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You must associate files ending in .torrent with the Content-Type application/x-bittorrent. For Apache, you should add the line: AddType application/x-bittorrent .torrent to your httpd.conf configuration file. If you cannot modify the main httpd.conf file (such as in the case of a shared or virtual hosting scenario), you can also put the above AddType directive in a .htaccess file. This presumes that the server's administrator has enabled this ability with the AllowOverride FileInfo directive. Also note that settings in a .htaccess file only apply to the directory containing the file, so make sure this is the directory that will contain the .torrent files. Alternatively, you can add the line: application/x-bittorrent .torrent to your mime.types file, which is used if the TypesConfig directive is present in httpd.conf. | |
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To add MIME types with Microsoft's IIS web server:
If you cannot configure the application/x-bittorrent type, you could place the .torrent files in an archive (.zip, .rar, etc.) and serve that instead. Doing so will forfeit the ability to click on a torrent link and automatically launch the BitTorrent client, however. The user must manually unpack the .torrent file and then launch it to start the transfer. | |
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