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Thread: Fix for tracker.openbittorrent.com

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    Fix for tracker.openbittorrent.com

    If you download public torrents, you're very likely to be familiar with OpenBitTorrent. It's among the most popular open trackers, and for stuff older than a few years, often the only one still online. However, as of a few months ago, it has been plagued with chronic downtime and timeouts. The reason is that while their hostname has 7 A records, only 3 of those are actually operational.

    Fortunately, there's an easy fix for this. Open the hosts file for your system and append one of the following lines (not all three, just one; pick any at random).

    Code:
    45.154.253.8 tracker.openbittorrent.com
    
    45.154.253.9 tracker.openbittorrent.com
    
    45.154.253.10 tracker.openbittorrent.com
    Then flush the DNS cache or just wait long enough, and everything should work fine again. Note that if they ever switch addresses in the future, you will need to edit or remove the entry.
    "I just remembered something that happened a long time ago."
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    DisasterSurvey (28.01.23) , JohnareyouOK (04.01.23) , Mon (30.12.22) , joe1982 (22.12.22) , Byden2050 (12.12.22) , Mag1sk (12.12.22) , Novo sød (11.12.22)

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    Moderator anon's Avatar
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    OpenBitTorrent is now mostly or completely non-functional on all of its IPs, making this fix useless. I looked for contact data to ask them what's going on, but found nothing.
    "I just remembered something that happened a long time ago."
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    DisasterSurvey (28.01.23)

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    Quote Originally Posted by anon View Post
    OpenBitTorrent is now mostly or completely non-functional on all of its IPs, making this fix useless. I looked for contact data to ask them what's going on, but found nothing.
    By a coincidence I was looking into the OpenBitTorrent situation today on my own and found this thread through Google.

    It is indeed difficult to find any recent information about the OpenBitTorrent project and so we have to rely on sources from more than 8 years years ago.

    The Wikipedia page for the OpenBitTorrent mentions speculations about the OBT being a side project of the people behind the ThePirateBay.

    The suspicions are based on the following:
    Quote Originally Posted by Wikipedia
    OpenBitTorrent has been suspected of being a part of, or a side project of, The Pirate Bay, because it was observed early on that both sites used the same trackers.[1] The OpenBitTorrent project has countered by stating that the sites merely shared a tracker cluster operated by DCP Networks and Fredrik Neij during a startup period (February through August 2009).

    ...

    From 5 December to 30 December 2014, the OpenBitTorrent website and tracker was unreachable, this may have been linked to the arrest of Pirate Bay co-founder Fredrik Neij.[6]
    Using nslookup we can see that the domain "openbittorrent.com" points to the IP address: 198.251.84.144.

    However, the tracker subdomain points to a different group of IP addresses:
    Code:
    $ nslookup tracker.openbittorrent.com
    
    Non-authoritative answer:
    Name:   tracker.openbittorrent.com
    Address: 45.154.253.6
    Name:   tracker.openbittorrent.com
    Address: 45.154.253.7
    Name:   tracker.openbittorrent.com
    Address: 45.154.253.8
    Name:   tracker.openbittorrent.com
    Address: 45.154.253.9
    Name:   tracker.openbittorrent.com
    Address: 45.154.253.10
    Name:   tracker.openbittorrent.com
    Address: 45.154.253.4
    Name:   tracker.openbittorrent.com
    Address: 45.154.253.5
    Reverse DNS lookup for one of the above IP addresses returns the name of the hosting company:
    Code:
    45.154.253.5
    tracker.openbittorrent.com
    Svea Hosting AB, Sweden
    The Swedish Companies Registration Office has the following info available about this company:
    Link: https://foretagsinfo.bolagsverket.se...oretagsform/AB

    Svea Hosting AB
    559246-8176
    Address: Box 8018, 163 08 SPÅNGA

    Registered office: Stockholm kommun, Stockholms län
    Type of business: Aktiebolag

    Registered: 2020-03-09
    The company has only one or two employees that are family-related (presumably a father and his son):
    https://www.proff.se/foretag/svea-ho...2KHM028I5YDLG/

    So, it seems like a newly established one-man company took over the hosting of the tracker server in 2020 and brought it back online after a prolonged downtime.

    A network scan of the tracker's servers reveals that they're still online with other services running. It might be that the tracker server just crashed.

    I pinged the Svea Hosting AB support and kindly asked them to let the owners know. Let's see if it comes back up any time soon!

