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7953 lines
321 KiB
7953 lines
321 KiB
============================ |
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libtorrent API Documentation |
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============================ |
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:Author: Arvid Norberg, arvid@rasterbar.com |
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:Version: 1.0.0 |
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.. contents:: Table of contents |
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:depth: 1 |
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:backlinks: none |
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overview |
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======== |
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The interface of libtorrent consists of a few classes. The main class is |
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the ``session``, it contains the main loop that serves all torrents. |
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The basic usage is as follows: |
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* construct a session |
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* load session state from settings file (see `load_state() save_state()`_) |
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* start extensions (see `add_extension()`_). |
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* start DHT, LSD, UPnP, NAT-PMP etc (see `start_dht() stop_dht() set_dht_settings() dht_state() is_dht_running()`_ |
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`start_lsd() stop_lsd()`_, `start_upnp() stop_upnp()`_ and `start_natpmp() stop_natpmp()`_) |
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* parse .torrent-files and add them to the session (see `bdecode() bencode()`_ and `async_add_torrent() add_torrent()`_) |
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* main loop (see session_) |
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* query the torrent_handles for progress (see torrent_handle_) |
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* query the session for information |
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* add and remove torrents from the session at run-time |
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* save resume data for all torrent_handles (optional, see |
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`save_resume_data()`_) |
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* save session state (see `load_state() save_state()`_) |
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* destruct session object |
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Each class and function is described in this manual. |
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For a description on how to create torrent files, see make_torrent_. |
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.. _make_torrent: make_torrent.html |
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things to keep in mind |
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====================== |
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A common problem developers are facing is torrents stopping without explanation. |
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Here is a description on which conditions libtorrent will stop your torrents, |
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how to find out about it and what to do about it. |
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Make sure to keep track of the paused state, the error state and the upload |
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mode of your torrents. By default, torrents are auto-managed, which means |
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libtorrent will pause them, unpause them, scrape them and take them out |
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of upload-mode automatically. |
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Whenever a torrent encounters a fatal error, it will be stopped, and the |
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``torrent_status::error`` will describe the error that caused it. If a torrent |
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is auto managed, it is scraped periodically and paused or resumed based on |
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the number of downloaders per seed. This will effectively seed torrents that |
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are in the greatest need of seeds. |
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If a torrent hits a disk write error, it will be put into upload mode. This |
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means it will not download anything, but only upload. The assumption is that |
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the write error is caused by a full disk or write permission errors. If the |
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torrent is auto-managed, it will periodically be taken out of the upload |
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mode, trying to write things to the disk again. This means torrent will recover |
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from certain disk errors if the problem is resolved. If the torrent is not |
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auto managed, you have to call `set_upload_mode()`_ to turn |
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downloading back on again. |
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network primitives |
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================== |
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There are a few typedefs in the ``libtorrent`` namespace which pulls |
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in network types from the ``asio`` namespace. These are:: |
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typedef asio::ip::address address; |
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typedef asio::ip::address_v4 address_v4; |
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typedef asio::ip::address_v6 address_v6; |
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using asio::ip::tcp; |
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using asio::ip::udp; |
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These are declared in the ``<libtorrent/socket.hpp>`` header. |
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The ``using`` statements will give easy access to:: |
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tcp::endpoint |
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udp::endpoint |
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Which are the endpoint types used in libtorrent. An endpoint is an address |
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with an associated port. |
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For documentation on these types, please refer to the `asio documentation`_. |
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.. _`asio documentation`: http://asio.sourceforge.net/asio-0.3.8/doc/asio/reference.html |
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entry |
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===== |
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The ``entry`` class represents one node in a bencoded hierarchy. It works as a |
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variant type, it can be either a list, a dictionary (``std::map``), an integer |
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or a string. This is its synopsis:: |
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class entry |
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{ |
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public: |
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typedef std::map<std::string, entry> dictionary_type; |
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typedef std::string string_type; |
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typedef std::list<entry> list_type; |
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typedef size_type integer_type; |
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enum data_type |
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{ |
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int_t, |
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string_t, |
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list_t, |
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dictionary_t, |
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undefined_t |
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}; |
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data_type type() const; |
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entry(dictionary_type const&); |
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entry(string_type const&); |
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entry(list_type const&); |
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entry(integer_type const&); |
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entry(); |
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entry(data_type t); |
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entry(entry const& e); |
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~entry(); |
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void operator=(entry const& e); |
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void operator=(dictionary_type const&); |
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void operator=(string_type const&); |
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void operator=(list_type const&); |
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void operator=(integer_type const&); |
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integer_type& integer(); |
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integer_type const& integer() const; |
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string_type& string(); |
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string_type const& string() const; |
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list_type& list(); |
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list_type const& list() const; |
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dictionary_type& dict(); |
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dictionary_type const& dict() const; |
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// these functions requires that the entry |
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// is a dictionary, otherwise they will throw |
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entry& operator[](char const* key); |
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entry& operator[](std::string const& key); |
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entry const& operator[](char const* key) const; |
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entry const& operator[](std::string const& key) const; |
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entry* find_key(char const* key); |
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entry const* find_key(char const* key) const; |
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void print(std::ostream& os, int indent = 0) const; |
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}; |
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*TODO: finish documentation of entry.* |
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integer() string() list() dict() type() |
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--------------------------------------- |
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:: |
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integer_type& integer(); |
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integer_type const& integer() const; |
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string_type& string(); |
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string_type const& string() const; |
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list_type& list(); |
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list_type const& list() const; |
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dictionary_type& dict(); |
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dictionary_type const& dict() const; |
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The ``integer()``, ``string()``, ``list()`` and ``dict()`` functions |
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are accessors that return the respective type. If the ``entry`` object isn't of the |
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type you request, the accessor will throw libtorrent_exception_ (which derives from |
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``std::runtime_error``). You can ask an ``entry`` for its type through the |
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``type()`` function. |
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The ``print()`` function is there for debug purposes only. |
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If you want to create an ``entry`` you give it the type you want it to have in its |
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constructor, and then use one of the non-const accessors to get a reference which you then |
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can assign the value you want it to have. |
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The typical code to get info from a torrent file will then look like this:: |
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entry torrent_file; |
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// ... |
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// throws if this is not a dictionary |
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entry::dictionary_type const& dict = torrent_file.dict(); |
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entry::dictionary_type::const_iterator i; |
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i = dict.find("announce"); |
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if (i != dict.end()) |
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{ |
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std::string tracker_url = i->second.string(); |
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std::cout << tracker_url << "\n"; |
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} |
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The following code is equivalent, but a little bit shorter:: |
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entry torrent_file; |
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// ... |
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// throws if this is not a dictionary |
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if (entry* i = torrent_file.find_key("announce")) |
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{ |
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std::string tracker_url = i->string(); |
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std::cout << tracker_url << "\n"; |
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} |
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To make it easier to extract information from a torrent file, the class torrent_info_ |
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exists. |
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operator[] |
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---------- |
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:: |
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entry& operator[](char const* key); |
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entry& operator[](std::string const& key); |
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entry const& operator[](char const* key) const; |
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entry const& operator[](std::string const& key) const; |
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All of these functions requires the entry to be a dictionary, if it isn't they |
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will throw ``libtorrent::type_error``. |
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The non-const versions of the ``operator[]`` will return a reference to either |
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the existing element at the given key or, if there is no element with the |
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given key, a reference to a newly inserted element at that key. |
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The const version of ``operator[]`` will only return a reference to an |
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existing element at the given key. If the key is not found, it will throw |
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``libtorrent::type_error``. |
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find_key() |
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---------- |
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:: |
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entry* find_key(char const* key); |
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entry const* find_key(char const* key) const; |
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These functions requires the entry to be a dictionary, if it isn't they |
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will throw ``libtorrent::type_error``. |
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They will look for an element at the given key in the dictionary, if the |
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element cannot be found, they will return 0. If an element with the given |
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key is found, the return a pointer to it. |
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torrent_info |
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============ |
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In previous versions of libtorrent, this class was also used for creating |
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torrent files. This functionality has been moved to ``create_torrent``, see |
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make_torrent_. |
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The ``torrent_info`` has the following synopsis:: |
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class torrent_info |
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{ |
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public: |
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// these constructors throws exceptions on error |
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torrent_info(sha1_hash const& info_hash, int flags = 0); |
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torrent_info(lazy_entry const& torrent_file, int flags = 0); |
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torrent_info(char const* buffer, int size, int flags = 0); |
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torrent_info(std::string const& filename, int flags = 0); |
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torrent_info(std::wstring const& filename, int flags = 0); |
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// these constructors sets the error code on error |
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torrent_info(sha1_hash const& info_hash, error_code& ec, int flags = 0); |
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torrent_info(lazy_entry const& torrent_file, error_code& ec, int flags = 0); |
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torrent_info(char const* buffer, int size, error_code& ec, int flags = 0); |
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torrent_info(fs::path const& filename, error_code& ec, int flags = 0); |
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torrent_info(fs::wpath const& filename, error_code& ec, int flags = 0); |
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void add_tracker(std::string const& url, int tier = 0); |
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std::vector<announce_entry> const& trackers() const; |
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file_storage const& files() const; |
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file_storage const& orig_files() const; |
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void remap_files(file_storage const& f); |
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void rename_file(int index, std::string const& new_filename); |
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void rename_file(int index, std::wstring const& new_filename); |
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typedef file_storage::iterator file_iterator; |
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typedef file_storage::reverse_iterator reverse_file_iterator; |
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file_iterator begin_files() const; |
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file_iterator end_files() const; |
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reverse_file_iterator rbegin_files() const; |
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reverse_file_iterator rend_files() const; |
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int num_files() const; |
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file_entry const& file_at(int index) const; |
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std::vector<file_slice> map_block(int piece, size_type offset |
