`Torrents.csv` is a *collaborative* repository of torrents and their files, consisting of a searchable `torrents.csv`, and `torrent_files.json`. With it you can search for torrents, or files within torrents. It aims to be a universal file system for popular data.
Its initially populated with a January 2017 backup of the pirate bay, and new torrents are periodically added from various torrents sites. It comes with a self-hostable [Torrents.csv webserver](https://torrents-csv.ml), a command line search, and a folder scanner to add torrents, and their files.
`Torrents.csv` will only store torrents with at least one seeder to keep the file small, will be periodically purged of non-seeded torrents, and sorted by infohash.
Made with [Rust](https://www.rust-lang.org), [ripgrep](https://github.com/BurntSushi/ripgrep), [Actix](https://actix.rs/), [Inferno](https://www.infernojs.org), [Typescript](https://www.typescriptlang.org/).
An *upload*, consists of making a pull request after running the `scan_torrents.sh` script, which adds torrents from a directory you choose to the `.csv` file, after checking that they aren't already there, and that they have seeders. It also adds their files to `torrent_files.json`.
./scan_torrents.sh MY_TORRENTS_DIR # `MY_TORRENTS_DIR` is `~/.local/share/data/qBittorrent/BT_backup/` for qBittorrent on linux, but you can search for where your torrents are stored for your client.
`Torrents.csv` has a `Rust` repository for scraping new and top torrents from some torrent sites in the `new_torrents_fetcher` folder. It currently scrapes skytorrents, magnetdl, and leetx.