torrents depending on the tracker. Voting on requests, ascending the user class ladder and purchasing goodies in a bonus points store are a few ways that seedpoints can be used. It is worth noting that many ratioless trackers use points to purchase optional functionality. BTN is an example of this. By changing the requirements for maintaining a ratio to that of spending seedpoints to download a torrent is what separates this category from the ratioless variety.
Asking this question is a good way to start a shitstorm on /ptg/ and torrent forums alike, especially when you consider the different kinds of soft economy: 32p has an inkdrop system that treats essentially replaces ratio with points, AB has a very, very elaborate formula for calculating the amount of points you get from seeding, and so on. There is probably no objective answer to that question, as there are top-tier trackers with all kinds of economy (e.g. BTN is ratioless, PTP is soft and Bib is hard) and of course countless shit tier trackers in either as well; different systems for different content. That doesn't preclude you from having a subjective opinion and posting it on /ptg/, of course.
I can just turn my router off and on again to get a new IP and start over, r-right? Wrong. The private tracker community is small, so unless you live near a large population center there's a real chance you are the only person in your town or city using private trackers. Which means it'll be obvious when staff cabal ban a rural Danish IP and the next day a rural Danish IP is in the RED interview channel. Consider what exchange you use and what IP range range your ISP uses. As well as other data like the torrent client you have, browser version and so on. If you ever do get banned and want to get back in it's best to wait a few weeks, or better yet a few months. If you are creating a new identity, remember, DO NOT check your old profile, especially just after joining the tracker. Some paranoid sysops are checking every new account's activity for weeks, even for months. DO NOT act the same as you were before, especially if you were an active user on forums and were uploading a lot. And obviously, don't use a similar nickname. Also, don't use the password you used to have, because they can see every users hashed password. Generally speaking, just don't draw attention on you and stay /pure/ by not inviting anyone nor donate to your trackers, ever (by the way, what kind of cuck would you be, giving a donation to a tracker that cabaled you?). If you are ever cabal banned consider all accounts linked to be tainted, even if if you can still access them. If you plan on starting over from the beginning you will have to burn all of the accounts that could be traced to your cabal banned account, including the accounts that you think are not part of the cabal (i.e morethantv, torrentleech, iptorrents, foreign tracker and so on).
Jackett works as a proxy server: it translates queries from apps (Sonarr, Radarr, SickRage, CouchPotato, Mylar3, Lidarr, DuckieTV, qBittorrent, Nefarious etc.) into tracker-site-specific http queries, parses the html or json response, and then sends results back to the requesting software. This allows for getting recent uploads (like RSS) and performing searches. Jackett is a single repository of maintained indexer scraping & translation logic - removing the burden from other apps. 2b1af7f3a8