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, int size) const; |
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peer_request map_file(int file_index, size_type file_offset |
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, int size) const; |
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bool priv() const; |
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void add_url_seed(std::string const& url); |
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void add_http_seed(std::string const& url); |
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std::vector<web_seed_entry> const& web_seeds() const; |
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size_type total_size() const; |
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int piece_length() const; |
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int num_pieces() const; |
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sha1_hash const& info_hash() const; |
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std::string const& name() const; |
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std::string const& comment() const; |
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std::string const& creator() const; |
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std::vector<std::pair<std::string, int> > const& nodes() const; |
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void add_node(std::pair<std::string, int> const& node); |
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boost::optional<time_t> creation_date() const; |
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int piece_size(unsigned int index) const; |
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sha1_hash const& hash_for_piece(unsigned int index) const; |
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char const* hash_for_piece_ptr(unsigned int index) const; |
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std::vector<sha1_hash> const& merkle_tree() const; |
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void set_merkle_tree(std::vector<sha1_hash>& h); |
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boost::shared_array<char> metadata() const; |
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int metadata_size() const; |
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}; |
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torrent_info() |
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-------------- |
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:: |
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torrent_info(sha1_hash const& info_hash, int flags = 0); |
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torrent_info(lazy_entry const& torrent_file, int flags = 0); |
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torrent_info(char const* buffer, int size, int flags = 0); |
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torrent_info(std::string const& filename, int flags = 0); |
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torrent_info(std::wstring const& filename, int flags = 0); |
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torrent_info(sha1_hash const& info_hash, error_code& ec, int flags = 0); |
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torrent_info(lazy_entry const& torrent_file, error_code& ec, int flags = 0); |
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torrent_info(char const* buffer, int size, error_code& ec, int flags = 0); |
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torrent_info(fs::path const& filename, error_code& ec, int flags = 0); |
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torrent_info(fs::wpath const& filename, error_code& ec, int flags = 0); |
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The constructor that takes an info-hash will initialize the info-hash to the given value, |
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but leave all other fields empty. This is used internally when downloading torrents without |
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the metadata. The metadata will be created by libtorrent as soon as it has been downloaded |
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from the swarm. |
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The constructor that takes a ``lazy_entry`` will create a ``torrent_info`` object from the |
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information found in the given torrent_file. The ``lazy_entry`` represents a tree node in |
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an bencoded file. To load an ordinary .torrent file |
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into a ``lazy_entry``, use `lazy_bdecode()`_. |
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The version that takes a buffer pointer and a size will decode it as a .torrent file and |
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initialize the torrent_info object for you. |
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The version that takes a filename will simply load the torrent file and decode it inside |
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the constructor, for convenience. This might not be the most suitable for applications that |
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want to be able to report detailed errors on what might go wrong. |
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The overloads that takes an ``error_code const&`` never throws if an error occur, they |
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will simply set the error code to describe what went wrong and not fully initialize the |
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torrent_info object. The overloads that do not take the extra error_code_ parameter will |
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always throw if an error occurs. These overloads are not available when building without |
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exception support. |
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The ``flags`` argument is currently unused. |
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add_tracker() |
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------------- |
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:: |
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void add_tracker(std::string const& url, int tier = 0); |
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``add_tracker()`` adds a tracker to the announce-list. The ``tier`` determines the order in |
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which the trackers are to be tried. For more information see `trackers()`_. |
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files() orig_files() |
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-------------------- |
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:: |
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file_storage const& files() const; |
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file_storage const& orig_files() const; |
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The ``file_storage`` object contains the information on how to map the pieces to |
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files. It is separated from the ``torrent_info`` object because when creating torrents |
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a storage object needs to be created without having a torrent file. When renaming files |
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in a storage, the storage needs to make its own copy of the ``file_storage`` in order |
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to make its mapping differ from the one in the torrent file. |
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``orig_files()`` returns the original (unmodified) file storage for this torrent. This |
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is used by the web server connection, which needs to request files with the original |
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names. Filename may be chaged using ``torrent_info::rename_file()``. |
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For more information on the ``file_storage`` object, see the separate document on how |
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to create torrents. |
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remap_files() |
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------------- |
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:: |
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void remap_files(file_storage const& f); |
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Remaps the file storage to a new file layout. This can be used to, for instance, |
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download all data in a torrent to a single file, or to a number of fixed size |
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sector aligned files, regardless of the number and sizes of the files in the torrent. |
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The new specified ``file_storage`` must have the exact same size as the current one. |
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rename_file() |
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------------- |
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:: |
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void rename_file(int index, std::string const& new_filename); |
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void rename_file(int index, std::wstring const& new_filename); |
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Renames a the file with the specified index to the new name. The new filename is |
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reflected by the ``file_storage`` returned by ``files()`` but not by the one |
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returned by ``orig_files()``. |
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If you want to rename the base name of the torrent (for a multifile torrent), you |
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can copy the ``file_storage`` (see `files() orig_files()`_), change the name, and |
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then use `remap_files()`_. |
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The ``new_filename`` can both be a relative path, in which case the file name |
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is relative to the ``save_path`` of the torrent. If the ``new_filename`` is |
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an absolute path (i.e. ``is_complete(new_filename) == true``), then the file |
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is detached from the ``save_path`` of the torrent. In this case the file is |
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not moved when move_storage_ is invoked. |
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begin_files() end_files() rbegin_files() rend_files() |
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----------------------------------------------------- |
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:: |
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file_iterator begin_files() const; |
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file_iterator end_files() const; |
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reverse_file_iterator rbegin_files() const; |
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reverse_file_iterator rend_files() const; |
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This class will need some explanation. First of all, to get a list of all files |
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in the torrent, you can use ``begin_files()``, ``end_files()``, |
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``rbegin_files()`` and ``rend_files()``. These will give you standard vector |
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iterators with the type ``internal_file_entry``, which is an internal type. |
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You can resolve it into the public representation of a file (``file_entry``) |
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using the ``file_storage::at`` function, which takes an index and an iterator; |
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:: |
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struct file_entry |
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{ |
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std::string path; |
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size_type offset; |
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size_type size; |
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size_type file_base; |
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time_t mtime; |
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sha1_hash filehash; |
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bool pad_file:1; |
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bool hidden_attribute:1; |
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bool executable_attribute:1; |
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bool symlink_attribute:1; |
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}; |
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The ``path`` is the full path of this file. The paths are unicode strings |
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encoded in UTF-8. |
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``size`` is the size of the file (in bytes) and ``offset`` is the byte offset |
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of the file within the torrent. i.e. the sum of all the sizes of the files |
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before it in the list. |
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``file_base`` is the offset in the file where the storage should start. The normal |
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case is to have this set to 0, so that the storage starts saving data at the start |
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if the file. In cases where multiple files are mapped into the same file though, |
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the ``file_base`` should be set to an offset so that the different regions do |
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not overlap. This is used when mapping "unselected" files into a so-called part |
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file. |
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``mtime`` is the modification time of this file specified in posix time. |
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``symlink_path`` is the path which this is a symlink to, or empty if this is |
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not a symlink. This field is only used if the ``symlink_attribute`` is set. |
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``filehash`` is a sha-1 hash of the content of the file, or zeroes, if no |
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file hash was present in the torrent file. It can be used to potentially |
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find alternative sources for the file. |
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|
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``pad_file`` is set to true for files that are not part of the data of the torrent. |
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They are just there to make sure the next file is aligned to a particular byte offset |
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or piece boundry. These files should typically be hidden from an end user. They are |
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not written to disk. |
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``hidden_attribute`` is true if the file was marked as hidden (on windows). |
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``executable_attribute`` is true if the file was marked as executable (posix) |
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``symlink_attribute`` is true if the file was a symlink. If this is the case |
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the ``symlink_index`` refers to a string which specifies the original location |
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where the data for this file was found. |
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num_files() file_at() |
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--------------------- |
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:: |
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int num_files() const; |
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file_entry const& file_at(int index) const; |
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If you need index-access to files you can use the ``num_files()`` and ``file_at()`` |
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to access files using indices. |
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map_block() |
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----------- |
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:: |
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std::vector<file_slice> map_block(int piece, size_type offset |
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, int size) const; |
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This function will map a piece index, a byte offset within that piece and |
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a size (in bytes) into the corresponding files with offsets where that data |
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for that piece is supposed to be stored. |
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|
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The file slice struct looks like this:: |
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struct file_slice |
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{ |
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int file_index; |
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size_type offset; |
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size_type size; |
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}; |
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The ``file_index`` refers to the index of the file (in the torrent_info). |
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To get the path and filename, use ``file_at()`` and give the ``file_index`` |
|
as argument. The ``offset`` is the byte offset in the file where the range |
|
starts, and ``size`` is the number of bytes this range is. The size + offset |
|
will never be greater than the file size. |
|
|
|
|
|
map_file() |
|
---------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
peer_request map_file(int file_index, size_type file_offset |
|
, int size) const; |
|
|
|
This function will map a range in a specific file into a range in the torrent. |
|
The ``file_offset`` parameter is the offset in the file, given in bytes, where |
|
0 is the start of the file. |
|
The ``peer_request`` structure looks like this:: |
|
|
|
struct peer_request |
|
{ |
|
int piece; |
|
int start; |
|
int length; |
|
bool operator==(peer_request const& r) const; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
``piece`` is the index of the piece in which the range starts. |
|
``start`` is the offset within that piece where the range starts. |
|
``length`` is the size of the range, in bytes. |
|
|
|
The input range is assumed to be valid within the torrent. ``file_offset`` |
|
+ ``size`` is not allowed to be greater than the file size. ``file_index`` |
|
must refer to a valid file, i.e. it cannot be >= ``num_files()``. |
|
|
|
|
|
add_url_seed() add_http_seed() |
|
------------------------------ |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
void add_url_seed(std::string const& url |
|
, std::string const& extern_auth = std::string() |
|
, web_seed_entry::headers_t const& extra_headers = web_seed_entry::headers_t()); |
|
void add_http_seed(std::string const& url |
|
, std::string const& extern_auth = std::string() |
|
, web_seed_entry::headers_t const& extra_headers = web_seed_entry::headers_t()); |
|
std::vector<web_seed_entry> const& web_seeds() const; |
|
|
|
``web_seeds()`` returns all url seeds and http seeds in the torrent. Each entry |
|
is a ``web_seed_entry`` and may refer to either a url seed or http seed. |
|
|
|
``add_url_seed()`` and ``add_http_seed()`` adds one url to the list of |
|
url/http seeds. Currently, the only transport protocol supported for the url |
|
is http. |
|
|
|
The ``extern_auth`` argument can be used for other athorization schemese than |
|
basic HTTP authorization. If set, it will override any username and password |
|
found in the URL itself. The string will be sent as the HTTP authorization header's |
|
value (without specifying "Basic"). |
|
|
|
The ``extra_headers`` argument defaults to an empty list, but can be used to |
|
insert custom HTTP headers in the requests to a specific web seed. |
|
|
|
See `HTTP seeding`_ for more information. |
|
|
|
The ``web_seed_entry`` has the following members:: |
|
|
|
struct web_seed_entry |
|
{ |
|
enum type_t { url_seed, http_seed }; |
|
|
|
typedef std::vector<std::pair<std::string, std::string> > headers_t; |
|
|
|
web_seed_entry(std::string const& url_, type_t type_ |
|
, std::string const& auth_ = std::string() |
|
, headers_t const& extra_headers_ = headers_t()); |
|
|
|
bool operator==(web_seed_entry const& e) const; |
|
bool operator<(web_seed_entry const& e) const; |
|
|
|
std::string url; |
|
type_t type; |
|