    EDIT: As of 28/01/2023 22:45 the tracker seems to be working again:



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    Last edited by DisasterSurvey; 28.01.23 at 22:45. Reason: Updated status of the tracker
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    anon (29.01.23)

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    Moderator anon's Avatar
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    Great research work, thanks! I didn't think of contacting the host, but I'd have dismissed the idea, as they'd have likely told me it's not their direct responsibility and to message the site owner directly. In any case, your edit was encouraging, but I realized I needed a better way to test this than checking some torrents in my client. First, I appended this to my nmap-payloads file (newer versions may already include a probe, but I haven't updated from 7.70).

    Code:
    # BitTorrent UDP tracker
    udp 6969,80
    # Magic number
    "\x00\x00\x04\x17\x27\x10\x19\x80"
    # Action (0x0 = connect)
    "\x00\x00\x00\x00"
    # Transaction ID
    "\x1e\xdf\xad\x18"
    Then I did an Nmap UDP scan (port 53 was included purely as a control group, since nothing should be running there).

    Code:
    C:\>nmap -sU -Pn -n --resolve-all -vv -p 6969,80,53 -r -T2 --scan-delay 1 --version-intensity 0 --ttl 64 --noninteractive tracker.openbittorrent.com
    Starting Nmap 7.70 ( https://nmap.org ) at 2023-01-28 20:47 SA Eastern Standard Time
    Initiating UDP Scan at 20:47
    Scanning 7 hosts [3 ports/host]
    Discovered open port 80/udp on 45.154.253.10
    Discovered open port 80/udp on 45.154.253.5
    Discovered open port 80/udp on 45.154.253.7
    Discovered open port 6969/udp on 45.154.253.5
    Discovered open port 80/udp on 45.154.253.9
    Discovered open port 6969/udp on 45.154.253.7
    Discovered open port 6969/udp on 45.154.253.10
    Discovered open port 80/udp on 45.154.253.8
    Discovered open port 6969/udp on 45.154.253.9
    Discovered open port 6969/udp on 45.154.253.8
    Completed UDP Scan at 20:48, 21.83s elapsed (21 total ports)
    Nmap scan report for tracker.openbittorrent.com (45.154.253.10)
    Host is up, received user-set (0.25s latency).
    Scanned at 2023-01-28 20:47:55 SA Eastern Standard Time for 16s
    
    PORT     STATE  SERVICE REASON
    53/udp   closed domain  port-unreach ttl 50
    80/udp   open   http    udp-response ttl 50
    6969/udp open   acmsoda udp-response ttl 50
    
    Nmap scan report for tracker.openbittorrent.com (45.154.253.9)
    Host is up, received user-set (0.25s latency).
    Scanned at 2023-01-28 20:47:55 SA Eastern Standard Time for 19s
    
    PORT     STATE  SERVICE REASON
    53/udp   closed domain  port-unreach ttl 50
    80/udp   open   http    udp-response ttl 50
    6969/udp open   acmsoda udp-response ttl 50
    
    Nmap scan report for tracker.openbittorrent.com (45.154.253.8)
    Host is up, received user-set (0.25s latency).
    Scanned at 2023-01-28 20:47:55 SA Eastern Standard Time for 21s
    
    PORT     STATE  SERVICE REASON
    53/udp   closed domain  port-unreach ttl 50
    80/udp   open   http    udp-response ttl 50
    6969/udp open   acmsoda udp-response ttl 50
    
    Nmap scan report for tracker.openbittorrent.com (45.154.253.6)
    Host is up, received user-set.
    Scanned at 2023-01-28 20:47:55 SA Eastern Standard Time for 13s
    
    PORT     STATE         SERVICE REASON
    53/udp   open|filtered domain  no-response
    80/udp   open|filtered http    no-response
    6969/udp open|filtered acmsoda no-response
    
    Nmap scan report for tracker.openbittorrent.com (45.154.253.4)
    Host is up, received user-set.
    Scanned at 2023-01-28 20:47:55 SA Eastern Standard Time for 21s
    
    PORT     STATE         SERVICE REASON
    53/udp   open|filtered domain  no-response
    80/udp   open|filtered http    no-response
    6969/udp open|filtered acmsoda no-response
    
    Nmap scan report for tracker.openbittorrent.com (45.154.253.7)
    Host is up, received user-set (0.26s latency).
    Scanned at 2023-01-28 20:47:55 SA Eastern Standard Time for 16s
    
