The magnet: URI scheme is a draft open standard defining a URI scheme for magnet links, which are mainly used to reference resources available for download via peer-to-peer networks. The standard was developed in 2002, partly as a "vendor- and project-neutral generalization" of the ed2k: and freenet: URI schemes used by eDonkey2000 and Freenet, respectively, and attempts to follow official IETF URI standards as closely as possible.
Since it refers to a file based on content or metadata, rather than by location, a magnet link can be considered a kind of URN (as opposed to the more common URLs). Although it could be used for other applications, it is particularly useful in a peer-to-peer context, because it allows resources to be referenced without the need for a continuously available host.
Applications supporting magnet links include Azureus, BearShare, DC++, Gtk-gnutella, Kazaa, LimeWire, MLdonkey, Morpheus, Phex, Shareaza, and TrustyFiles.
Another advantage of magnet links is their open nature and platform independence: the same magnet link can be used to download a resource from one of any number of applications on almost any operating system. Because magnets are concise and plain-text, it is possible for users to simply copy-and-paste the links into emails or instant messages, a property not found in, for example, bittorrent files.
magnet:?xt=urn:sha1:YNCKHTQCWBTRNJIV4WNAE52SJUQCZO5C
Note that although this refers to a particular file, a search must still be carried out by the client application to determine where, if anywhere, it can obtain that file. Other parameters defined by the draft standard are:
The standard also suggests that two parameters of the same type can be used by appending ".1", ".2", etc, e.g
magnet:?xt.1=urn:sha1:YNCKHTQCWBTRNJIV4WNAE52SJUQCZO5C&xt.2=urn:sha1:TXGCZQTH26NL6OUQAJJPFALHG2LTGBC7
Extensions to this system using an XML format are currently under development.
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"Magnet: URI scheme".
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