std::string auth; |
|
headers_t extra_headers; |
|
|
|
// ... |
|
}; |
|
|
|
|
|
trackers() |
|
---------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
std::vector<announce_entry> const& trackers() const; |
|
|
|
The ``trackers()`` function will return a sorted vector of ``announce_entry``. |
|
Each announce entry contains a string, which is the tracker url, and a tier index. The |
|
tier index is the high-level priority. No matter which trackers that works or not, the |
|
ones with lower tier will always be tried before the one with higher tier number. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct announce_entry |
|
{ |
|
announce_entry(std::string const& url); |
|
std::string url; |
|
|
|
int next_announce_in() const; |
|
int min_announce_in() const; |
|
|
|
int scrape_incomplete; |
|
int scrape_complete; |
|
int scrape_downloaded; |
|
|
|
error_code last_error; |
|
|
|
std::string message; |
|
|
|
boost::uint8_t tier; |
|
boost::uint8_t fail_limit; |
|
boost::uint8_t fails; |
|
|
|
enum tracker_source |
|
{ |
|
source_torrent = 1, |
|
source_client = 2, |
|
source_magnet_link = 4, |
|
source_tex = 8 |
|
}; |
|
boost::uint8_t source; |
|
|
|
bool verified:1; |
|
bool updating:1; |
|
bool start_sent:1; |
|
bool complete_sent:1; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
``next_announce_in()`` returns the number of seconds to the next announce on |
|
this tracker. ``min_announce_in()`` returns the number of seconds until we are |
|
allowed to force another tracker update with this tracker. |
|
|
|
If the last time this tracker was contacted failed, ``last_error`` is the error |
|
code describing what error occurred. |
|
|
|
``scrape_incomplete``, ``scrape_complete`` and ``scrape_downloaded`` are either |
|
-1 or the scrape information this tracker last responded with. *incomplete* is |
|
the current number of downloaders in the swarm, *complete* is the current number |
|
of seeds in the swarm and *downloaded* is the cumulative number of completed |
|
downloads of this torrent, since the beginning of time (from this tracker's point |
|
of view). |
|
|
|
If the last time this tracker was contacted, the tracker returned a warning |
|
or error message, ``message`` contains that message. |
|
|
|
``fail_limit`` is the max number of failures to announce to this tracker in |
|
a row, before this tracker is not used anymore. |
|
|
|
``fails`` is the number of times in a row we have failed to announce to this |
|
tracker. |
|
|
|
``source`` is a bitmask specifying which sources we got this tracker from. |
|
|
|
``verified`` is set to true the first time we receive a valid response |
|
from this tracker. |
|
|
|
``updating`` is true while we're waiting for a response from the tracker. |
|
|
|
``start_sent`` is set to true when we get a valid response from an announce |
|
with event=started. If it is set, we won't send start in the subsequent |
|
announces. |
|
|
|
``complete_sent`` is set to true when we send a event=completed. |
|
|
|
|
|
total_size() piece_length() piece_size() num_pieces() |
|
----------------------------------------------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
size_type total_size() const; |
|
int piece_length() const; |
|
int piece_size(unsigned int index) const; |
|
int num_pieces() const; |
|
|
|
|
|
``total_size()``, ``piece_length()`` and ``num_pieces()`` returns the total |
|
number of bytes the torrent-file represents (all the files in it), the number of byte for |
|
each piece and the total number of pieces, respectively. The difference between |
|
``piece_size()`` and ``piece_length()`` is that ``piece_size()`` takes |
|
the piece index as argument and gives you the exact size of that piece. It will always |
|
be the same as ``piece_length()`` except in the case of the last piece, which may |
|
be smaller. |
|
|
|
|
|
hash_for_piece() hash_for_piece_ptr() info_hash() |
|
------------------------------------------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
size_type piece_size(unsigned int index) const; |
|
sha1_hash const& hash_for_piece(unsigned int index) const; |
|
char const* hash_for_piece_ptr(unsigned int index) const; |
|
|
|
``hash_for_piece()`` takes a piece-index and returns the 20-bytes sha1-hash for that |
|
piece and ``info_hash()`` returns the 20-bytes sha1-hash for the info-section of the |
|
torrent file. For more information on the ``sha1_hash``, see the big_number_ class. |
|
``hash_for_piece_ptr()`` returns a pointer to the 20 byte sha1 digest for the piece. |
|
Note that the string is not null-terminated. |
|
|
|
merkle_tree() set_merkle_tree() |
|
------------------------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
std::vector<sha1_hash> const& merkle_tree() const; |
|
void set_merkle_tree(std::vector<sha1_hash>& h); |
|
|
|
``merkle_tree()`` returns a reference to the merkle tree for this torrent, if any. |
|
|
|
``set_merkle_tree()`` moves the passed in merkle tree into the torrent_info object. |
|
i.e. ``h`` will not be identical after the call. You need to set the merkle tree for |
|
a torrent that you've just created (as a merkle torrent). The merkle tree is retrieved |
|
from the ``create_torrent::merkle_tree()`` function, and need to be saved separately |
|
from the torrent file itself. Once it's added to libtorrent, the merkle tree will be |
|
persisted in the resume data. |
|
|
|
|
|
name() comment() creation_date() creator() |
|
------------------------------------------ |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
std::string const& name() const; |
|
std::string const& comment() const; |
|
std::string const& creator() const; |
|
boost::optional<time_t> creation_date() const; |
|
|
|
``name()`` returns the name of the torrent. |
|
|
|
``comment()`` returns the comment associated with the torrent. If there's no comment, |
|
it will return an empty string. ``creation_date()`` returns the creation date of |
|
the torrent as time_t (`posix time`_). If there's no time stamp in the torrent file, |
|
the optional object will be uninitialized. |
|
|
|
Both the name and the comment is UTF-8 encoded strings. |
|
|
|
``creator()`` returns the creator string in the torrent. If there is no creator string |
|
it will return an empty string. |
|
|
|
.. _`posix time`: http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/functions/time.html |
|
|
|
priv() |
|
------ |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
bool priv() const; |
|
|
|
``priv()`` returns true if this torrent is private. i.e., it should not be |
|
distributed on the trackerless network (the kademlia DHT). |
|
|
|
|
|
nodes() |
|
------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
std::vector<std::pair<std::string, int> > const& nodes() const; |
|
|
|
If this torrent contains any DHT nodes, they are put in this vector in their original |
|
form (host name and port number). |
|
|
|
add_node() |
|
---------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
void add_node(std::pair<std::string, int> const& node); |
|
|
|
This is used when creating torrent. Use this to add a known DHT node. It may |
|
be used, by the client, to bootstrap into the DHT network. |
|
|
|
|
|
metadata() metadata_size() |
|
-------------------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
boost::shared_array<char> metadata() const; |
|
int metadata_size() const; |
|
|
|
``metadata()`` returns a the raw info section of the torrent file. The size |
|
of the metadata is returned by ``metadata_size()``. |
|
|
|
|
|
torrent_handle |
|
============== |
|
|
|
You will usually have to store your torrent handles somewhere, since it's the |
|
object through which you retrieve information about the torrent and aborts the torrent. |
|
|
|
.. warning:: |
|
Any member function that returns a value or fills in a value has to |
|
be made synchronously. This means it has to wait for the main thread |
|
to complete the query before it can return. This might potentially be |
|
expensive if done from within a GUI thread that needs to stay responsive. |
|
Try to avoid quering for information you don't need, and try to do it |
|
in as few calls as possible. You can get most of the interesting information |
|
about a torrent from the ``torrent_handle::status()`` call. |
|
|
|
Its declaration looks like this:: |
|
|
|
struct torrent_handle |
|
{ |
|
torrent_handle(); |
|
|
|
enum status_flags_t |
|
{ |
|
query_distributed_copies = 1, |
|
query_accurate_download_counters = 2, |
|
query_last_seen_complete = 4, |
|
query_pieces = 8, |
|
query_verified_pieces = 16, |
|
query_torrent_file = 32, |
|
query_name = 64, |
|
query_save_path = 128, |
|
}; |
|
|
|
torrent_status status(boost::uint32_t flags = 0xffffffff); |
|
void file_progress(std::vector<size_type>& fp, int flags = 0); |
|
void get_download_queue(std::vector<partial_piece_info>& queue) const; |
|
void get_peer_info(std::vector<peer_info>& v) const; |
|
boost::intrusive_ptr<torrent_info> torrent_file() const; |
|
bool is_valid() const; |
|
|
|
enum save_resume_flags_t { flush_disk_cache = 1, save_info_dict = 2 }; |
|
void save_resume_data(int flags = 0) const; |
|
bool need_save_resume_data() const; |
|
void force_reannounce() const; |
|
void force_dht_announce() const; |
|
void force_reannounce(boost::posix_time::time_duration) const; |
|
void scrape_tracker() const; |
|
void connect_peer(asio::ip::tcp::endpoint const& adr, int source = 0) const; |
|
|
|
void set_tracker_login(std::string const& username |
|
, std::string const& password) const; |
|
|
|
std::vector<announce_entry> trackers() const; |
|
void replace_trackers(std::vector<announce_entry> const&); |
|
void add_tracker(announce_entry const& url); |
|
|
|
void add_url_seed(std::string const& url); |
|
void remove_url_seed(std::string const& url); |
|
std::set<std::string> url_seeds() const; |
|
|
|
void add_http_seed(std::string const& url); |
|
void remove_http_seed(std::string const& url); |
|
std::set<std::string> http_seeds() const; |
|
|
|
int max_uploads() const; |
|
void set_max_uploads(int max_uploads) const; |
|
void set_max_connections(int max_connections) const; |
|
int max_connections() const; |
|
void set_upload_limit(int limit) const; |
|
int upload_limit() const; |
|
void set_download_limit(int limit) const; |
|
int download_limit() const; |
|
void set_sequential_download(bool sd) const; |
|
bool is_sequential_download() const; |
|
|
|
int queue_position() const; |
|
void queue_position_up() const; |
|
void queue_position_down() const; |
|
void queue_position_top() const; |
|
void queue_position_bottom() const; |
|
|
|
void set_priority(int prio) const; |
|
|
|
void use_interface(char const* net_interface) const; |
|
|
|
enum pause_flags_t { graceful_pause = 1 }; |
|
void pause(int flags = 0) const; |
|
void resume() const; |
|
bool is_seed() const; |
|
void force_recheck() const; |
|
void clear_error() const; |
|
void set_upload_mode(bool m) const; |
|
void set_share_mode(bool m) const; |
|
|
|
void apply_ip_filter(bool b) const; |
|
|
|
void flush_cache() const; |
|
|
|
void resolve_countries(bool r); |
|
bool resolve_countries() const; |
|
|
|
enum deadline_flags { alert_when_available = 1 }; |
|
void set_piece_deadline(int index, int deadline, int flags = 0) const; |
|
void reset_piece_deadline(int index) const; |
|
|
|
void piece_availability(std::vector<int>& avail) const; |
|
void piece_priority(int index, int priority) const; |
|
int piece_priority(int index) const; |
|
void prioritize_pieces(std::vector<int> const& pieces) const; |
|
std::vector<int> piece_priorities() const; |
|
|
|
void file_priority(int index, int priority) const; |
|
int file_priority(int index) const; |
|
void prioritize_files(std::vector<int> const& files) const; |
|
std::vector<int> file_priorities() const; |
|
|
|
void auto_managed(bool m) const; |
|
|
|
bool set_metadata(char const* buf, int size) const; |
|
|
|
void move_storage(std::string const& save_path, int flags = 0) const; |
|
void move_storage(std::wstring const& save_path, int flags = 0) const; |
|
void rename_file(int index, std::string) const; |
|
void rename_file(int index, std::wstring) const; |
|
storage_interface* get_storage_impl() const; |
|
|
|
void super_seeding(bool on) const; |
|
|
|
enum flags_t { overwrite_existing = 1 }; |
|
void add_piece(int piece, char const* data, int flags = 0) const; |
|
void read_piece(int piece) const; |
|
bool have_piece(int piece) const; |
|
|
|
sha1_hash info_hash() const; |
|
|
|
void set_ssl_certificate(std::string const& cert |
|
, std::string const& private_key |
|
, std::string const& dh_params |
|
, std::string const& passphrase = ""); |
|
|
|
bool operator==(torrent_handle const&) const; |
|
bool operator!=(torrent_handle const&) const; |
|
bool operator<(torrent_handle const&) const; |
|
|
|
boost::shared_ptr<torrent> native_handle() const; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
The default constructor will initialize the handle to an invalid state. Which |
|
means you cannot perform any operation on it, unless you first assign it a |
|
valid handle. If you try to perform any operation on an uninitialized handle, |
|
it will throw ``invalid_handle``. |
|
|
|
.. warning:: All operations on a ``torrent_handle`` may throw libtorrent_exception_ |
|
exception, in case the handle is no longer refering to a torrent. There is |
|
one exception ``is_valid()`` will never throw. |
|
Since the torrents are processed by a background thread, there is no |
|
guarantee that a handle will remain valid between two calls. |
|
|
|
set_piece_deadline() reset_piece_deadline() |
|
------------------------------------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
enum deadline_flags { alert_when_available = 1 }; |
|
void set_piece_deadline(int index, int deadline, int flags = 0) const; |
|
void reset_piece_deadline(int index) const; |
|
|
|
This function sets or resets the deadline associated with a specific piece |
|
index (``index``). libtorrent will attempt to download this entire piece before |
|
the deadline expires. This is not necessarily possible, but pieces with a more |
|
recent deadline will always be prioritized over pieces with a deadline further |
|
ahead in time. The deadline (and flags) of a piece can be changed by calling this |
|
function again. |
|
|
|
The ``flags`` parameter can be used to ask libtorrent to send an alert once the |
|
piece has been downloaded, by passing ``alert_when_available``. When set, the |
|
read_piece_alert_ alert will be delivered, with the piece data, when it's downloaded. |
|
|
|
If the piece is already downloaded when this call is made, nothing happens, unless |
|
the ``alert_when_available`` flag is set, in which case it will do the same thing |
|
as calling `read_piece()`_ for ``index``. |
|
|
|
``deadline`` is the number of milliseconds until this piece should be completed. |
|
|
|
``reset_piece_deadline`` removes the deadline from the piece. If it hasn't already |
|
been downloaded, it will no longer be considered a priority. |
|
|
|
piece_availability() |
|
-------------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
void piece_availability(std::vector<int>& avail) const; |
|
|
|
Fills the specified ``std::vector<int>`` with the availability for each |
|
piece in this torrent. libtorrent does not keep track of availability for |
|
seeds, so if the torrent is seeding the availability for all pieces is |
|
reported as 0. |
|
|
|
The piece availability is the number of peers that we are connected that has |
|
advertized having a particular piece. This is the information that libtorrent |
|
uses in order to prefer picking rare pieces. |
|
|
|
|
|
piece_priority() prioritize_pieces() piece_priorities() |
|
------------------------------------------------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
void piece_priority(int index, int priority) const; |
|
int piece_priority(int index) const; |
|
void prioritize_pieces(std::vector<int> const& pieces) const; |
|
std::vector<int> piece_priorities() const; |
|
|
|
These functions are used to set and get the prioritiy of individual pieces. |
|
By default all pieces have priority 1. That means that the random rarest |
|
first algorithm is effectively active for all pieces. You may however |
|
change the priority of individual pieces. There are 8 different priority |
|
levels: |
|
|
|
0. piece is not downloaded at all |
|
1. normal priority. Download order is dependent on availability |
|
2. higher than normal priority. Pieces are preferred over pieces with |
|
the same availability, but not over pieces with lower availability |
|
3. pieces are as likely to be picked as partial pieces. |
|
4. pieces are preferred over partial pieces, but not over pieces with |
|
lower availability |
|
5. *currently the same as 4* |
|
6. piece is as likely to be picked as any piece with availability 1 |
|
7. maximum priority, availability is disregarded, the piece is preferred |
|
over any other piece with lower priority |
|
|
|
The exact definitions of these priorities are implementation details, and |
|
subject to change. The interface guarantees that higher number means higher |
|
priority, and that 0 means do not download. |
|
|
|
``piece_priority`` sets or gets the priority for an individual piece, |
|
specified by ``index``. |
|
|
|
``prioritize_pieces`` takes a vector of integers, one integer per piece in |
|
the torrent. All the piece priorities will be updated with the priorities |
|
in the vector. |
|
|
|
``piece_priorities`` returns a vector with one element for each piece in the |
|
torrent. Each element is the current priority of that piece. |
|
|
|
|
|
file_priority() prioritize_files() file_priorities() |
|
---------------------------------------------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
void file_priority(int index, int priority) const; |
|
int file_priority(int index) const; |
|
void prioritize_files(std::vector<int> const& files) const; |
|
std::vector<int> file_priorities() const; |
|
|
|
``index`` must be in the range [0, number_of_files). |
|
|
|
``file_priority`` queries or sets the priority of file ``index``. |
|
|
|
``prioritize_files`` takes a vector that has at as many elements as there are |
|
files in the torrent. Each entry is the priority of that file. The function |
|
sets the priorities of all the pieces in the torrent based on the vector. |
|
|
|
``file_priorities`` returns a vector with the priorities of all files. |
|
|
|
The priority values are the same as for ``piece_priority``. |
|
|
|
Whenever a file priority is changed, all other piece priorities are reset |
|
to match the file priorities. In order to maintain sepcial priorities for |
|
particular pieces, ``piece_priority`` has to be called again for those pieces. |
|
|
|
You cannot set the file priorities on a torrent that does not yet |
|
have metadata or a torrent that is a seed. ``file_priority(int, int)`` and |
|
``prioritize_files()`` are both no-ops for such torrents. |
|
|
|
file_progress() |
|
--------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
void file_progress(std::vector<size_type>& fp, int flags = 0); |
|
|
|
This function fills in the supplied vector with the the number of bytes downloaded |
|
of each file in this torrent. The progress values are ordered the same as the files |
|
in the `torrent_info`_. This operation is not very cheap. Its complexity is *O(n + mj)*. |
|
Where *n* is the number of files, *m* is the number of downloading pieces and *j* |
|
is the number of blocks in a piece. |
|
|
|
The ``flags`` parameter can be used to specify the granularity of the file progress. If |
|
left at the default value of 0, the progress will be as accurate as possible, but also |
|
more expensive to calculate. If ``torrent_handle::piece_granularity`` is specified, |
|
the progress will be specified in piece granularity. i.e. only pieces that have been |
|
fully downloaded and passed the hash check count. When specifying piece granularity, |
|
the operation is a lot cheaper, since libtorrent already keeps track of this internally |
|
and no calculation is required. |
|
|
|
|
|
move_storage() |
|
-------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
void move_storage(std::string const& save_path, int flags = 0) const; |
|
void move_storage(std::wstring const& save_path, int flags = 0) const; |
|
|
|
Moves the file(s) that this torrent are currently seeding from or downloading to. If |
|
the given ``save_path`` is not located on the same drive as the original save path, |
|
the files will be copied to the new drive and removed from their original location. |
|
This will block all other disk IO, and other torrents download and upload rates may |
|
drop while copying the file. |
|
|
|
Since disk IO is performed in a separate thread, this operation is also asynchronous. |
|
Once the operation completes, the ``storage_moved_alert`` is generated, with the new |
|
path as the message. If the move fails for some reason, ``storage_moved_failed_alert`` |
|
is generated instead, containing the error message. |
|
|
|
The ``flags`` argument determines the behavior of the copying/moving of the files |
|
in the torrent. They are defined in ``include/libtorrent/storage.hpp``: |
|
|
|
* ``always_replace_files`` = 0 |
|
* ``fail_if_exist`` = 1 |
|
* ``dont_replace`` = 2 |
|
|
|
``always_replace_files`` is the default and replaces any file that exist in both the |
|
source directory and the target directory. |
|
|
|
``fail_if_exist`` first check to see that none of the copy operations would cause an |
|
overwrite. If it would, it will fail. Otherwise it will proceed as if it was in |
|
``always_replace_files`` mode. Note that there is an inherent race condition here. |
|
If the files in the target directory appear after the check but before the copy |
|
or move completes, they will be overwritten. When failing because of files already |
|
existing in the target path, the ``error`` of ``move_storage_failed_alert`` is set |
|
to ``boost::system::errc::file_exists``. |