    PORT     STATE         SERVICE REASON
    53/udp   open|filtered domain  no-response
    80/udp   open          http    udp-response ttl 50
    6969/udp open          acmsoda udp-response ttl 50
    
    Nmap scan report for tracker.openbittorrent.com (45.154.253.5)
    Host is up, received user-set (0.26s latency).
    Scanned at 2023-01-28 20:47:55 SA Eastern Standard Time for 15s
    
    PORT     STATE         SERVICE REASON
    53/udp   open|filtered domain  no-response
    80/udp   open          http    udp-response ttl 50
    6969/udp open          acmsoda udp-response ttl 50
    
    Read data files from: 
    Nmap done: 7 IP addresses (7 hosts up) scanned in 22.27 seconds
               Raw packets sent: 30 (1.272KB) | Rcvd: 14 (712B)
    Note how the IPs that end in 6 and 4 are completely unresponsive; scanning them individually resulted in this...

    Code:
    C:\>nmap -sU -Pn -n -vv -p 6969,80 -r -T2 --scan-delay 1 --max-retries 10 --version-intensity 0 --ttl 64 --noninteractive 45.154.253.6 45.154.253.4
    Starting Nmap 7.70 ( https://nmap.org ) at 2023-01-28 20:51 SA Eastern Standard Time
    Initiating UDP Scan at 20:51
    Scanning 2 hosts [2 ports/host]
    Completed UDP Scan at 20:51, 4.81s elapsed (4 total ports)
    Nmap scan report for 45.154.253.6
    Host is up, received user-set (0.25s latency).
    Scanned at 2023-01-28 20:51:42 SA Eastern Standard Time for 3s
    
    PORT     STATE  SERVICE REASON
    80/udp   closed http    port-unreach ttl 50
    6969/udp closed acmsoda port-unreach ttl 50
    
    Nmap scan report for 45.154.253.4
    Host is up, received user-set (0.27s latency).
    Scanned at 2023-01-28 20:51:42 SA Eastern Standard Time for 5s
    
    PORT     STATE         SERVICE REASON
    80/udp   open|filtered http    no-response
    6969/udp closed        acmsoda port-unreach ttl 50
    
    Read data files from: 
    Nmap done: 2 IP addresses (2 hosts up) scanned in 5.16 seconds
               Raw packets sent: 5 (220B) | Rcvd: 3 (216B)
    Meaning there's nothing listening on those ports as of this writing. The other addresses work consistently well, though, which is great news. Although I should note that going through months of downtime with the owners not taking any action or noticing at all is not very assuring...
    "I just remembered something that happened a long time ago."
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    DisasterSurvey (29.01.23)

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    Thanks anon!

    I didn't think of contacting the host, but I'd have dismissed the idea, as they'd have likely told me it's not their direct responsibility and to message the site owner directly.
    You are right. Usually I wouldn't expect this to work and even in this case I mostly relied on the good faith of the hosting provider. If it were a big company, then it would be most definitely met with the response you've expected. However, this provider is a bit special, because they only own 3 small /24 IPv4 ranges and host only 2 significant domains (one of those being OBT).

    NETBLOCK COMPANY NUM OF IPS
    193.239.232.0/24 Svea Hosting AB 256
    195.96.151.0/24 Svea Hosting AB 256
    45.154.253.0/24 Svea Hosting AB 256

    And 2 IPv6 ranges:
    NETBLOCK COMPANY
    2001:678:b30::/48 Svea Hosting AB
    2a12:1e01::/32 Svea Hosting AB

    Source: https://ipinfo.io/AS41634

    Thanks for showing your verification process. I tried to use nmap to scan the servers, but I wasn't sure what kind of answer I should expect from a BitTorrent tracker on a UDP socket. I wasn't aware of the nmap-payloads and how it is being used. So, your reply was very helpful!

    I got the same results as you did (i.e. those two servers not responding on the port 6969).

    Although I should note that going through months of downtime with the owners not taking any action or noticing at all is not very assuring...
    It's a pity that such a popular tracker is not getting the attention it deserves. Nowadays, with more modern infrastructure tools it could be much easier to monitor such a service and keep it online 24/7. On the other hand, it's understandable that the people behind OBT most likely have other priorities in their lives these days.

