Code: Select all
# Propers
Options(dupescore+:1000): internal
Options(dupescore+:2000): repack
Options(dupescore+:4000): proper
Options(dupescore+:8000): real
# Dont grab dupes
Reject: dupestatus:success dupescore:<1000 | dupestatus:queued | dupestatus:downloading
# Accept all that passed above
Accept: *specific release groups I want*
Code: Select all
# Propers
Options(dupescore+:1000): internal
Options(dupescore+:2000): repack
Options(dupescore+:4000): proper
Options(dupescore+:8000): real
# Dont grab dupes
Reject: dupestatus:success dupescore:<1000 | dupestatus:queued | dupestatus:downloading | age:>28d
# Accept all that passed above
Accept: *specific release groups I want*
Now that's all well and dandy, but NZBGet or this filter currently treats releases the same, whether they use " " (spaces), "." (periods), "_" (underscores), or whatever other symbol groups are using, as different releases.
For example:
This.One.Release.Year.MediaType.VideoCodec.AudioCodec-Group (1.17GB)
is treated as a completely different release as:
This_One_Release_Year_MediaType_VideoCodec_AudioCodec-Group (1.17GB)
or even:
This One Release Year MediaType VideoCodec AudioCodec-Group (1.17GB)
Is there a way to combat this?
Which also brings me to another related issue.
Currently the only way to deal with those dupe releases is to manual delete them as dupes, but then they can end-up re-downloaded using the filter above, so I have to then mark them as 'success' in history, in order to not download/requeue again.
Hopefully this makes sense, otherwise I can try to clarify.
Thank you!