|
|
|
The intention is that a client may use this as a probe, and if it fails, ask the user |
|
which mode to use. The client may then re-issue the ``move_storage`` call with one |
|
of the other modes. |
|
|
|
``dont_replace`` always takes the existing file in the target directory, if there is |
|
one. The source files will still be removed in that case. |
|
|
|
Files that have been renamed to have absolute pahts are not moved by this function. |
|
Keep in mind that files that don't belong to the torrent but are stored in the torrent's |
|
directory may be moved as well. This goes for files that have been renamed to |
|
absolute paths that still end up inside the save path. |
|
|
|
rename_file() |
|
------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
void rename_file(int index, std::string) const; |
|
void rename_file(int index, std::wstring) const; |
|
|
|
Renames the file with the given index asynchronously. The rename operation is complete |
|
when either a ``file_renamed_alert`` or ``file_rename_failed_alert`` is posted. |
|
|
|
get_storage_impl() |
|
------------------ |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
storage_interface* get_storage_impl() const; |
|
|
|
Returns the storage implementation for this torrent. This depends on the |
|
storage contructor function that was passed to ``session::add_torrent``. |
|
|
|
super_seeding() |
|
--------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
void super_seeding(bool on) const; |
|
|
|
Enables or disabled super seeding/initial seeding for this torrent. The torrent |
|
needs to be a seed for this to take effect. |
|
|
|
add_piece() |
|
----------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
enum flags_t { overwrite_existing = 1 }; |
|
void add_piece(int piece, char const* data, int flags = 0) const; |
|
|
|
This function will write ``data`` to the storage as piece ``piece``, as if it had |
|
been downloaded from a peer. ``data`` is expected to point to a buffer of as many |
|
bytes as the size of the specified piece. The data in the buffer is copied and |
|
passed on to the disk IO thread to be written at a later point. |
|
|
|
By default, data that's already been downloaded is not overwritten by this buffer. If |
|
you trust this data to be correct (and pass the piece hash check) you may pass the |
|
``overwrite_existing`` flag. This will instruct libtorrent to overwrite any data that |
|
may already have been downloaded with this data. |
|
|
|
Since the data is written asynchronously, you may know that is passed or failed the |
|
hash check by waiting for ``piece_finished_alert`` or ``has_failed_alert``. |
|
|
|
read_piece() |
|
------------ |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
void read_piece(int piece) const; |
|
|
|
This function starts an asynchronous read operation of the specified piece from |
|
this torrent. You must have completed the download of the specified piece before |
|
calling this function. |
|
|
|
When the read operation is completed, it is passed back through an alert, |
|
read_piece_alert_. Since this alert is a reponse to an explicit call, it will |
|
always be posted, regardless of the alert mask. |
|
|
|
Note that if you read multiple pieces, the read operations are not guaranteed to |
|
finish in the same order as you initiated them. |
|
|
|
have_piece() |
|
------------ |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
bool have_piece(int piece) const; |
|
|
|
Returns true if this piece has been completely downloaded, and false otherwise. |
|
|
|
force_reannounce() force_dht_announce() |
|
--------------------------------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
void force_reannounce() const; |
|
void force_reannounce(boost::posix_time::time_duration) const; |
|
void force_dht_announce() const; |
|
|
|
``force_reannounce()`` will force this torrent to do another tracker request, to receive new |
|
peers. The second overload of ``force_reannounce`` that takes a ``time_duration`` as |
|
argument will schedule a reannounce in that amount of time from now. |
|
|
|
If the tracker's ``min_interval`` has not passed since the last announce, the forced |
|
announce will be scheduled to happen immediately as the ``min_interval`` expires. This is |
|
to honor trackers minimum re-announce interval settings. |
|
|
|
``force_dht_announce`` will announce the torrent to the DHT immediately. |
|
|
|
scrape_tracker() |
|
---------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
void scrape_tracker() const; |
|
|
|
``scrape_tracker()`` will send a scrape request to the tracker. A scrape request queries the |
|
tracker for statistics such as total number of incomplete peers, complete peers, number of |
|
downloads etc. |
|
|
|
This request will specifically update the ``num_complete`` and ``num_incomplete`` fields in |
|
the torrent_status_ struct once it completes. When it completes, it will generate a |
|
scrape_reply_alert_. If it fails, it will generate a scrape_failed_alert_. |
|
|
|
connect_peer() |
|
-------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
void connect_peer(asio::ip::tcp::endpoint const& adr, int source = 0) const; |
|
|
|
``connect_peer()`` is a way to manually connect to peers that one believe is a part of the |
|
torrent. If the peer does not respond, or is not a member of this torrent, it will simply |
|
be disconnected. No harm can be done by using this other than an unnecessary connection |
|
attempt is made. If the torrent is uninitialized or in queued or checking mode, this |
|
will throw libtorrent_exception_. The second (optional) argument will be bitwised ORed into |
|
the source mask of this peer. Typically this is one of the source flags in peer_info_. |
|
i.e. ``tracker``, ``pex``, ``dht`` etc. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
set_upload_limit() set_download_limit() upload_limit() download_limit() |
|
----------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
void set_upload_limit(int limit) const; |
|
void set_download_limit(int limit) const; |
|
int upload_limit() const; |
|
int download_limit() const; |
|
|
|
``set_upload_limit`` will limit the upload bandwidth used by this particular torrent to the |
|
limit you set. It is given as the number of bytes per second the torrent is allowed to upload. |
|
``set_download_limit`` works the same way but for download bandwidth instead of upload bandwidth. |
|
Note that setting a higher limit on a torrent then the global limit (``session_settings::upload_rate_limit``) |
|
will not override the global rate limit. The torrent can never upload more than the global rate |
|
limit. |
|
|
|
``upload_limit`` and ``download_limit`` will return the current limit setting, for upload and |
|
download, respectively. |
|
|
|
|
|
set_sequential_download() |
|
------------------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
void set_sequential_download(bool sd); |
|
|
|
``set_sequential_download()`` enables or disables *sequential download*. When enabled, the piece |
|
picker will pick pieces in sequence instead of rarest first. |
|
|
|
Enabling sequential download will affect the piece distribution negatively in the swarm. It should be |
|
used sparingly. |
|
|
|
pause() resume() |
|
---------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
enum pause_flags_t { graceful_pause = 1 }; |
|
void pause(int flags) const; |
|
void resume() const; |
|
|
|
``pause()``, and ``resume()`` will disconnect all peers and reconnect all peers respectively. |
|
When a torrent is paused, it will however remember all share ratios to all peers and remember |
|
all potential (not connected) peers. Torrents may be paused automatically if there is a file |
|
error (e.g. disk full) or something similar. See file_error_alert_. |
|
|
|
To know if a torrent is paused or not, call ``torrent_handle::status()`` and inspect |
|
``torrent_status::paused``. |
|
|
|
The ``flags`` argument to pause can be set to ``torrent_handle::graceful_pause`` which will |
|
delay the disconnect of peers that we're still downloading outstanding requests from. The torrent |
|
will not accept any more requests and will disconnect all idle peers. As soon as a peer is |
|
done transferring the blocks that were requested from it, it is disconnected. This is a graceful |
|
shut down of the torrent in the sense that no downloaded bytes are wasted. |
|
|
|
torrents that are auto-managed may be automatically resumed again. It does not make sense to |
|
pause an auto-managed torrent without making it not automanaged first. Torrents are auto-managed |
|
by default when added to the session. For more information, see queuing_. |
|
|
|
flush_cache() |
|
------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
void flush_cache() const; |
|
|
|
Instructs libtorrent to flush all the disk caches for this torrent and close all |
|
file handles. This is done asynchronously and you will be notified that it's complete |
|
through cache_flushed_alert_. |
|
|
|
Note that by the time you get the alert, libtorrent may have cached more data for the |
|
torrent, but you are guaranteed that whatever cached data libtorrent had by the time |
|
you called ``torrent_handle::flush_cache()`` has been written to disk. |
|
|
|
force_recheck() |
|
--------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
void force_recheck() const; |
|
|
|
``force_recheck`` puts the torrent back in a state where it assumes to have no resume data. |
|
All peers will be disconnected and the torrent will stop announcing to the tracker. The torrent |
|
will be added to the checking queue, and will be checked (all the files will be read and |
|
compared to the piece hashes). Once the check is complete, the torrent will start connecting |
|
to peers again, as normal. |
|
|
|
clear_error() |
|
------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
void clear_error() const; |
|
|
|
If the torrent is in an error state (i.e. ``torrent_status::error`` is non-empty), this |
|
will clear the error and start the torrent again. |
|
|
|
set_upload_mode() |
|
----------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
void set_upload_mode(bool m) const; |
|
|
|
Explicitly sets the upload mode of the torrent. In upload mode, the torrent will not |
|
request any pieces. If the torrent is auto managed, it will automatically be taken out |
|
of upload mode periodically (see ``session_settings::optimistic_disk_retry``). Torrents |
|
are automatically put in upload mode whenever they encounter a disk write error. |
|
|
|
``m`` should be true to enter upload mode, and false to leave it. |
|
|
|
To test if a torrent is in upload mode, call ``torrent_handle::status()`` and inspect |
|
``torrent_status::upload_mode``. |
|
|
|
set_share_mode() |
|
---------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
void set_share_mode(bool m) const; |
|
|
|
Enable or disable share mode for this torrent. When in share mode, the torrent will |
|
not necessarily be downloaded, especially not the whole of it. Only parts that are likely |
|
to be distributed to more than 2 other peers are downloaded, and only if the previous |
|
prediction was correct. |
|
|
|
apply_ip_filter() |
|
----------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
void apply_ip_filter(bool b) const; |
|
|
|
Set to true to apply the session global IP filter to this torrent (which is the |
|
default). Set to false to make this torrent ignore the IP filter. |
|
|
|
resolve_countries() |
|
------------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
void resolve_countries(bool r); |
|
bool resolve_countries() const; |
|
|
|
Sets or gets the flag that derermines if countries should be resolved for the peers of this |
|
torrent. It defaults to false. If it is set to true, the peer_info_ structure for the peers |
|
in this torrent will have their ``country`` member set. See peer_info_ for more information |
|
on how to interpret this field. |
|
|
|
is_seed() |
|
--------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
bool is_seed() const; |
|
|
|
Returns true if the torrent is in seed mode (i.e. if it has finished downloading). |
|
|
|
auto_managed() |
|
-------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
void auto_managed(bool m) const; |
|
|
|
``auto_managed()`` changes whether the torrent is auto managed or not. For more info, |
|
see queuing_. |
|
|
|
set_metadata() |
|
-------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
bool set_metadata(char const* buf, int size) const; |
|
|
|
``set_metadata`` expects the *info* section of metadata. i.e. The buffer passed in will be |
|
hashed and verified against the info-hash. If it fails, a ``metadata_failed_alert`` will be |
|
generated. If it passes, a ``metadata_received_alert`` is generated. The function returns |
|
true if the metadata is successfully set on the torrent, and false otherwise. If the torrent |
|
already has metadata, this function will not affect the torrent, and false will be returned. |
|
|
|
|
|
set_tracker_login() |
|
------------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
void set_tracker_login(std::string const& username |
|
, std::string const& password) const; |
|
|
|
``set_tracker_login()`` sets a username and password that will be sent along in the HTTP-request |
|
of the tracker announce. Set this if the tracker requires authorization. |
|
|
|
|
|
trackers() replace_trackers() add_tracker() |
|
------------------------------------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
std::vector<announce_entry> trackers() const; |
|
void replace_trackers(std::vector<announce_entry> const&) const; |
|
void add_tracker(announc_entry const& url); |
|
|
|
``trackers()`` will return the list of trackers for this torrent. The |
|
announce entry contains both a string ``url`` which specify the announce url |
|
for the tracker as well as an int ``tier``, which is specifies the order in |
|
which this tracker is tried. If you want libtorrent to use another list of |
|
trackers for this torrent, you can use ``replace_trackers()`` which takes |
|
a list of the same form as the one returned from ``trackers()`` and will |
|
replace it. If you want an immediate effect, you have to call |
|
`force_reannounce() force_dht_announce()`_. See `trackers()`_ for the definition of ``announce_entry``. |
|
|
|
``add_tracker()`` will look if the specified tracker is already in the set. |
|
If it is, it doesn't do anything. If it's not in the current set of trackers, |
|
it will insert it in the tier specified in the announce_entry. |
|
|
|
The updated set of trackers will be saved in the resume data, and when a torrent |
|
is started with resume data, the trackers from the resume data will replace the |
|
original ones. |
|
|
|
|
|
add_url_seed() remove_url_seed() url_seeds() |
|
-------------------------------------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
void add_url_seed(std::string const& url); |
|
void remove_url_seed(std::string const& url); |
|
std::set<std::string> url_seeds() const; |
|
|
|
``add_url_seed()`` adds another url to the torrent's list of url seeds. If the |
|
given url already exists in that list, the call has no effect. The torrent |
|
will connect to the server and try to download pieces from it, unless it's |
|
paused, queued, checking or seeding. ``remove_url_seed()`` removes the given |
|
url if it exists already. ``url_seeds()`` return a set of the url seeds |
|
currently in this torrent. Note that urls that fails may be removed |
|
automatically from the list. |
|
|
|
See `HTTP seeding`_ for more information. |
|
|
|
add_http_seed() remove_http_seed() http_seeds() |
|
----------------------------------------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
void add_http_seed(std::string const& url); |
|
void remove_http_seed(std::string const& url); |
|
std::set<std::string> http_seeds() const; |
|
|
|
These functions are identical as the ``*_url_seed()`` variants, but they |
|
operate on BEP 17 web seeds instead of BEP 19. |
|
|
|
See `HTTP seeding`_ for more information. |
|
|
|
queue_position() queue_position_up() queue_position_down() queue_position_top() queue_position_bottom() |
|
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
int queue_position() const; |
|
void queue_position_up() const; |
|
void queue_position_down() const; |
|
void queue_position_top() const; |
|
void queue_position_bottom() const; |
|
|
|
Every torrent that is added is assigned a queue position exactly one greater than |
|
the greatest queue position of all existing torrents. Torrents that are being |
|
seeded have -1 as their queue position, since they're no longer in line to be downloaded. |
|
|
|
When a torrent is removed or turns into a seed, all torrents with greater queue positions |
|
have their positions decreased to fill in the space in the sequence. |
|
|
|
``queue_position()`` returns the torrent's position in the download queue. The torrents |
|
with the smallest numbers are the ones that are being downloaded. The smaller number, |
|
the closer the torrent is to the front of the line to be started. |
|
|
|
The queue position is also available in the ``torrent_status``. |
|
|
|
The ``queue_position_*()`` functions adjust the torrents position in the queue. Up means |
|
closer to the front and down means closer to the back of the queue. Top and bottom refers |
|
to the front and the back of the queue respectively. |
|
|
|
set_priority() |
|
-------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
void set_priority(int prio) const; |
|
|
|
This sets the bandwidth priority of this torrent. The priority of a torrent determines |
|
how much bandwidth its peers are assigned when distributing upload and download rate quotas. |
|
A high number gives more bandwidth. The priority must be within the range [0, 255]. |
|
|
|
The default priority is 0, which is the lowest priority. |
|
|
|
To query the priority of a torrent, use the ``torrent_handle::status()`` call. |
|
|
|
Torrents with higher priority will not nececcarily get as much bandwidth as they can |
|
consume, even if there's is more quota. Other peers will still be weighed in when |
|
bandwidth is being distributed. With other words, bandwidth is not distributed strictly |
|
in order of priority, but the priority is used as a weight. |
|
|
|
Peers whose Torrent has a higher priority will take precedence when distributing unchoke slots. |
|
This is a strict prioritization where every interested peer on a high priority torrent will |
|
be unchoked before any other, lower priority, torrents have any peers unchoked. |
|
|
|
use_interface() |
|
--------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
void use_interface(char const* net_interface) const; |
|
|
|
``use_interface()`` sets the network interface this torrent will use when it opens outgoing |
|
connections. By default, it uses the same interface as the session_ uses to listen on. The |
|
parameter must be a string containing one or more, comma separated, ip-address (either an |
|
IPv4 or IPv6 address). When specifying multiple interfaces, the torrent will round-robin |
|
which interface to use for each outgoing conneciton. This is useful for clients that are |
|
multi-homed. |
|
|
|
|
|
info_hash() |
|
----------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
sha1_hash info_hash() const; |
|
|
|
``info_hash()`` returns the info-hash for the torrent. |
|
|
|
|
|
set_max_uploads() max_uploads() |
|
------------------------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
void set_max_uploads(int max_uploads) const; |
|
int max_uploads() const; |
|
|
|
``set_max_uploads()`` sets the maximum number of peers that's unchoked at the same time on this |
|
torrent. If you set this to -1, there will be no limit. This defaults to infinite. The primary |
|
setting controlling this is the global unchoke slots limit, set by ``unchoke_slots_limit`` |
|
in session_settings_. |
|
|
|
``max_uploads()`` returns the current settings. |
|
|
|
|
|
set_max_connections() max_connections() |
|
--------------------------------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
void set_max_connections(int max_connections) const; |
|
int max_connections() const; |
|
|
|
``set_max_connections()`` sets the maximum number of connection this torrent will open. If all |
|
connections are used up, incoming connections may be refused or poor connections may be closed. |
|
This must be at least 2. The default is unlimited number of connections. If -1 is given to the |
|
function, it means unlimited. There is also a global limit of the number of connections, set |
|
by ``connections_limit`` in session_settings_. |
|
|
|
``max_connections()`` returns the current settings. |
|
|
|
|
|
save_resume_data() |
|
------------------ |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
enum save_resume_flags_t { flush_disk_cache = 1, save_info_dict = 2 }; |
|
void save_resume_data(int flags = 0) const; |
|
|
|
``save_resume_data()`` generates fast-resume data and returns it as an entry_. This entry_ |
|
is suitable for being bencoded. For more information about how fast-resume works, see `fast resume`_. |
|
|
|
The ``flags`` argument is a bitmask of flags ORed together. If the flag ``torrent_handle::flush_cache`` |
|
is set, the disk cache will be flushed before creating the resume data. This avoids a problem with |
|
file timestamps in the resume data in case the cache hasn't been flushed yet. |
|
|
|
If the flag ``torrent_handle::save_info_dict`` is set, the resume data will contain the metadata |
|
from the torrent file as well. This is default for any torrent that's added without a torrent |
|
file (such as a magnet link or a URL). |
|
|
|
This operation is asynchronous, ``save_resume_data`` will return immediately. The resume data |
|
is delivered when it's done through an `save_resume_data_alert`_. |
|
|
|
The fast resume data will be empty in the following cases: |
|
|
|
1. The torrent handle is invalid. |
