What is your strategy for clearing out old torrents, balancing the community need for continued seeding with torrents that are clearly not requested anymore?
What is your strategy for clearing out old torrents, balancing the community need for continued seeding with torrents that are clearly not requested anymore?
The original post: /r/torrents by /u/rekabis on 2025-01-31 20:07:49.
I run BiglyBT, because I truly enjoy the flexibility and power it provides. IMO nothing comes even close to BiglyBT/Vuze/Azureus in that regard.
But I have been looking over my existing seeding, and have noticed that a number of torrents from a long time ago - a decade-plus, in some cases - simply aren’t seeding out any more. I am seeing an “Up Idle” in the years, with some of them being idle for the last 5 years. Which means that nothing has requested anything from these torrents in a damn long time.
My current pruning strategy is something like this:
- Examine age. Start with the oldest torrents
- Are there zero peers?
- Are there zero leechers?
- Is the Up Idle measured in years (ideally 3+)?
- Is the share ratio less than 20 (ideally <1)?
Then I prune.
Obviously, my keep strategy is pretty much the opposite:
- Are there less than 2 peers?
- Are there any leechers?
- Is the Up Idle less than 1 year (ideally <1mo)?
- Is the share ratio 20+ (min. >2)?
Then I definitely keep, because there is still active demand for them.
As of now, I have pruned my torrents from 3K+ down to about 1,500, with the currently-oldest torrent being a PDF of Excel 2016 for Business Statistics from 8 years ago (to the day, actually!) still being actively leeched. It only has a share ratio just shy of 500. Other younger torrents are getting close to share rations of 5,000+.
Aside from just indiscriminate removal, does anyone employ a different strategy?