    Let's hope the tracker keeps running for a couple of years before we have to ping them again!
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    Quote Originally Posted by DisasterSurvey View Post
    Thanks for showing your verification process. I tried to use nmap to scan the servers, but I wasn't sure what kind of answer I should expect from a BitTorrent tracker on a UDP socket. I wasn't aware of the nmap-payloads and how it is being used. So, your reply was very helpful!
    The connectionless nature of UDP makes port scanning a complicated process. It's impossible to distinguish ports that are open but discarding incoming data, from those that are filtered, from those that are closed but for which the host didn't send the corresponding ICMP "destination port unreachable" message due to rate-limiting or firewall rules. Nmap tries to find UDP ports that do respond (assisted by the payloads file and version-intensity parameter you saw above) and makes assumptions about the rest; when no probe for a particular protocol is available, it'll send a zero-length packet.

    I highly, completely recommend reading the Nmap book, which you can find at Z-Library. It will teach you a great deal not only about the program itself, but networking in general. The BEPs that define the UDP tracker protocol and its extensions are also in the public domain.

    It's a pity that such a popular tracker is not getting the attention it deserves. Nowadays, with more modern infrastructure tools it could be much easier to monitor such a service and keep it online 24/7.
    That was partly my point. The OpenBitTorrent announce URL is embedded on all magnet links from The Pirate Bay and many other indexers and aggregators, so it should be getting at least a few hundred million requests per day. Any monitoring system should notice those numbers dropping to near-zero, and anyone paying attention to it should have taken action months ago.

    Anyway, I'll keep an eye on the .6 and .4 servers, but it seems I can now add one of the others to my hosts file
    "I just remembered something that happened a long time ago."
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    As of this writing, OpenBitTorrent is fully functional on all of its IPs, so there is no need to keep any hosts file entries anymore.

    On a sidenote, it would be nice if the following became a CNAME for some tracker that is still operational

    Code:
    tracker.leechers-paradise.org
    
    tracker.coppersurfer.tk
    
    tracker.publicbt.com
    
    tracker.ccc.de
    
    tracker.istole.it
    "I just remembered something that happened a long time ago."
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    alpacino (01.02.23)

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    OpenBitTorrent has been down for around three weeks, anyone can confirm or have any information? This is pretty vexing, as I have many torrents over a decade old in my client, and by now they are/were the only tracker from that time still operational (there's still DHT, but it isn't 100% effective).
    "I just remembered something that happened a long time ago."
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    Quote Originally Posted by anon View Post
    OpenBitTorrent has been down for around three weeks, anyone can confirm or have any information? This is pretty vexing, as I have many torrents over a decade old in my client, and by now they are/were the only tracker from that time still operational (there's still DHT, but it isn't 100% effective).
    No news at all. Offline here as well

    Code:
    https://newtrackon.com
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    anon (01.03.24)

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    And understandably missing from https://github.com/ngosang/trackerslist. I'm not ready to remove it from my torrents just yet, though...
    "I just remembered something that happened a long time ago."
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    Quote Originally Posted by anon View Post
    And understandably missing from https://github.com/ngosang/trackerslist. I'm not ready to remove it from my torrents just yet, though...
    I always create torrents to share with ngosang list no matter what is in it. I might check for https sometimes because of friends blocked by their environments. That way never depending on single tracker and less likely to be unreliable. However, openbittorrent been down before for sometime then came back up. So time will tell what you can do from here. Just no idea how long that would be.

    My suggestion though, silly one but humor me. I would add the other trackers in the list along with openbittorrent and leave all of them there. But for new torrents, just go with ngosang list.
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    anon (02.03.24)

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    ngosang is a good reference, but for new torrents I choose to stick to what I consider the Top 5 (until now at least) based on longevity, popularity and stability.

    Code:
    udp://tracker.openbittorrent.com:6969/announce
    
    udp://exodus.desync.com:6969/announce
    
    udp://open.stealth.si:80/announce
    
    udp://tracker.torrent.eu.org:451/announce
    
    udp://tracker.opentrackr.org:1337/announce
    Other open trackers come and go, and you never know who's behind them or why (Cloudflare ran one on their 1.1.1.1 IP!). For old stuff, adding extra announce URLs only works if others add the same ones, but doing so is an oft-given piece of advice for reviving torrents and nothing can happen if I don't take the first step, so you have a good point.

    For sharing with friends or small closed groups I recommend privtracker.com, that way you none of you leak anything to DHT crawlers and consequently the entire world.
    "I just remembered something that happened a long time ago."
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