|
2. The torrent is checking (or is queued for checking) its storage, it will obviously |
|
not be ready to write resume data. |
|
3. The torrent hasn't received valid metadata and was started without metadata |
|
(see libtorrent's `metadata from peers`_ extension) |
|
|
|
Note that by the time you receive the fast resume data, it may already be invalid if the torrent |
|
is still downloading! The recommended practice is to first pause the session, then generate the |
|
fast resume data, and then close it down. Make sure to not `remove_torrent()`_ before you receive |
|
the `save_resume_data_alert`_ though. There's no need to pause when saving intermittent resume data. |
|
|
|
.. warning:: If you pause every torrent individually instead of pausing the session, every torrent |
|
will have its paused state saved in the resume data! |
|
|
|
.. warning:: The resume data contains the modification timestamps for all files. If one file has |
|
been modified when the torrent is added again, the will be rechecked. When shutting down, make |
|
sure to flush the disk cache before saving the resume data. This will make sure that the file |
|
timestamps are up to date and won't be modified after saving the resume data. The recommended way |
|
to do this is to pause the torrent, which will flush the cache and disconnect all peers. |
|
|
|
.. note:: It is typically a good idea to save resume data whenever a torrent is completed or paused. In those |
|
cases you don't need to pause the torrent or the session, since the torrent will do no more writing |
|
to its files. If you save resume data for torrents when they are paused, you can accelerate the |
|
shutdown process by not saving resume data again for paused torrents. Completed torrents should |
|
have their resume data saved when they complete and on exit, since their statistics might be updated. |
|
|
|
In full allocation mode the reume data is never invalidated by subsequent |
|
writes to the files, since pieces won't move around. This means that you don't need to |
|
pause before writing resume data in full or sparse mode. If you don't, however, any data written to |
|
disk after you saved resume data and before the session_ closed is lost. |
|
|
|
It also means that if the resume data is out dated, libtorrent will not re-check the files, but assume |
|
that it is fairly recent. The assumption is that it's better to loose a little bit than to re-check |
|
the entire file. |
|
|
|
It is still a good idea to save resume data periodically during download as well as when |
|
closing down. |
|
|
|
Example code to pause and save resume data for all torrents and wait for the alerts:: |
|
|
|
extern int outstanding_resume_data; // global counter of outstanding resume data |
|
std::vector<torrent_handle> handles = ses.get_torrents(); |
|
ses.pause(); |
|
for (std::vector<torrent_handle>::iterator i = handles.begin(); |
|
i != handles.end(); ++i) |
|
{ |
|
torrent_handle& h = *i; |
|
if (!h.is_valid()) continue; |
|
torrent_status s = h.status(); |
|
if (!s.has_metadata) continue; |
|
if (!s.need_save_resume_data()) continue; |
|
|
|
h.save_resume_data(); |
|
++outstanding_resume_data; |
|
} |
|
|
|
while (outstanding_resume_data > 0) |
|
{ |
|
alert const* a = ses.wait_for_alert(seconds(10)); |
|
|
|
// if we don't get an alert within 10 seconds, abort |
|
if (a == 0) break; |
|
|
|
std::auto_ptr<alert> holder = ses.pop_alert(); |
|
|
|
if (alert_cast<save_resume_data_failed_alert>(a)) |
|
{ |
|
process_alert(a); |
|
--outstanding_resume_data; |
|
continue; |
|
} |
|
|
|
save_resume_data_alert const* rd = alert_cast<save_resume_data_alert>(a); |
|
if (rd == 0) |
|
{ |
|
process_alert(a); |
|
continue; |
|
} |
|
|
|
torrent_handle h = rd->handle; |
|
torrent_status st = h.status(torrent_handle::query_save_path | torrent_handle::query_name); |
|
std::ofstream out((st.save_path |
|
+ "/" + st.name + ".fastresume").c_str() |
|
, std::ios_base::binary); |
|
out.unsetf(std::ios_base::skipws); |
|
bencode(std::ostream_iterator<char>(out), *rd->resume_data); |
|
--outstanding_resume_data; |
|
} |
|
|
|
.. note:: Note how ``outstanding_resume_data`` is a global counter in this example. |
|
This is deliberate, otherwise there is a race condition for torrents that |
|
was just asked to save their resume data, they posted the alert, but it has |
|
not been received yet. Those torrents would report that they don't need to |
|
save resume data again, and skipped by the initial loop, and thwart the counter |
|
otherwise. |
|
|
|
|
|
need_save_resume_data() |
|
----------------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
bool need_save_resume_data() const; |
|
|
|
This function returns true if any whole chunk has been downloaded since the |
|
torrent was first loaded or since the last time the resume data was saved. When |
|
saving resume data periodically, it makes sense to skip any torrent which hasn't |
|
downloaded anything since the last time. |
|
|
|
.. note:: A torrent's resume data is considered saved as soon as the alert |
|
is posted. It is important to make sure this alert is received and handled |
|
in order for this function to be meaningful. |
|
|
|
|
|
status() |
|
-------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
torrent_status status(boost::uint32_t flags = 0xffffffff) const; |
|
|
|
``status()`` will return a structure with information about the status of this |
|
torrent. If the torrent_handle_ is invalid, it will throw libtorrent_exception_ exception. |
|
See torrent_status_. The ``flags`` argument filters what information is returned |
|
in the torrent_status. Some information in there is relatively expensive to calculate, and |
|
if you're not interested in it (and see performance issues), you can filter them out. |
|
|
|
By default everything is included. The flags you can use to decide what to *include* are: |
|
|
|
* ``query_distributed_copies`` |
|
calculates ``distributed_copies``, ``distributed_full_copies`` and ``distributed_fraction``. |
|
|
|
* ``query_accurate_download_counters`` |
|
includes partial downloaded blocks in ``total_done`` and ``total_wanted_done``. |
|
|
|
* ``query_last_seen_complete`` |
|
includes ``last_seen_complete``. |
|
|
|
* ``query_pieces`` |
|
includes ``pieces``. |
|
|
|
* ``query_verified_pieces`` |
|
includes ``verified_pieces`` (only applies to torrents in *seed mode*). |
|
|
|
* ``query_torrent_file`` |
|
includes ``torrent_file``, which is all the static information from the .torrent file. |
|
|
|
* ``query_name`` |
|
includes ``name``, the name of the torrent. This is either derived from the .torrent |
|
file, or from the ``&dn=`` magnet link argument or possibly some other source. If the |
|
name of the torrent is not known, this is an empty string. |
|
|
|
* ``query_save_path`` |
|
includes ``save_path``, the path to the directory the files of the torrent are saved to. |
|
|
|
get_download_queue() |
|
-------------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
void get_download_queue(std::vector<partial_piece_info>& queue) const; |
|
|
|
``get_download_queue()`` takes a non-const reference to a vector which it will fill with |
|
information about pieces that are partially downloaded or not downloaded at all but partially |
|
requested. The entry in the vector (``partial_piece_info``) looks like this:: |
|
|
|
struct partial_piece_info |
|
{ |
|
int piece_index; |
|
int blocks_in_piece; |
|
enum state_t { none, slow, medium, fast }; |
|
state_t piece_state; |
|
block_info* blocks; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
``piece_index`` is the index of the piece in question. ``blocks_in_piece`` is the |
|
number of blocks in this particular piece. This number will be the same for most pieces, but |
|
the last piece may have fewer blocks than the standard pieces. |
|
|
|
``piece_state`` is set to either ``fast``, ``medium``, ``slow`` or ``none``. It tells which |
|
download rate category the peers downloading this piece falls into. ``none`` means that no |
|
peer is currently downloading any part of the piece. Peers prefer picking pieces from |
|
the same category as themselves. The reason for this is to keep the number of partially |
|
downloaded pieces down. Pieces set to ``none`` can be converted into any of ``fast``, |
|
``medium`` or ``slow`` as soon as a peer want to download from it. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct block_info |
|
{ |
|
enum block_state_t |
|
{ none, requested, writing, finished }; |
|
|
|
void set_peer(tcp::endpoint const& ep); |
|
tcp::endpoint peer() const; |
|
|
|
unsigned bytes_progress:15; |
|
unsigned block_size:15; |
|
unsigned state:2; |
|
unsigned num_peers:14; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
|
|
The ``blocks`` field points to an array of ``blocks_in_piece`` elements. This pointer is |
|
only valid until the next call to ``get_download_queue()`` for any torrent in the same session. |
|
They all share the storaga for the block arrays in their session object. |
|
|
|
The ``block_info`` array contains data for each individual block in the piece. Each block has |
|
a state (``state``) which is any of: |
|
|
|
* ``none`` - This block has not been downloaded or requested form any peer. |
|
* ``requested`` - The block has been requested, but not completely downloaded yet. |
|
* ``writing`` - The block has been downloaded and is currently queued for being written to disk. |
|
* ``finished`` - The block has been written to disk. |
|
|
|
The ``peer`` field is the ip address of the peer this block was downloaded from. |
|
``num_peers`` is the number of peers that is currently requesting this block. Typically this |
|
is 0 or 1, but at the end of the torrent blocks may be requested by more peers in parallel to |
|
speed things up. |
|
``bytes_progress`` is the number of bytes that have been received for this block, and |
|
``block_size`` is the total number of bytes in this block. |
|
|
|
get_peer_info() |
|
--------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
void get_peer_info(std::vector<peer_info>&) const; |
|
|
|
``get_peer_info()`` takes a reference to a vector that will be cleared and filled |
|
with one entry for each peer connected to this torrent, given the handle is valid. If the |
|
torrent_handle_ is invalid, it will throw libtorrent_exception_ exception. Each entry in |
|
the vector contains information about that particular peer. See peer_info_. |
|
|
|
|
|
torrent_file() |
|
-------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
boost::intrusive_ptr<torrent_info> torrent_file() const; |
|
|
|
Returns a pointer to the torrent_info_ object associated with this torrent. The |
|
``torrent_info`` object is a copy of the internal object. If the torrent doesn't |
|
have metadata, the object being returned will not be fully filled in. |
|
The torrent may be in a state without metadata only if |
|
it was started without a .torrent file, e.g. by using the libtorrent extension of |
|
just supplying a tracker and info-hash. |
|
|
|
|
|
is_valid() |
|
---------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
bool is_valid() const; |
|
|
|
Returns true if this handle refers to a valid torrent and false if it hasn't been initialized |
|
or if the torrent it refers to has been aborted. Note that a handle may become invalid after |
|
it has been added to the session. Usually this is because the storage for the torrent is |
|
somehow invalid or if the filenames are not allowed (and hence cannot be opened/created) on |
|
your filesystem. If such an error occurs, a file_error_alert_ is generated and all handles |
|
that refers to that torrent will become invalid. |
|
|
|
set_ssl_certificate() |
|
--------------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
void set_ssl_certificate(std::string const& cert, std::string const& private_key |
|
, std::string const& dh_params, std::string const& passphrase = ""); |
|
|
|
For SSL torrents, use this to specify a path to a .pem file to use as this client's certificate. |
|
The certificate must be signed by the certificate in the .torrent file to be valid. |
|
|
|
``cert`` is a path to the (signed) certificate in .pem format corresponding to this torrent. |
|
|
|
``private_key`` is a path to the private key for the specified certificate. This must be in .pem |
|
format. |
|
|
|
``dh_params`` is a path to the Diffie-Hellman parameter file, which needs to be in .pem format. |
|
You can generate this file using the openssl command like this: |
|
``openssl dhparam -outform PEM -out dhparams.pem 512``. |
|
|
|
``passphrase`` may be specified if the private key is encrypted and requires a passphrase to |
|
be decrypted. |
|
|
|
Note that when a torrent first starts up, and it needs a certificate, it will suspend connecting |
|
to any peers until it has one. It's typically desirable to resume the torrent after setting the |
|
ssl certificate. |
|
|
|
If you receive a torrent_need_cert_alert_, you need to call this to provide a valid cert. If you |
|
don't have a cert you won't be allowed to connect to any peers. |
|
|
|
native_handle() |
|
--------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
boost::shared_ptr<torrent> native_handle() const; |
|
|
|
This function is intended only for use by plugins and the alert dispatch function. Any code |
|
that runs in libtorrent's network thread may not use the public API of ``torrent_handle``. |
|
Doing so results in a dead-lock. For such routines, the ``native_handle`` gives access to the |
|
underlying type representing the torrent. This type does not have a stable API and should |
|
be relied on as little as possible. |
|
|
|
|
|
torrent_status |
|
============== |
|
|
|
It contains the following fields:: |
|
|
|
struct torrent_status |
|
{ |
|
enum state_t |
|
{ |
|
queued_for_checking, |
|
checking_files, |
|
downloading_metadata, |
|
downloading, |
|
finished, |
|
seeding, |
|
allocating, |
|
checking_resume_data |
|
}; |
|
|
|
torrent_handle handle; |
|
|
|
state_t state; |
|
bool paused; |
|
bool auto_managed; |
|
bool sequential_download; |
|
bool seeding; |
|
bool finished; |
|
float progress; |
|
int progress_ppm; |
|
std::string error; |
|
std::string save_path; |
|
std::string name; |
|
|
|
boost::intrusive_ptr<const torrent_info> torrent_file; |
|
|
|
boost::posix_time::time_duration next_announce; |
|
boost::posix_time::time_duration announce_interval; |
|
|
|
std::string current_tracker; |
|
|
|
size_type total_download; |
|
size_type total_upload; |
|
|
|
size_type total_payload_download; |
|
size_type total_payload_upload; |
|
|
|
size_type total_failed_bytes; |
|
size_type total_redundant_bytes; |
|
|
|
int download_rate; |
|
int upload_rate; |
|
|
|
int download_payload_rate; |
|
int upload_payload_rate; |
|
|
|
int num_peers; |
|
|
|
int num_complete; |
|
int num_incomplete; |
|
|
|
int list_seeds; |
|
int list_peers; |
|
|
|
int connect_candidates; |
|
|
|
bitfield pieces; |
|
bitfield verified_pieces; |
|
|
|
int num_pieces; |
|
|
|
size_type total_done; |
|
size_type total_wanted_done; |
|
size_type total_wanted; |
|
|
|
int num_seeds; |
|
|
|
int distributed_full_copies; |
|
int distributed_fraction; |
|
|
|
float distributed_copies; |
|
|
|
int block_size; |
|
|
|
int num_uploads; |
|
int num_connections; |
|
int uploads_limit; |
|
int connections_limit; |
|
|
|
storage_mode_t storage_mode; |
|
|
|
int up_bandwidth_queue; |
|
int down_bandwidth_queue; |
|
|
|
size_type all_time_upload; |
|
size_type all_time_download; |
|
|
|
int active_time; |
|
int finished_time; |
|
int seeding_time; |
|
|
|
int seed_rank; |
|
|
|
int last_scrape; |
|
|
|
bool has_incoming; |
|
|
|
int sparse_regions; |
|
|
|
bool seed_mode; |
|
bool upload_mode; |
|
bool share_mode; |
|
bool super_seeding; |
|
|
|
int priority; |
|
|
|
time_t added_time; |
|
time_t completed_time; |
|
time_t last_seen_complete; |
|
|
|
int time_since_upload; |
|
int time_since_download; |
|
|
|
int queue_position; |
|
bool need_save_resume; |
|
bool ip_filter_applies; |
|
|
|
sha1_hash info_hash; |
|
|
|
int listen_port; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
``handle`` is a handle to the torrent whose status the object represents. |
|
|
|
``progress`` is a value in the range [0, 1], that represents the progress of the |
|
torrent's current task. It may be checking files or downloading. |
|
|
|
``progress_ppm`` reflects the same value as ``progress``, but instead in a range |
|
[0, 1000000] (ppm = parts per million). When floating point operations are disabled, |
|
this is the only alternative to the floating point value in ``progress``. |
|
|
|
The torrent's current task is in the ``state`` member, it will be one of the following: |
|
|
|
+--------------------------+----------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
|``checking_resume_data`` |The torrent is currently checking the fastresume data and | |
|
| |comparing it to the files on disk. This is typically | |
|
| |completed in a fraction of a second, but if you add a | |
|
| |large number of torrents at once, they will queue up. | |
|
+--------------------------+----------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
|``queued_for_checking`` |The torrent is in the queue for being checked. But there | |
|
| |currently is another torrent that are being checked. | |
|
| |This torrent will wait for its turn. | |
|
+--------------------------+----------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
|``checking_files`` |The torrent has not started its download yet, and is | |
|
| |currently checking existing files. | |
|
+--------------------------+----------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
|``downloading_metadata`` |The torrent is trying to download metadata from peers. | |
|
| |This assumes the metadata_transfer extension is in use. | |
|
+--------------------------+----------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
|``downloading`` |The torrent is being downloaded. This is the state | |
|
| |most torrents will be in most of the time. The progress | |
|
| |meter will tell how much of the files that has been | |
|
| |downloaded. | |
|
+--------------------------+----------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
|``finished`` |In this state the torrent has finished downloading but | |
|
| |still doesn't have the entire torrent. i.e. some pieces | |
|
| |are filtered and won't get downloaded. | |
|
+--------------------------+----------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
|``seeding`` |In this state the torrent has finished downloading and | |
|
| |is a pure seeder. | |
|
+--------------------------+----------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
|``allocating`` |If the torrent was started in full allocation mode, this | |
|
| |indicates that the (disk) storage for the torrent is | |
|
| |allocated. | |
|
+--------------------------+----------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
|
|
|
|
When downloading, the progress is ``total_wanted_done`` / ``total_wanted``. This takes |
|
into account files whose priority have been set to 0. They are not considered. |
|
|
|
``paused`` is set to true if the torrent is paused and false otherwise. It's only true |
|
if the torrent itself is paused. If the torrent is not running because the session is |
|
paused, this is still false. To know if a torrent is active or not, you need to inspect |
|
both ``torrent_status::paused`` and ``session::is_paused()``. |
|
|
|
``auto_managed`` is set to true if the torrent is auto managed, i.e. libtorrent is |
|
responsible for determining whether it should be started or queued. For more info |
|
see queuing_ |
|
|
|
``sequential_download`` is true when the torrent is in sequential download mode. In |
|
this mode pieces are downloaded in order rather than rarest first. |
|
|
|
``is_seeding`` is true if all pieces have been downloaded. |
|
|
|
``is_finished`` is true if all pieces that have a priority > 0 are downloaded. There is |
|
only a distinction between finished and seeding if some pieces or files have been |
|
set to priority 0, i.e. are not downloaded. |
|
|
|
``has_metadata`` is true if this torrent has metadata (either it was started from a |
|
.torrent file or the metadata has been downloaded). The only scenario where this can be |
|
false is when the torrent was started torrent-less (i.e. with just an info-hash and tracker |
|
ip, a magnet link for instance). |
|
|
|
``error`` may be set to an error message describing why the torrent was paused, in |
|
case it was paused by an error. If the torrent is not paused or if it's paused but |
|
not because of an error, this string is empty. |
|
|
|
``save_path`` is the path to the directory where this torrent's files are stored. |
|
It's typically the path as was given to `async_add_torrent() add_torrent()`_ when this torrent |
|
was started. This field is only included if the torrent status is queried with |
|
``torrent_handle::query_save_path``. |
|
|
|
``name`` is the name of the torrent. Typically this is derived from the .torrent file. |
|
In case the torrent was started without metadata, and hasn't completely received it yet, |
|
it returns the name given to it when added to the session. See ``session::add_torrent``. |
|
This field is only included if the torrent status is queried with ``torrent_handle::query_name``. |
|
|
|
``torrent_file`` is set to point to the ``torrent_info`` object for this torrent. It's |
|
only included if the torrent status is queried with ``torrent_handle::query_torrent_file``. |
|
|
|
``next_announce`` is the time until the torrent will announce itself to the tracker. And |
|
``announce_interval`` is the time the tracker want us to wait until we announce ourself |
|
again the next time. |
|
|
|
``current_tracker`` is the URL of the last working tracker. If no tracker request has |
|
been successful yet, it's set to an empty string. |
|
|
|
``total_download`` and ``total_upload`` is the number of bytes downloaded and |
