There are no logs that I can find. Additionally, if it was waiting for unpacking to complete, I'd expect the torrent to be unpacked, but in the wrong folder. In my situation, they are neither moved nor unpacked.
Does anyone know how to find or enable logs that would show why both unpacking and moving torrents is failing? I tired to find some logging info within the program but couldn't find any. Today too Maybe it's because I have thousands of torrents loaded but not active. I keep them so I don't download the same stuff again. I find this issues seems to happen every weeks with the hosting I use.
I find that rebooting the rtorrent instance fixes it. It's likely not just AutoMove, I also find that it doesn't unpack, so it's something like the trigger to perform the functions on complete torrents doesn't happen. It's not a permissions issue or anything as if I manually click Save to.. I have the same issue. Automove stops moving files from incoming to completed, but it occurs randomly and for different types of files. It's really annoying because you can't really rely on it anymore.
I guess it is time to look for other alternatives. Also the log doesn't say anything except that. I have this bug as well and it's completely random when it chooses to do this has anyone found a solution yet? This issue has been automatically marked as stale because it has not had recent activity.
It will be closed if no further activity occurs. Thank you for your contributions. Skip to content. Star 1. New issue. Jump to bottom. Labels wontfix. Copy link. For some reason this has been happening with increased frequency in the last week.
The log file in that config is setup, however it doesn't log anything relevant. This is still an issue till today. I have that issue frequently as well with only torrents loaded. I've never had this issue. I find that rebooting the rtorrent instance fixes it It's likely not just AutoMove, I also find that it doesn't unpack, so it's something like the trigger to perform the functions on complete torrents doesn't happen.
Previously, if you were using an older version of uTorrent, you had to manually move the files yourself, but in the newer version, it moves the files for you!
Step 1 : The first thing we have to do is stop the current download so that the files are not being accessed or updated by uTorrent. To do this, just right-click on the torrent and choose Stop. Do not Pause the download. Step 2 : Now that the torrent has stopped downloading, we can change the download location for this torrent. To do this, right-click on the torrent again, choose Advanced and then choose Set Download Location.
A new dialog will pop up asking you where to download your torrent file to. Navigate to the new location and just click Select Folder. You may have to wait a little bit if a large amount of data has to be transferred over to the new location. Step 3 : Now that the files have been moved, you need to start up the download again.
Simply right-click on the torrent again and choose Start. The download will continue from whatever percentage it had already completed and download the rest. This can save a significant amount of bandwidth compared to starting over again, especially for very large torrents. The process is exactly the same for Mac users running OS X.
Just stop the download, then right-click on the torrent and set the new download location.
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