I’m pretty sure. I think. I can’t find a core2.dat in my Linux filesystem so i assume it works some other way, and therefore it’s cooked.
The reason i want to do this is because transplanting core2.dat is what you usually do to recover your settings and transfers. I this case though i’ve installed it on my Linux PC so i don’t think this is going to work.
I’ve resorted to exporting all magnets and re-importing them, but that has a few drawbacks.
I’ll update if i find better solutions. So far, if you want to transfer your Tixati from Windows to Linux, my advice is probably don’t
Title makes me think you’re gonna explain 🥲
Oh i see it now, i didn’t mean it like that lol
Yeah as far as i can tell the best way to do this is to export all magnets out of the old system, import them in the new system, make sure the file path / location is correct, and force check. It’s what i did, but a lot of transfers are apparently only 99% complete even though they were 100% before. Of these, many have 0 peers so i don’t know if there’s any hope of them completing.
It’s a shitshow. Honestly i fucking hate torrenting right now, nothing ever works
Sorry! That really stinks! Wonder if qbit would work better
Tried qBittorrent and Transmission, they don’t do better, in fact they see the same number of peers as Tixati does. And i don’t know what would happen if i had two clients try to download the same file, probably nothing good.
Are you trying to do this too?
do you have a port open for the torrent client? also, you are speaking of torrents that otherwise have peers, right?