|
uploaded to all peers, accumulated, *this session* only. The session is considered |
|
to restart when a torrent is paused and restarted again. When a torrent is paused, |
|
these counters are reset to 0. If you want complete, persistent, stats, see |
|
``all_time_upload`` and ``all_time_download``. |
|
|
|
``total_payload_download`` and ``total_payload_upload`` counts the amount of bytes |
|
send and received this session, but only the actual payload data (i.e the interesting |
|
data), these counters ignore any protocol overhead. |
|
|
|
``total_failed_bytes`` is the number of bytes that has been downloaded and that |
|
has failed the piece hash test. In other words, this is just how much crap that |
|
has been downloaded. |
|
|
|
``total_redundant_bytes`` is the number of bytes that has been downloaded even |
|
though that data already was downloaded. The reason for this is that in some |
|
situations the same data can be downloaded by mistake. When libtorrent sends |
|
requests to a peer, and the peer doesn't send a response within a certain |
|
timeout, libtorrent will re-request that block. Another situation when |
|
libtorrent may re-request blocks is when the requests it sends out are not |
|
replied in FIFO-order (it will re-request blocks that are skipped by an out of |
|
order block). This is supposed to be as low as possible. |
|
|
|
``pieces`` is the bitmask that represents which pieces we have (set to true) and |
|
the pieces we don't have. It's a pointer and may be set to 0 if the torrent isn't |
|
downloading or seeding. |
|
|
|
``verified_pieces`` is a bitmask representing which pieces has had their hash |
|
checked. This only applies to torrents in *seed mode*. If the torrent is not |
|
in seed mode, this bitmask may be empty. |
|
|
|
``num_pieces`` is the number of pieces that has been downloaded. It is equivalent |
|
to: ``std::accumulate(pieces->begin(), pieces->end())``. So you don't have to |
|
count yourself. This can be used to see if anything has updated since last time |
|
if you want to keep a graph of the pieces up to date. |
|
|
|
``download_rate`` and ``upload_rate`` are the total rates for all peers for this |
|
torrent. These will usually have better precision than summing the rates from |
|
all peers. The rates are given as the number of bytes per second. The |
|
``download_payload_rate`` and ``upload_payload_rate`` respectively is the |
|
total transfer rate of payload only, not counting protocol chatter. This might |
|
be slightly smaller than the other rates, but if projected over a long time |
|
(e.g. when calculating ETA:s) the difference may be noticeable. |
|
|
|
``num_peers`` is the number of peers this torrent currently is connected to. |
|
Peer connections that are in the half-open state (is attempting to connect) |
|
or are queued for later connection attempt do not count. Although they are |
|
visible in the peer list when you call `get_peer_info()`_. |
|
|
|
``num_complete`` and ``num_incomplete`` are set to -1 if the tracker did not |
|
send any scrape data in its announce reply. This data is optional and may |
|
not be available from all trackers. If these are not -1, they are the total |
|
number of peers that are seeding (complete) and the total number of peers |
|
that are still downloading (incomplete) this torrent. |
|
|
|
``list_seeds`` and ``list_peers`` are the number of seeds in our peer list |
|
and the total number of peers (including seeds) respectively. We are not |
|
necessarily connected to all the peers in our peer list. This is the number |
|
of peers we know of in total, including banned peers and peers that we have |
|
failed to connect to. |
|
|
|
``connect_candidates`` is the number of peers in this torrent's peer list |
|
that is a candidate to be connected to. i.e. It has fewer connect attempts |
|
than the max fail count, it is not a seed if we are a seed, it is not banned |
|
etc. If this is 0, it means we don't know of any more peers that we can try. |
|
|
|
``total_done`` is the total number of bytes of the file(s) that we have. All |
|
this does not necessarily has to be downloaded during this session (that's |
|
``total_payload_download``). |
|
|
|
``total_wanted_done`` is the number of bytes we have downloaded, only counting the |
|
pieces that we actually want to download. i.e. excluding any pieces that we have but |
|
have priority 0 (i.e. not wanted). |
|
|
|
``total_wanted`` is the total number of bytes we want to download. This is also |
|
excluding pieces whose priorities have been set to 0. |
|
|
|
``num_seeds`` is the number of peers that are seeding that this client is |
|
currently connected to. |
|
|
|
``distributed_full_copies`` is the number of distributed copies of the torrent. |
|
Note that one copy may be spread out among many peers. It tells how many copies |
|
there are currently of the rarest piece(s) among the peers this client is |
|
connected to. |
|
|
|
``distributed_fraction`` tells the share of pieces that have more copies than |
|
the rarest piece(s). Divide this number by 1000 to get the fraction. |
|
|
|
For example, if ``distributed_full_copies`` is 2 and ``distrbuted_fraction`` |
|
is 500, it means that the rarest pieces have only 2 copies among the peers |
|
this torrent is connected to, and that 50% of all the pieces have more than |
|
two copies. |
|
|
|
If we are a seed, the piece picker is deallocated as an optimization, and |
|
piece availability is no longer tracked. In this case the distributed |
|
copies members are set to -1. |
|
|
|
``distributed_copies`` is a floating point representation of the |
|
``distributed_full_copies`` as the integer part and ``distributed_fraction`` |
|
/ 1000 as the fraction part. If floating point operations are disabled |
|
this value is always -1. |
|
|
|
``block_size`` is the size of a block, in bytes. A block is a sub piece, it |
|
is the number of bytes that each piece request asks for and the number of |
|
bytes that each bit in the ``partial_piece_info``'s bitset represents |
|
(see `get_download_queue()`_). This is typically 16 kB, but it may be |
|
larger if the pieces are larger. |
|
|
|
``num_uploads`` is the number of unchoked peers in this torrent. |
|
|
|
``num_connections`` is the number of peer connections this torrent has, including |
|
half-open connections that hasn't completed the bittorrent handshake yet. This is |
|
always >= ``num_peers``. |
|
|
|
``uploads_limit`` is the set limit of upload slots (unchoked peers) for this torrent. |
|
|
|
``connections_limit`` is the set limit of number of connections for this torrent. |
|
|
|
``storage_mode`` is one of ``storage_mode_allocate``, ``storage_mode_sparse`` or |
|
``storage_mode_compact``. Identifies which storage mode this torrent is being saved |
|
with. See `Storage allocation`_. |
|
|
|
``up_bandwidth_queue`` and ``down_bandwidth_queue`` are the number of peers in this |
|
torrent that are waiting for more bandwidth quota from the torrent rate limiter. |
|
This can determine if the rate you get from this torrent is bound by the torrents |
|
limit or not. If there is no limit set on this torrent, the peers might still be |
|
waiting for bandwidth quota from the global limiter, but then they are counted in |
|
the ``session_status`` object. |
|
|
|
``all_time_upload`` and ``all_time_download`` are accumulated upload and download |
|
payload byte counters. They are saved in and restored from resume data to keep totals |
|
across sessions. |
|
|
|
``active_time``, ``finished_time`` and ``seeding_time`` are second counters. |
|
They keep track of the number of seconds this torrent has been active (not |
|
paused) and the number of seconds it has been active while being finished and |
|
active while being a seed. ``seeding_time`` should be <= ``finished_time`` which |
|
should be <= ``active_time``. They are all saved in and restored from resume data, |
|
to keep totals across sessions. |
|
|
|
``seed_rank`` is a rank of how important it is to seed the torrent, it is used |
|
to determine which torrents to seed and which to queue. It is based on the peer |
|
to seed ratio from the tracker scrape. For more information, see queuing_. |
|
|
|
``last_scrape`` is the number of seconds since this torrent acquired scrape data. |
|
If it has never done that, this value is -1. |
|
|
|
``has_incoming`` is true if there has ever been an incoming connection attempt |
|
to this torrent.' |
|
|
|
``sparse_regions`` the number of regions of non-downloaded pieces in the |
|
torrent. This is an interesting metric on windows vista, since there is |
|
a limit on the number of sparse regions in a single file there. |
|
|
|
``seed_mode`` is true if the torrent is in seed_mode. If the torrent was |
|
started in seed mode, it will leave seed mode once all pieces have been |
|
checked or as soon as one piece fails the hash check. |
|
|
|
``upload_mode`` is true if the torrent is blocked from downloading. This |
|
typically happens when a disk write operation fails. If the torrent is |
|
auto-managed, it will periodically be taken out of this state, in the |
|
hope that the disk condition (be it disk full or permission errors) has |
|
been resolved. If the torrent is not auto-managed, you have to explicitly |
|
take it out of the upload mode by calling `set_upload_mode()`_ on the |
|
torrent_handle_. |
|
|
|
``share_mode`` is true if the torrent is currently in share-mode, i.e. |
|
not downloading the torrent, but just helping the swarm out. |
|
|
|
``super_seeding`` is true if the torrent is in super seeding mode. |
|
|
|
``added_time`` is the posix-time when this torrent was added. i.e. what |
|
``time(NULL)`` returned at the time. |
|
|
|
``completed_time`` is the posix-time when this torrent was finished. If |
|
the torrent is not yet finished, this is 0. |
|
|
|
``last_seen_complete`` is the time when we, or one of our peers, last |
|
saw a complete copy of this torrent. |
|
|
|
``time_since_upload`` and ``time_since_download`` are the number of |
|
seconds since any peer last uploaded from this torrent and the last |
|
time a downloaded piece passed the hash check, respectively. |
|
|
|
``queue_position`` is the position this torrent has in the download |
|
queue. If the torrent is a seed or finished, this is -1. |
|
|
|
``need_save_resume`` is true if this torrent has unsaved changes |
|
to its download state and statistics since the last resume data |
|
was saved. |
|
|
|
``ip_filter_applies`` is true if the session global IP filter applies |
|
to this torrent. This defaults to true. |
|
|
|
``info_hash`` is the info-hash of the torrent. |
|
|
|
``listen_port`` is the listen port this torrent is listening on for new |
|
connections, if the torrent has its own listen socket. Only SSL torrents |
|
have their own listen sockets. If the torrent doesn't have one, and is |
|
accepting connections on the single listen socket, this is 0. |
|
|
|
peer_info |
|
========= |
|
|
|
It contains the following fields:: |
|
|
|
struct peer_info |
|
{ |
|
enum |
|
{ |
|
interesting = 0x1, |
|
choked = 0x2, |
|
remote_interested = 0x4, |
|
remote_choked = 0x8, |
|
supports_extensions = 0x10, |
|
local_connection = 0x20, |
|
handshake = 0x40, |
|
connecting = 0x80, |
|
queued = 0x100, |
|
on_parole = 0x200, |
|
seed = 0x400, |
|
optimistic_unchoke = 0x800, |
|
snubbed = 0x1000, |
|
upload_only = 0x2000, |
|
endgame_mode = 0x4000, |
|
holepunched = 0x8000, |
|
rc4_encrypted = 0x100000, |
|
plaintext_encrypted = 0x200000 |
|
}; |
|
|
|
unsigned int flags; |
|
|
|
enum peer_source_flags |
|
{ |
|
tracker = 0x1, |
|
dht = 0x2, |
|
pex = 0x4, |
|
lsd = 0x8 |
|
}; |
|
|
|
int source; |
|
|
|
// bitmask representing socket state |
|
enum bw_state { bw_idle = 0, bw_limit = 1, bw_network = 2, bw_disk = 4 }; |
|
|
|
char read_state; |
|
char write_state; |
|
|
|
asio::ip::tcp::endpoint ip; |
|
int up_speed; |
|
int down_speed; |
|
int payload_up_speed; |
|
int payload_down_speed; |
|
size_type total_download; |
|
size_type total_upload; |
|
peer_id pid; |
|
bitfield pieces; |
|
int upload_limit; |
|
int download_limit; |
|
|
|
time_duration last_request; |
|
time_duration last_active; |
|
int request_timeout; |
|
|
|
int send_buffer_size; |
|
int used_send_buffer; |
|
|
|
int receive_buffer_size; |
|
int used_receive_buffer; |
|
|
|
int num_hashfails; |
|
|
|
char country[2]; |
|
|
|
std::string inet_as_name; |
|
int inet_as; |
|
|
|
size_type load_balancing; |
|
|
|
int requests_in_buffer; |
|
int download_queue_length; |
|
int upload_queue_length; |
|
|
|
int failcount; |
|
|
|
int downloading_piece_index; |
|
int downloading_block_index; |
|
int downloading_progress; |
|
int downloading_total; |
|
|
|
std::string client; |
|
|
|
enum |
|
{ |
|
standard_bittorrent = 0, |
|
web_seed = 1 |
|
}; |
|
int connection_type; |
|
|
|
int remote_dl_rate; |
|
|
|
int pending_disk_bytes; |
|
|
|
int send_quota; |
|
int receive_quota; |
|
|
|
int rtt; |
|
|
|
int num_pieces; |
|
|
|
int download_rate_peak; |
|
int upload_rate_peak; |
|
|
|
float progress; |
|
int progress_ppm; |
|
|
|
tcp::endpoint local_endpoint; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
The ``flags`` attribute tells you in which state the peer is. It is set to |
|
any combination of the enums above. The following table describes each flag: |
|
|
|
+-------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``interesting`` | **we** are interested in pieces from this peer. | |
|
+-------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``choked`` | **we** have choked this peer. | |
|
+-------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``remote_interested`` | the peer is interested in **us** | |
|
+-------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``remote_choked`` | the peer has choked **us**. | |
|
+-------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``support_extensions`` | means that this peer supports the | |
|
| | `extension protocol`__. | |
|
+-------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``local_connection`` | The connection was initiated by us, the peer has a | |
|
| | listen port open, and that port is the same as in the | |
|
| | address of this peer. If this flag is not set, this | |
|
| | peer connection was opened by this peer connecting to | |
|
| | us. | |
|
+-------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``handshake`` | The connection is opened, and waiting for the | |
|
| | handshake. Until the handshake is done, the peer | |
|
| | cannot be identified. | |
|
+-------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``connecting`` | The connection is in a half-open state (i.e. it is | |
|
| | being connected). | |
|
+-------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``queued`` | The connection is currently queued for a connection | |
|
| | attempt. This may happen if there is a limit set on | |
|
| | the number of half-open TCP connections. | |
|
+-------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``on_parole`` | The peer has participated in a piece that failed the | |
|
| | hash check, and is now "on parole", which means we're | |
|
| | only requesting whole pieces from this peer until | |
|
| | it either fails that piece or proves that it doesn't | |
|
| | send bad data. | |
|
+-------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``seed`` | This peer is a seed (it has all the pieces). | |
|
+-------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``optimistic_unchoke`` | This peer is subject to an optimistic unchoke. It has | |
|
| | been unchoked for a while to see if it might unchoke | |
|
| | us in return an earn an upload/unchoke slot. If it | |
|
| | doesn't within some period of time, it will be choked | |
|
| | and another peer will be optimistically unchoked. | |
|
+-------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``snubbed`` | This peer has recently failed to send a block within | |
|
| | the request timeout from when the request was sent. | |
|
| | We're currently picking one block at a time from this | |
|
| | peer. | |
|
+-------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``upload_only`` | This peer has either explicitly (with an extension) | |
|
| | or implicitly (by becoming a seed) told us that it | |
|
| | will not downloading anything more, regardless of | |
|
| | which pieces we have. | |
|
+-------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``endgame_mode`` | This means the last time this peer picket a piece, | |
|
| | it could not pick as many as it wanted because there | |
|
| | were not enough free ones. i.e. all pieces this peer | |
|
| | has were already requested from other peers. | |
|
+-------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``holepunched`` | This flag is set if the peer was in holepunch mode | |
|
| | when the connection succeeded. This typically only | |
|
| | happens if both peers are behind a NAT and the peers | |
|
| | connect via the NAT holepunch mechanism. | |
|
+-------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
|
|
__ extension_protocol.html |
|
|
|
``source`` is a combination of flags describing from which sources this peer |
|
was received. The flags are: |
|
|
|
+------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``tracker`` | The peer was received from the tracker. | |
|
+------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``dht`` | The peer was received from the kademlia DHT. | |
|
+------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``pex`` | The peer was received from the peer exchange | |
|
| | extension. | |
|
+------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``lsd`` | The peer was received from the local service | |
|
| | discovery (The peer is on the local network). | |
|
+------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``resume_data`` | The peer was added from the fast resume data. | |
|
+------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
|
|
``read_state`` and ``write_state`` are bitmasks indicating what state this peer |
|
is in with regards to sending and receiving data. The states are declared in the |
|
``bw_state`` enum and defines as follows: |
|
|
|
+------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``bw_idle`` | The peer is not waiting for any external events to | |
|
| | send or receive data. | |
|
| | | |
|
+------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``bw_limit`` | The peer is waiting for the rate limiter. | |
|
| | | |
|
+------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``bw_network`` | The peer has quota and is currently waiting for a | |
|
| | network read or write operation to complete. This is | |
|
| | the state all peers are in if there are no bandwidth | |
|
| | limits. | |
|
| | | |
|
+------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``bw_disk`` | The peer is waiting for the disk I/O thread to catch | |
|
| | up writing buffers to disk before downloading more. | |
|
| | | |
|
+------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
|
|
Note that ``read_state`` and ``write_state`` are bitmasks. A peer may be waiting |
|
on disk and on the network at the same time. ``bw_idle`` does not represent a bit, |
|
but is simply a name for no bit being set in the bitmask. |
|
|
|
The ``ip`` field is the IP-address to this peer. The type is an asio endpoint. For |
|
more info, see the asio_ documentation. |
|
|
|
.. _asio: http://asio.sf.net |
|
|
|
``up_speed`` and ``down_speed`` contains the current upload and download speed |
|
we have to and from this peer (including any protocol messages). The transfer rates |
|
of payload data only are found in ``payload_up_speed`` and ``payload_down_speed``. |
|
These figures are updated approximately once every second. |
|
|
|
``total_download`` and ``total_upload`` are the total number of bytes downloaded |
|
from and uploaded to this peer. These numbers do not include the protocol chatter, but only |
|
the payload data. |
|
|
|
``pid`` is the peer's id as used in the bit torrent protocol. This id can be used to |
|
extract 'fingerprints' from the peer. Sometimes it can tell you which client the peer |
|
is using. See identify_client()_ |
|
|
|
``pieces`` is a bitfield, with one bit per piece in the torrent. |
|
Each bit tells you if the peer has that piece (if it's set to 1) |
|
or if the peer miss that piece (set to 0). |
|
|
|
``seed`` is true if this peer is a seed. |
|
|
|
``upload_limit`` is the number of bytes per second we are allowed to send to this |
|
peer every second. It may be -1 if there's no local limit on the peer. The global |
|
limit and the torrent limit is always enforced anyway. |
|
|
|
``download_limit`` is the number of bytes per second this peer is allowed to |
|
receive. -1 means it's unlimited. |
|
|
|
``last_request`` and ``last_active`` is the time since we last sent a request |
|
to this peer and since any transfer occurred with this peer, respectively. |
|
|
|
``request_timeout`` is the number of seconds until the current front piece request |
|
will time out. This timeout can be adjusted through ``session_settings::request_timeout``. |
|
-1 means that there is not outstanding request. |
|
|
|
``send_buffer_size`` and ``used_send_buffer`` is the number of bytes allocated |
|
and used for the peer's send buffer, respectively. |
|
|
|
``receive_buffer_size`` and ``used_receive_buffer`` are the number of bytes |
|
allocated and used as receive buffer, respectively. |
|
|
|
``num_hashfails`` is the number of pieces this peer has participated in |
|
sending us that turned out to fail the hash check. |
|
|
|
``country`` is the two letter `ISO 3166 country code`__ for the country the peer |
|
is connected from. If the country hasn't been resolved yet, both chars are set |
|
to 0. If the resolution failed for some reason, the field is set to "--". If the |
|
resolution service returns an invalid country code, it is set to "!!". |
|
