![]() NZBGet has a unique feature called “fast par-rename”, which restores original file names within few seconds, even on very slow machines, eliminating the need for time consuming par-verification step required when using external tool par2cmdline. The process of reading of files can take very long, many minutes or even tens of minutes depending on files size and disk speed. During recovery the tool reads all downloaded files first and then restores original file names. To restore the file names a recovery process using external tool par2cmdline is usually used. The files come with par2-set, which hold the recovery information including original file names. The original names of rar-archives must be restored first. Once downloaded such files can not be directly unpacked (unpack will fail). Fast deobfuscation: Many files posted to Usenet nowadays have obfuscated file names.Do care about efficiency - that’s a general motto when developing NZBGet: use efficient algorithms, avoid unnecessary calculations whenever possible, don’t load everything into memory. That provides the best possible usage of CPU power. The program code is compiled into native CPU instructions during build process. High performance: First of all NZBGet is written in C++ language.NZBGet is available as an one-click installable app on all of our Gigabox Plans starting from Gigabox Mini series. For other platforms the program can be compiled from sources. The download area provides precompiled binaries for Windows, macOS, Linux (compatible with many CPUs and platform variants), FreeBSD and Android. NZBGet can run on almost any device - classic PC, NAS, media player, SAT-receiver, WLAN-router, etc. NZBGet is written in C++ and is known for its performance and efficiency. Your downloads will continue as normal and they will be downloaded into their individual folders inside your downloads folder.NZBGet is a binary downloader, which downloads files from Usenet based on information given in nzb-files. This will combine the downloads into a single queue. In the main NZBGet area select the queues you want to merge and click the “Merge” button at the top. If you want to manage multiple downloads within a single queue, you are able to merge multiple queues into a single one. Select your default watch folder and click on the “Save all changes” button. Inside the Paths settings, navigate to the NzbDir setting area. ![]() Then select the “Paths” option on the left-hand side menu. To begin, click on the settings tab on the far right side at the top of the screen. This allows you to define the location that will be automatically scanned for NZB files. To be able to use the method listed above you first will need to set up your NzbDir setting. NZBGet will automatically scan the folder and any new NZB files will be added to the queue It will do this process automatically, but if you recently added a file and want to prompt the folder scan use the following method.Ĭlick on the “Scan incoming directory” button next to the text “ Add from NzbDir” Once the file’s path has been entered click on “Submit” and your download will begin.įrom an NZB directory - If you have an automated process that downloads NZBs into a specific folder you can set NZBGet to watch this folder and automatically download any new NZB that is added to it. Once the NZB file has been selected click on “Submit” and your download will begin.įrom a URL - If you have a URL for an NZB file you can add that URL and NZBGet will be able to add it to the queue directly. Navigate to the folder that the NZB file resides in and select it. Local Files - If you have downloaded an NZB file directly to your device you can select the file path and add it to NZBGet manually. NZB files can be added directly in several ways: NZBGet is able to work with a number of different methods to add files into the download queue, please note the list below may not be exhaustive.
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