If your computer can not connect to a torrent tracker but others can, your internet service provider may be blocking connections to that tracker (due to legality). If that is the case, there most likely won't be a "quick and easy" fix.
If the tracker is down for everyone, it may be down for maintenance or it may be refusing connections due to being too busy.
To fix inactive torrents, try restarting your torrent client, checking your internet connection, ensuring the tracker is online, and making sure the torrent file is not corrupted. Additionally, try updating the torrent client and adjusting the firewall settings to allow the client to connect to peers.
I am assuming you mean how do you add trackers to a torrent in Vuze. Stop the torrent in Vuze, then right-click on the torrent in Vuze and select: Advanced>Tracker/Torrent>Add tracker URL
To connect 2 or more machines: A sends a broadcast packet, UDP (Broadcast) asking for other peers (Machines) B Recieves and sends back a TCP packet (One destination) with information A accepts connection and establishes it. Peer to peer is complete. Torrent: Person gets torrent from a tracker, torrent has URL's of trackers in it. Client connects to tracker and retrieves an IP list of clients having the torrent on them (Thus calling to the same tracker and 'registering'). Client now has a list of other people. Peer to peer is complete.
Peer Exchange (PEX) allows you to connect to new peers through a peer you are already connected to. Ordinarily peers connect to each other through trackers. PEX allows them to connect without a tracker, by communicating with each other.
.torrent files are not "anything"-compatible. Their sole purpose is to instruct a BitTorrent client on what tracker to connect to to download the files you actually want. They contain very little data themselves, and nothing that you could play, watch, or read.
When you are finished downloading do not stop the torrent. You just need to have a full copy of the original files, and be connected to a tracker that hosts that torrent. If you want to upload or share a never-before-seen or new torrent, then you'll have to find a tracker to host/distribute your torrent. thepiratebay.org has free logins and then you can upload.
A torrent tracker such as thepiratebay, requiring a torrent client such as bittorrent.
A tracker in a Bittorrent swarm organizes the seeders and leechers. You don't need a tracker though, you can just use DHT when creating a torrent. You can also use Openbittorrent's tracker.
Its the place where the seeders and leechers are cumming from
You can not. They have been closed for three years now.
to find the best Torrent Tracker go here http://torrentinvite.com/forum/ .. just follow the rules of the site and you're good to go
You don't "extract" a torrent file, as they contain little data to begin with, and none of it would be useful in another form. Their purpose is to instruct a BitTorrent client on what tracker to connect to to download a file, along with checksum information for the file. For Linux, the most common BitTorrent clients are Transmission, KTorrent, and Vuze.