The ``countries.nerd.dk`` service is used to look up countries. This field will |
|
remain set to 0 unless the torrent is set to resolve countries, see `resolve_countries()`_. |
|
|
|
__ http://www.iso.org/iso/en/prods-services/iso3166ma/02iso-3166-code-lists/list-en1.html |
|
|
|
``inet_as_name`` is the name of the AS this peer is located in. This might be |
|
an empty string if there is no name in the geo ip database. |
|
|
|
``inet_as`` is the AS number the peer is located in. |
|
|
|
``load_balancing`` is a measurement of the balancing of free download (that we get) |
|
and free upload that we give. Every peer gets a certain amount of free upload, but |
|
this member says how much *extra* free upload this peer has got. If it is a negative |
|
number it means that this was a peer from which we have got this amount of free |
|
download. |
|
|
|
``requests_in_buffer`` is the number of requests messages that are currently in the |
|
send buffer waiting to be sent. |
|
|
|
``download_queue_length`` is the number of piece-requests we have sent to this peer |
|
that hasn't been answered with a piece yet. |
|
|
|
``upload_queue_length`` is the number of piece-requests we have received from this peer |
|
that we haven't answered with a piece yet. |
|
|
|
``failcount`` is the number of times this peer has "failed". i.e. failed to connect |
|
or disconnected us. The failcount is decremented when we see this peer in a tracker |
|
response or peer exchange message. |
|
|
|
You can know which piece, and which part of that piece, that is currently being |
|
downloaded from a specific peer by looking at the next four members. |
|
``downloading_piece_index`` is the index of the piece that is currently being downloaded. |
|
This may be set to -1 if there's currently no piece downloading from this peer. If it is |
|
>= 0, the other three members are valid. ``downloading_block_index`` is the index of the |
|
block (or sub-piece) that is being downloaded. ``downloading_progress`` is the number |
|
of bytes of this block we have received from the peer, and ``downloading_total`` is |
|
the total number of bytes in this block. |
|
|
|
``client`` is a string describing the software at the other end of the connection. |
|
In some cases this information is not available, then it will contain a string |
|
that may give away something about which software is running in the other end. |
|
In the case of a web seed, the server type and version will be a part of this |
|
string. |
|
|
|
``connection_type`` can currently be one of: |
|
|
|
+---------------------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| type | meaning | |
|
+=======================================+=======================================================+ |
|
| ``peer_info::standard_bittorrent`` | Regular bittorrent connection over TCP | |
|
+---------------------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``peer_info::bittorrent_utp`` | Bittorrent connection over uTP | |
|
+---------------------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``peer_info::web_sesed`` | HTTP connection using the `BEP 19`_ protocol | |
|
+---------------------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``peer_info::http_seed`` | HTTP connection using the `BEP 17`_ protocol | |
|
+---------------------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
|
|
``remote_dl_rate`` is an estimate of the rate this peer is downloading at, in |
|
bytes per second. |
|
|
|
``pending_disk_bytes`` is the number of bytes this peer has pending in the |
|
disk-io thread. Downloaded and waiting to be written to disk. This is what |
|
is capped by ``session_settings::max_queued_disk_bytes``. |
|
|
|
``send_quota`` and ``receive_quota`` are the number of bytes this peer has been |
|
assigned to be allowed to send and receive until it has to request more quota |
|
from the bandwidth manager. |
|
|
|
``rtt`` is an estimated round trip time to this peer, in milliseconds. It is |
|
estimated by timing the the tcp ``connect()``. It may be 0 for incoming connections. |
|
|
|
``num_pieces`` is the number of pieces this peer has. |
|
|
|
``download_rate_peak`` and ``upload_rate_peak`` are the highest download and upload |
|
rates seen on this connection. They are given in bytes per second. This number is |
|
reset to 0 on reconnect. |
|
|
|
``progress`` is the progress of the peer in the range [0, 1]. This is always 0 when |
|
floating point operations are diabled, instead use ``progress_ppm``. |
|
|
|
``progress_ppm`` indicates the download progress of the peer in the range [0, 1000000] |
|
(parts per million). |
|
|
|
``local_endpoint`` is the IP and port pair the socket is bound to locally. i.e. the IP |
|
address of the interface it's going out over. This may be useful for multi-homed |
|
clients with multiple interfaces to the internet. |
|
|
|
feed_handle |
|
=========== |
|
|
|
The ``feed_handle`` refers to a specific RSS feed which is watched by the session. |
|
The ``feed_item`` struct is defined in ``<libtorrent/rss.hpp>``. It has the following |
|
functions:: |
|
|
|
struct feed_handle |
|
{ |
|
feed_handle(); |
|
void update_feed(); |
|
feed_status get_feed_status() const; |
|
void set_settings(feed_settings const& s); |
|
feed_settings settings() const; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
update_feed() |
|
------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
void update_feed(); |
|
|
|
Forces an update/refresh of the feed. Regular updates of the feed is managed |
|
by libtorrent, be careful to not call this too frequently since it may |
|
overload the RSS server. |
|
|
|
get_feed_status() |
|
----------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
feed_status get_feed_status() const; |
|
|
|
Queries the RSS feed for information, including all the items in the feed. |
|
The ``feed_status`` object has the following fields:: |
|
|
|
struct feed_status |
|
{ |
|
std::string url; |
|
std::string title; |
|
std::string description; |
|
time_t last_update; |
|
int next_update; |
|
bool updating; |
|
std::vector<feed_item> items; |
|
error_code error; |
|
int ttl; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
``url`` is the URL of the feed. |
|
|
|
``title`` is the name of the feed (as specified by the feed itself). This |
|
may be empty if we have not recevied a response from the RSS server yet, |
|
or if the feed does not specify a title. |
|
|
|
``description`` is the feed description (as specified by the feed itself). |
|
This may be empty if we have not received a response from the RSS server |
|
yet, or if the feed does not specify a description. |
|
|
|
``last_update`` is the posix time of the last successful response from the feed. |
|
|
|
``next_update`` is the number of seconds, from now, when the feed will be |
|
updated again. |
|
|
|
``updating`` is true if the feed is currently being updated (i.e. waiting for |
|
DNS resolution, connecting to the server or waiting for the response to the |
|
HTTP request, or receiving the response). |
|
|
|
``items`` is a vector of all items that we have received from the feed. See |
|
feed_item_ for more information. |
|
|
|
``error`` is set to the appropriate error code if the feed encountered an |
|
error. |
|
|
|
``ttl`` is the current refresh time (in minutes). It's either the configured |
|
default ttl, or the ttl specified by the feed. |
|
|
|
|
|
set_settings() settings() |
|
------------------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
void set_settings(feed_settings const& s); |
|
feed_settings settings() const; |
|
|
|
Sets and gets settings for this feed. For more information on the |
|
available settings, see `add_feed()`_. |
|
|
|
feed_item |
|
========= |
|
|
|
The ``feed_item`` struct is defined in ``<libtorrent/rss.hpp>``. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct feed_item |
|
{ |
|
feed_item(); |
|
std::string url; |
|
std::string uuid; |
|
std::string title; |
|
std::string description; |
|
std::string comment; |
|
std::string category; |
|
size_type size; |
|
torrent_handle handle; |
|
sha1_hash info_hash; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
``size`` is the total size of the content the torrent refers to, or -1 |
|
if no size was specified by the feed. |
|
|
|
``handle`` is the handle to the torrent, if the session is already downloading |
|
this torrent. |
|
|
|
``info_hash`` is the info-hash of the torrent, or cleared (i.e. all zeroes) if |
|
the feed does not specify the info-hash. |
|
|
|
All the strings are self explanatory and may be empty if the feed does not specify |
|
those fields. |
|
|
|
session customization |
|
===================== |
|
|
|
You have some control over session configuration through the ``session_settings`` object. You |
|
create it and fill it with your settings and then use ``session::set_settings()`` |
|
to apply them. |
|
|
|
You have control over proxy and authorization settings and also the user-agent |
|
that will be sent to the tracker. The user-agent will also be used to identify the |
|
client with other peers. |
|
|
|
presets |
|
------- |
|
|
|
The default values of the session settings are set for a regular bittorrent client running |
|
on a desktop system. There are functions that can set the session settings to pre set |
|
settings for other environments. These can be used for the basis, and should be tweaked to |
|
fit your needs better. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
session_settings min_memory_usage(); |
|
session_settings high_performance_seed(); |
|
|
|
``min_memory_usage`` returns settings that will use the minimal amount of RAM, at the |
|
potential expense of upload and download performance. It adjusts the socket buffer sizes, |
|
disables the disk cache, lowers the send buffer watermarks so that each connection only has |
|
at most one block in use at any one time. It lowers the outstanding blocks send to the disk |
|
I/O thread so that connections only have one block waiting to be flushed to disk at any given |
|
time. It lowers the max number of peers in the peer list for torrents. It performs multiple |
|
smaller reads when it hashes pieces, instead of reading it all into memory before hashing. |
|
|
|
This configuration is inteded to be the starting point for embedded devices. It will |
|
significantly reduce memory usage. |
|
|
|
``high_performance_seed`` returns settings optimized for a seed box, serving many peers |
|
and that doesn't do any downloading. It has a 128 MB disk cache and has a limit of 400 files |
|
in its file pool. It support fast upload rates by allowing large send buffers. |
|
|
|
|
|
session_settings |
|
---------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct session_settings |
|
{ |
|
session_settings(); |
|
int version; |
|
std::string user_agent; |
|
int tracker_completion_timeout; |
|
int tracker_receive_timeout; |
|
int stop_tracker_timeout; |
|
int tracker_maximum_response_length; |
|
|
|
int piece_timeout; |
|
float request_queue_time; |
|
int max_allowed_in_request_queue; |
|
int max_out_request_queue; |
|
int whole_pieces_threshold; |
|
int peer_timeout; |
|
int urlseed_timeout; |
|
int urlseed_pipeline_size; |
|
int file_pool_size; |
|
bool allow_multiple_connections_per_ip; |
|
int max_failcount; |
|
int min_reconnect_time; |
|
int peer_connect_timeout; |
|
bool ignore_limits_on_local_network; |
|
int connection_speed; |
|
bool send_redundant_have; |
|
bool lazy_bitfields; |
|
int inactivity_timeout; |
|
int unchoke_interval; |
|
int optimistic_unchoke_interval; |
|
std::string announce_ip; |
|
int num_want; |
|
int initial_picker_threshold; |
|
int allowed_fast_set_size; |
|
|
|
enum { no_piece_suggestions = 0, suggest_read_cache = 1 }; |
|
int suggest_mode; |
|
int max_queued_disk_bytes; |
|
int handshake_timeout; |
|
bool use_dht_as_fallback; |
|
bool free_torrent_hashes; |
|
bool upnp_ignore_nonrouters; |
|
int send_buffer_watermark; |
|
int send_buffer_watermark_factor; |
|
|
|
#ifndef TORRENT_NO_DEPRECATE |
|
bool auto_upload_slots; |
|
bool auto_upload_slots_rate_based; |
|
#endif |
|
|
|
enum choking_algorithm_t |
|
{ |
|
fixed_slots_choker, |
|
auto_expand_choker, |
|
rate_based_choker, |
|
bittyrant_choker |
|
}; |
|
|
|
int choking_algorithm; |
|
|
|
enum seed_choking_algorithm_t |
|
{ |
|
round_robin, |
|
fastest_upload, |
|
anti_leech |
|
}; |
|
|
|
int seed_choking_algorithm; |
|
|
|
bool use_parole_mode; |
|
int cache_size; |
|
int cache_buffer_chunk_size; |
|
int cache_expiry; |
|
bool use_read_cache; |
|
bool explicit_read_cache; |
|
int explicit_cache_interval; |
|
|
|
enum io_buffer_mode_t |
|
{ |
|
enable_os_cache = 0, |
|
disable_os_cache_for_aligned_files = 1, |
|
disable_os_cache = 2 |
|
}; |
|
int disk_io_write_mode; |
|
int disk_io_read_mode; |
|
|
|
std::pair<int, int> outgoing_ports; |
|
char peer_tos; |
|
|
|
int active_downloads; |
|
int active_seeds; |
|
int active_dht_limit; |
|
int active_tracker_limit; |
|
int active_limit; |
|
bool auto_manage_prefer_seeds; |
|
bool dont_count_slow_torrents; |
|
int auto_manage_interval; |
|
float share_ratio_limit; |
|
float seed_time_ratio_limit; |
|
int seed_time_limit; |
|
int peer_turnover_interval; |
|
float peer_turnover; |
|
float peer_turnover_cutoff; |
|
bool close_redundant_connections; |
|
|
|
int auto_scrape_interval; |
|
int auto_scrape_min_interval; |
|
|
|
int max_peerlist_size; |
|
|
|
int min_announce_interval; |
|
|
|
bool prioritize_partial_pieces; |
|
int auto_manage_startup; |
|
|
|
bool rate_limit_ip_overhead; |
|
|
|
bool announce_to_all_trackers; |
|
bool announce_to_all_tiers; |
|
|
|
bool prefer_udp_trackers; |
|
bool strict_super_seeding; |
|
|
|
int seeding_piece_quota; |
|
|
|
int max_sparse_regions; |
|
|
|
bool lock_disk_cache; |
|
|
|
int max_rejects; |
|
|
|
int recv_socket_buffer_size; |
|
int send_socket_buffer_size; |
|
|
|
bool optimize_hashing_for_speed; |
|
|
|
int file_checks_delay_per_block; |
|
|
|
enum disk_cache_algo_t |
|
{ lru, largest_contiguous, avoid_readback }; |
|
|
|
disk_cache_algo_t disk_cache_algorithm; |
|
|
|
int read_cache_line_size; |
|
int write_cache_line_size; |
|
|
|
int optimistic_disk_retry; |
|
bool disable_hash_checks; |
|
|
|
int max_suggest_pieces; |
|
|
|
bool drop_skipped_requests; |
|
|
|
bool low_prio_disk; |
|
int local_service_announce_interval; |
|
int dht_announce_interval; |
|
|
|
int udp_tracker_token_expiry; |
|
bool volatile_read_cache; |
|
bool guided_read_cache; |
|
bool default_cache_min_age; |
|
|
|
int num_optimistic_unchoke_slots; |
|
bool no_atime_storage; |
|
int default_est_reciprocation_rate; |
|
int increase_est_reciprocation_rate; |
|
int decrease_est_reciprocation_rate; |
|
bool incoming_starts_queued_torrents; |
|
bool report_true_downloaded; |
|
bool strict_end_game_mode; |
|
|
|
bool broadcast_lsd; |
|
|
|
bool enable_outgoing_utp; |
|
bool enable_incoming_utp; |
|
bool enable_outgoing_tcp; |
|
bool enable_incoming_tcp; |
|
int max_pex_peers; |
|
bool ignore_resume_timestamps; |
|
bool no_recheck_incomplete_resume; |
|
bool anonymous_mode; |
|
bool force_proxy; |
|
int tick_interval; |
|
int share_mode_target; |
|
|
|
int upload_rate_limit; |
|
int download_rate_limit; |
|
int local_upload_rate_limit; |
|
int local_download_rate_limit; |
|
int dht_upload_rate_limit; |
|
int unchoke_slots_limit; |
|
int half_open_limit; |
|
int connections_limit; |
|
|
|
int utp_target_delay; |
|
int utp_gain_factor; |
|
int utp_min_timeout; |
|
int utp_syn_resends; |
|
int utp_num_resends; |
|
int utp_connect_timeout; |
|
bool utp_dynamic_sock_buf; |
|
int utp_loss_multiplier; |
|
|
|
enum bandwidth_mixed_algo_t |
|
{ |
|
prefer_tcp = 0, |
|
peer_proportional = 1 |
|
|
|
}; |
|
int mixed_mode_algorithm; |
|
bool rate_limit_utp; |
|
|
|
int listen_queue_size; |
|
|
|
bool announce_double_nat; |
|
|
|
int torrent_connect_boost; |
|
bool seeding_outgoing_connections; |
|
|
|
bool no_connect_privileged_ports; |
|
int alert_queue_size; |
|
int max_metadata_size; |
|
bool smooth_connects; |
|
bool always_send_user_agent; |
|
bool apply_ip_filter_to_trackers; |
|
int read_job_every; |
|
bool use_disk_read_ahead; |
|
bool lock_files; |
|
|
|
int ssl_listen; |
|
|
|
int tracker_backoff; |
|
|
|
bool ban_web_seeds; |
|
int max_http_recv_buffer_size; |
|
|
|
bool support_share_mode; |
|
bool support_merkle_torrents; |
|
bool report_redundant_bytes; |
|
std::string handshake_client_version; |
|
bool use_disk_cache_pool; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
``version`` is automatically set to the libtorrent version you're using |
|
in order to be forward binary compatible. This field should not be changed. |
|
|
|
``user_agent`` this is the client identification to the tracker. |
|
The recommended format of this string is: |
|
"ClientName/ClientVersion libtorrent/libtorrentVersion". |
|
This name will not only be used when making HTTP requests, but also when |
|
sending extended headers to peers that support that extension. |
|
|
|
``tracker_completion_timeout`` is the number of seconds the tracker |
|
connection will wait from when it sent the request until it considers the |
|
tracker to have timed-out. Default value is 60 seconds. |
|
|
|
``tracker_receive_timeout`` is the number of seconds to wait to receive |
|
any data from the tracker. If no data is received for this number of |
|
seconds, the tracker will be considered as having timed out. If a tracker |
|
is down, this is the kind of timeout that will occur. The default value |
|
is 20 seconds. |
|
|
|
``stop_tracker_timeout`` is the time to wait for tracker responses when |
|
shutting down the session object. This is given in seconds. Default is |
|
10 seconds. |
|
|
|
``tracker_maximum_response_length`` is the maximum number of bytes in a |
|
tracker response. If a response size passes this number it will be rejected |
|
and the connection will be closed. On gzipped responses this size is measured |
|
on the uncompressed data. So, if you get 20 bytes of gzip response that'll |
|
expand to 2 megs, it will be interrupted before the entire response has been |
|
uncompressed (given your limit is lower than 2 megs). Default limit is |
|
1 megabyte. |
|
|
|
``piece_timeout`` controls the number of seconds from a request is sent until |
|
it times out if no piece response is returned. |
|
|
|
``request_queue_time`` is the length of the request queue given in the number |
|
of seconds it should take for the other end to send all the pieces. i.e. the |
|
actual number of requests depends on the download rate and this number. |
|
|
|
``max_allowed_in_request_queue`` is the number of outstanding block requests |
|
a peer is allowed to queue up in the client. If a peer sends more requests |
|
than this (before the first one has been handled) the last request will be |
|
dropped. The higher this is, the faster upload speeds the client can get to a |
|
single peer. |
|
|
|
``max_out_request_queue`` is the maximum number of outstanding requests to |
|
send to a peer. This limit takes precedence over ``request_queue_time``. i.e. |
|
no matter the download speed, the number of outstanding requests will never |
|
exceed this limit. |
|
|
|
``whole_pieces_threshold`` is a limit in seconds. if a whole piece can be |
|
downloaded in at least this number of seconds from a specific peer, the |
|
peer_connection will prefer requesting whole pieces at a time from this peer. |
|
The benefit of this is to better utilize disk caches by doing localized |
|
accesses and also to make it easier to identify bad peers if a piece fails |
|
the hash check. |
|
|
|
``peer_timeout`` is the number of seconds the peer connection should |
|
wait (for any activity on the peer connection) before closing it due |
|
to time out. This defaults to 120 seconds, since that's what's specified |
|
in the protocol specification. After half the time out, a keep alive message |
|
is sent. |
|
|
|
``urlseed_timeout`` is the same as ``peer_timeout`` but applies only to |
|
url seeds. This value defaults to 20 seconds. |
|
|
|
``urlseed_pipeline_size`` controls the pipelining with the web server. When |
|
using persistent connections to HTTP 1.1 servers, the client is allowed to |
|
send more requests before the first response is received. This number controls |
|
the number of outstanding requests to use with url-seeds. Default is 5. |
|
|
|
``file_pool_size`` is the the upper limit on the total number of files this |
|
session will keep open. The reason why files are left open at all is that |
|
some anti virus software hooks on every file close, and scans the file for |
|
viruses. deferring the closing of the files will be the difference between |
|
a usable system and a completely hogged down system. Most operating systems |
|
also has a limit on the total number of file descriptors a process may have |
|
open. It is usually a good idea to find this limit and set the number of |
|
connections and the number of files limits so their sum is slightly below it. |
|
|
|
``allow_multiple_connections_per_ip`` determines if connections from the |
|
same IP address as existing connections should be rejected or not. Multiple |
|
connections from the same IP address is not allowed by default, to prevent |
|
abusive behavior by peers. It may be useful to allow such connections in |
|
cases where simulations are run on the same machie, and all peers in a |
|
swarm has the same IP address. |
|
|
|
``max_failcount`` is the maximum times we try to connect to a peer before |
|
stop connecting again. If a peer succeeds, the failcounter is reset. If |
|
a peer is retrieved from a peer source (other than DHT) the failcount is |
|
decremented by one, allowing another try. |
|
|
|
``min_reconnect_time`` is the time to wait between connection attempts. If |
|
the peer fails, the time is multiplied by fail counter. |
|
|
|
``peer_connect_timeout`` the number of seconds to wait after a connection |
|
attempt is initiated to a peer until it is considered as having timed out. |
|
The default is 10 seconds. This setting is especially important in case |
|
the number of half-open connections are limited, since stale half-open |
|
connection may delay the connection of other peers considerably. |
|
|
|
``ignore_limits_on_local_network``, if set to true, upload, download and |
|
unchoke limits are ignored for peers on the local network. |
|
|
|
``connection_speed`` is the number of connection attempts that |
|
are made per second. If a number < 0 is specified, it will default to |
|
200 connections per second. If 0 is specified, it means don't make |
|
outgoing connections at all. |
|
|
|
``send_redundant_have`` controls if have messages will be sent |
|
to peers that already have the piece. This is typically not necessary, |
|
but it might be necessary for collecting statistics in some cases. |
|
Default is false. |
|
|
|
``lazy_bitfields`` prevents outgoing bitfields from being full. If the |
|
client is seed, a few bits will be set to 0, and later filled in with |
|
have-messages. This is to prevent certain ISPs from stopping people |
|
from seeding. |
|
|
|
``inactivity_timeout``, if a peer is uninteresting and uninterested |
|
for longer than this number of seconds, it will be disconnected. |
|
Default is 10 minutes |
|
|
|
``unchoke_interval`` is the number of seconds between chokes/unchokes. |
|
On this interval, peers are re-evaluated for being choked/unchoked. This |
|
is defined as 30 seconds in the protocol, and it should be significantly |
|
longer than what it takes for TCP to ramp up to it's max rate. |
|
|
|
``optimistic_unchoke_interval`` is the number of seconds between |
|
each *optimistic* unchoke. On this timer, the currently optimistically |
|
unchoked peer will change. |
|
|
|
``announce_ip`` is the ip address passed along to trackers as the ``&ip=`` parameter. |
|
If left as the default (an empty string), that parameter is omitted. |
|
|
|
``num_want`` is the number of peers we want from each tracker request. It defines |
|
what is sent as the ``&num_want=`` parameter to the tracker. |
|
|
|
``initial_picker_threshold`` specifies the number of pieces we need before we |
|
switch to rarest first picking. This defaults to 4, which means the 4 first |
|
pieces in any torrent are picked at random, the following pieces are picked |
|
in rarest first order. |
|
|
|
``allowed_fast_set_size`` is the number of pieces we allow peers to download |
|
from us without being unchoked. |
|
|
|
``suggest_mode`` controls whether or not libtorrent will send out suggest |
|
messages to create a bias of its peers to request certain pieces. The modes |
|
are: |
|
|
|
* ``no_piece_suggestsions`` which is the default and will not send out suggest |
|
messages. |
|
* ``suggest_read_cache`` which will send out suggest messages for the most |
|
recent pieces that are in the read cache. |
|
|
|
``max_queued_disk_bytes`` is the number maximum number of bytes, to be |
|
written to disk, that can wait in the disk I/O thread queue. This queue |
|
is only for waiting for the disk I/O thread to receive the job and either |
|
write it to disk or insert it in the write cache. When this limit is reached, |
|
the peer connections will stop reading data from their sockets, until the disk |
|
thread catches up. Setting this too low will severly limit your download rate. |
|
|
|
``handshake_timeout`` specifies the number of seconds we allow a peer to |
|
delay responding to a protocol handshake. If no response is received within |
|
this time, the connection is closed. |
|
|
|
``use_dht_as_fallback`` determines how the DHT is used. If this is true, |
|
the DHT will only be used for torrents where all trackers in its tracker |
|
list has failed. Either by an explicit error message or a time out. This |
|
is false by default, which means the DHT is used by default regardless of |
|
if the trackers fail or not. |
|
|
|
``free_torrent_hashes`` determines whether or not the torrent's piece hashes |
|
are kept in memory after the torrent becomes a seed or not. If it is set to |
|
``true`` the hashes are freed once the torrent is a seed (they're not |
|
needed anymore since the torrent won't download anything more). If it's set |
|
to false they are not freed. If they are freed, the torrent_info_ returned |
|
by get_torrent_info() will return an object that may be incomplete, that |
|
cannot be passed back to `async_add_torrent() add_torrent()`_ for instance. |
|
|
|
``upnp_ignore_nonrouters`` indicates whether or not the UPnP implementation |
|
should ignore any broadcast response from a device whose address is not the |
|
configured router for this machine. i.e. it's a way to not talk to other |
|
people's routers by mistake. |
|
|
|
``send_buffer_watermark`` is the upper limit of the send buffer low-watermark. |
|
if the send buffer has fewer bytes than this, we'll read another 16kB block |
|
onto it. If set too small, upload rate capacity will suffer. If set too high, |
|
memory will be wasted. The actual watermark may be lower than this in case |
|
the upload rate is low, this is the upper limit. |
|
|
|
``send_buffer_watermark_factor`` is multiplied to the peer's upload rate |
|
to determine the low-watermark for the peer. It is specified as a percentage, |
|
which means 100 represents a factor of 1. |
|
The low-watermark is still clamped to not exceed the ``send_buffer_watermark`` |
|
upper limit. This defaults to 50. For high capacity connections, setting this |
|
higher can improve upload performance and disk throughput. Setting it too |
|
high may waste RAM and create a bias towards read jobs over write jobs. |
|
|
|
``auto_upload_slots`` defaults to true. When true, if there is a global upload |
|
limit set and the current upload rate is less than 90% of that, another upload |
|
slot is opened. If the upload rate has been saturated for an extended period |
|
of time, on upload slot is closed. The number of upload slots will never be |
|
less than what has been set by ``session::set_max_uploads()``. To query the |
|
current number of upload slots, see ``session_status::allowed_upload_slots``. |
|
|
|
When ``auto_upload_slots_rate_based`` is set, and ``auto_upload_slots`` is set, |
|
the max upload slots setting is used as a minimum number of unchoked slots. |
|
This algorithm is designed to prevent the peer from spreading its upload |
|
capacity too thin, but still open more slots in order to utilize the full capacity. |
|
|
|
``choking_algorithm`` specifies which algorithm to use to determine which peers |
|
to unchoke. This setting replaces the deprecated settings ``auto_upload_slots`` |
|
and ``auto_upload_slots_rate_based``. |
|
|
|
The options for choking algorithms are: |
|
|
|
* ``fixed_slots_choker`` is the traditional choker with a fixed number of unchoke |
|
slots (as specified by ``session::set_max_uploads()``). |
|
|
|
* ``auto_expand_choker`` opens at least the number of slots as specified by |
|
``session::set_max_uploads()`` but opens up more slots if the upload capacity |
|
is not saturated. This unchoker will work just like the ``fixed_slot_choker`` |
|
if there's no global upload rate limit set. |
|
|
|
* ``rate_based_choker`` opens up unchoke slots based on the upload rate |
|
achieved to peers. The more slots that are opened, the marginal upload |
|
rate required to open up another slot increases. |
|
|
|
* ``bittyrant_choker`` attempts to optimize download rate by finding the |
|
reciprocation rate of each peer individually and prefers peers that gives |
|
the highest *return on investment*. It still allocates all upload capacity, |
|
but shuffles it around to the best peers first. For this choker to be |
|
efficient, you need to set a global upload rate limit |
|
(``session_settings::upload_rate_limit``). For more information about this |
|
choker, see the paper_. |
|
|
|
.. _paper: http://bittyrant.cs.washington.edu/#papers |
|
|
|
``seed_choking_algorithm`` controls the seeding unchoke behavior. The available |
|
options are: |
|
|
|
* ``round_robin`` which round-robins the peers that are unchoked when seeding. This |
|
distributes the upload bandwidht uniformly and fairly. It minimizes the ability |
|
for a peer to download everything without redistributing it. |
|
|
|
* ``fastest_upload`` unchokes the peers we can send to the fastest. This might be |
|
a bit more reliable in utilizing all available capacity. |
|
|
|
* ``anti_leech`` prioritizes peers who have just started or are just about to finish |
|
the download. The intention is to force peers in the middle of the download to |
|
trade with each other. |
|
|
|
``use_parole_mode`` specifies if parole mode should be used. Parole mode means |
|
that peers that participate in pieces that fail the hash check are put in a mode |
|
where they are only allowed to download whole pieces. If the whole piece a peer |
|
in parole mode fails the hash check, it is banned. If a peer participates in a |
|
piece that passes the hash check, it is taken out of parole mode. |
|
|
|
``cache_size`` is the disk write and read cache. It is specified in units of |
|
16 KiB blocks. Buffers that are part of a peer's send or receive buffer also |
|
count against this limit. Send and receive buffers will never be denied to be |
|
allocated, but they will cause the actual cached blocks to be flushed or evicted. |
|
If this is set to -1, the cache size is automatically set to the amount |
|
of physical RAM available in the machine divided by 8. If the amount of physical |
|
RAM cannot be determined, it's set to 1024 (= 16 MiB). |
|
|
|
Disk buffers are allocated using a pool allocator, the number of blocks that |
|
are allocated at a time when the pool needs to grow can be specified in |
|
``cache_buffer_chunk_size``. This defaults to 16 blocks. Lower numbers |
|
saves memory at the expense of more heap allocations. It must be at least 1. |
|
|
|
``cache_expiry`` is the number of seconds from the last cached write to a piece |
|
in the write cache, to when it's forcefully flushed to disk. Default is 60 second. |
|
|
|
``use_read_cache``, is set to true (default), the disk cache is also used to |
|
cache pieces read from disk. Blocks for writing pieces takes presedence. |
|
|
|
``explicit_read_cache`` defaults to 0. If set to something greater than 0, the |
|
disk read cache will not be evicted by cache misses and will explicitly be |
|
controlled based on the rarity of pieces. Rare pieces are more likely to be |
|
cached. This would typically be used together with ``suggest_mode`` set to |
|
``suggest_read_cache``. The value is the number of pieces to keep in the read |
|
cache. If the actual read cache can't fit as many, it will essentially be clamped. |
|
|
|
``explicit_cache_interval`` is the number of seconds in between each refresh of |
|
a part of the explicit read cache. Torrents take turns in refreshing and this |
|
is the time in between each torrent refresh. Refreshing a torrent's explicit |
|
read cache means scanning all pieces and picking a random set of the rarest ones. |
|
There is an affinity to pick pieces that are already in the cache, so that |
|
subsequent refreshes only swaps in pieces that are rarer than whatever is in |
|
the cache at the time. |
|
|
|
``disk_io_write_mode`` and ``disk_io_read_mode`` determines how files are |
|
opened when they're in read only mode versus read and write mode. The options |
|
are: |
|
|
|
* enable_os_cache |
|
This is the default and files are opened normally, with the OS caching |
|
reads and writes. |
|
* disable_os_cache_for_aligned_files |
|
This will open files in unbuffered mode for files where every read and |
|
write would be sector aligned. Using aligned disk offsets is a requirement |
|
on some operating systems. |
|
* disable_os_cache |
|
This opens all files in unbuffered mode (if allowed by the operating system). |
|
Linux and Windows, for instance, require disk offsets to be sector aligned, |
|
and in those cases, this option is the same as ``disable_os_caches_for_aligned_files``. |
|
|
|
One reason to disable caching is that it may help the operating system from growing |
|
its file cache indefinitely. Since some OSes only allow aligned files to be opened |
|
in unbuffered mode, It is recommended to make the largest file in a torrent the first |
|
file (with offset 0) or use pad files to align all files to piece boundries. |
|
|
|
``outgoing_ports``, if set to something other than (0, 0) is a range of ports |
|
used to bind outgoing sockets to. This may be useful for users whose router |
|
allows them to assign QoS classes to traffic based on its local port. It is |
|
a range instead of a single port because of the problems with failing to reconnect |
|
to peers if a previous socket to that peer and port is in ``TIME_WAIT`` state. |
|
|
|
.. warning:: setting outgoing ports will limit the ability to keep multiple |
|
connections to the same client, even for different torrents. It is not |
|
recommended to change this setting. Its main purpose is to use as an |
|
escape hatch for cheap routers with QoS capability but can only classify |
|
flows based on port numbers. |
|
|
|
``peer_tos`` determines the TOS byte set in the IP header of every packet |
|
sent to peers (including web seeds). The default value for this is ``0x0`` |
|
(no marking). One potentially useful TOS mark is ``0x20``, this represents |
|
the *QBone scavenger service*. For more details, see QBSS_. |
|
|
|
.. _`QBSS`: http://qbone.internet2.edu/qbss/ |
|
|
|
``active_downloads`` and ``active_seeds`` controls how many active seeding and |
|
downloading torrents the queuing mechanism allows. The target number of active |
|
torrents is ``min(active_downloads + active_seeds, active_limit)``. |
|
``active_downloads`` and ``active_seeds`` are upper limits on the number of |
|
downloading torrents and seeding torrents respectively. Setting the value to |
|
-1 means unlimited. |
|
|
|
For example if there are 10 seeding torrents and 10 downloading torrents, and |
|
``active_downloads`` is 4 and ``active_seeds`` is 4, there will be 4 seeds |
|
active and 4 downloading torrents. If the settings are ``active_downloads`` = 2 |
|
and ``active_seeds`` = 4, then there will be 2 downloading torrents and 4 seeding |
|
torrents active. Torrents that are not auto managed are also counted against these |
|
limits. If there are non-auto managed torrents that use up all the slots, no |
|
auto managed torrent will be activated. |
|
|
|
``auto_manage_prefer_seeds`` specifies if libtorrent should prefer giving seeds |
|
active slots or downloading torrents. The default is ``false``. |
|
|
|
if ``dont_count_slow_torrents`` is true, torrents without any payload transfers are |
|
not subject to the ``active_seeds`` and ``active_downloads`` limits. This is intended |
|
to make it more likely to utilize all available bandwidth, and avoid having torrents |
|
that don't transfer anything block the active slots. |
|
|
|
``active_limit`` is a hard limit on the number of active torrents. This applies even to |
|
slow torrents. |
|
|
|
``active_dht_limit`` is the max number of torrents to announce to the DHT. By default |
|
this is set to 88, which is no more than one DHT announce every 10 seconds. |
|
|
|
``active_tracker_limit`` is the max number of torrents to announce to their trackers. |
|
By default this is 360, which is no more than one announce every 5 seconds. |
|
|
|
``active_lsd_limit`` is the max number of torrents to announce to the local network |
|
over the local service discovery protocol. By default this is 80, which is no more |
|
than one announce every 5 seconds (assuming the default announce interval of 5 minutes). |
|
|
|
You can have more torrents *active*, even though they are not announced to the DHT, |
|
lsd or their tracker. If some peer knows about you for any reason and tries to connect, |
|
it will still be accepted, unless the torrent is paused, which means it won't accept |
|
any connections. |
|
|
|
``auto_manage_interval`` is the number of seconds between the torrent queue |
|
is updated, and rotated. |
|
|
|
``share_ratio_limit`` is the upload / download ratio limit for considering a |
|
seeding torrent have met the seed limit criteria. See queuing_. |
|
|
|
``seed_time_ratio_limit`` is the seeding time / downloading time ratio limit |
|
for considering a seeding torrent to have met the seed limit criteria. See queuing_. |
|
|
|
``seed_time_limit`` is the limit on the time a torrent has been an active seed |
|
(specified in seconds) before it is considered having met the seed limit criteria. |
|
See queuing_. |
|
|
|
``peer_turnover_interval`` controls a feature where libtorrent periodically can disconnect |
|
the least useful peers in the hope of connecting to better ones. This settings controls |
|
the interval of this optimistic disconnect. It defaults to every 5 minutes, and |
|
is specified in seconds. |
|
|
|
``peer_turnover`` Is the fraction of the peers that are disconnected. This is |
|
a float where 1.f represents all peers an 0 represents no peers. It defaults to |
|
4% (i.e. 0.04f) |
|
|
|
``peer_turnover_cutoff`` is the cut off trigger for optimistic unchokes. If a torrent |
|
has more than this fraction of its connection limit, the optimistic unchoke is |
|
triggered. This defaults to 90% (i.e. 0.9f). |
|
|
|
``close_redundant_connections`` specifies whether libtorrent should close |
|
connections where both ends have no utility in keeping the connection open. |
|
For instance if both ends have completed their downloads, there's no point |
|
in keeping it open. This defaults to ``true``. |
|
|
|
``auto_scrape_interval`` is the number of seconds between scrapes of |
|
queued torrents (auto managed and paused torrents). Auto managed |
|
torrents that are paused, are scraped regularly in order to keep |
|
track of their downloader/seed ratio. This ratio is used to determine |
|
which torrents to seed and which to pause. |
|
|
|
``auto_scrape_min_interval`` is the minimum number of seconds between any |
|
automatic scrape (regardless of torrent). In case there are a large number |
|
of paused auto managed torrents, this puts a limit on how often a scrape |
|
request is sent. |
|
|
|
``max_peerlist_size`` is the maximum number of peers in the list of |
|
known peers. These peers are not necessarily connected, so this number |
|
should be much greater than the maximum number of connected peers. |
|
Peers are evicted from the cache when the list grows passed 90% of |
|
this limit, and once the size hits the limit, peers are no longer |
|
added to the list. If this limit is set to 0, there is no limit on |
|
how many peers we'll keep in the peer list. |
|
|
|
``max_paused_peerlist_size`` is the max peer list size used for torrents |
|
that are paused. This default to the same as ``max_peerlist_size``, but |
|
can be used to save memory for paused torrents, since it's not as |
|
important for them to keep a large peer list. |
|
|
|
``min_announce_interval`` is the minimum allowed announce interval |
|
for a tracker. This is specified in seconds, defaults to 5 minutes and |
|
is used as a sanity check on what is returned from a tracker. It |
|
mitigates hammering misconfigured trackers. |
|
|
|
If ``prioritize_partial_pieces`` is true, partial pieces are picked |
|
before pieces that are more rare. If false, rare pieces are always |
|
prioritized, unless the number of partial pieces is growing out of |
|
proportion. |
|
|
|
``auto_manage_startup`` is the number of seconds a torrent is considered |
|
active after it was started, regardless of upload and download speed. This |
|
is so that newly started torrents are not considered inactive until they |
|
have a fair chance to start downloading. |
|
|
|
If ``rate_limit_ip_overhead`` is set to true, the estimated TCP/IP overhead is |
|
drained from the rate limiters, to avoid exceeding the limits with the total traffic |
|
|
|
``announce_to_all_trackers`` controls how multi tracker torrents are |
|
treated. If this is set to true, all trackers in the same tier are |
|
announced to in parallel. If all trackers in tier 0 fails, all trackers |
|
in tier 1 are announced as well. If it's set to false, the behavior is as |
|
defined by the multi tracker specification. It defaults to false, which |
|
is the same behavior previous versions of libtorrent has had as well. |
|
|
|
``announce_to_all_tiers`` also controls how multi tracker torrents are |
|
treated. When this is set to true, one tracker from each tier is announced |
|
to. This is the uTorrent behavior. This is false by default in order |
|
to comply with the multi-tracker specification. |
|
|
|
``prefer_udp_trackers`` is true by default. It means that trackers may |
|
be rearranged in a way that udp trackers are always tried before http |
|
trackers for the same hostname. Setting this to fails means that the |
|
trackers' tier is respected and there's no preference of one protocol |
|
over another. |
|
|
|
``strict_super_seeding`` when this is set to true, a piece has to |
|
have been forwarded to a third peer before another one is handed out. |
|
This is the traditional definition of super seeding. |
|
|
|
``seeding_piece_quota`` is the number of pieces to send to a peer, |
|
when seeding, before rotating in another peer to the unchoke set. |
|
It defaults to 3 pieces, which means that when seeding, any peer we've |
|
sent more than this number of pieces to will be unchoked in favour of |
|
a choked peer. |
|
|
|
``max_sparse_regions`` is a limit of the number of *sparse regions* in |
|
a torrent. A sparse region is defined as a hole of pieces we have not |
|
yet downloaded, in between pieces that have been downloaded. This is |
|
used as a hack for windows vista which has a bug where you cannot |
|
write files with more than a certain number of sparse regions. This |
|
limit is not hard, it will be exceeded. Once it's exceeded, pieces |
|
that will maintain or decrease the number of sparse regions are |
|
prioritized. To disable this functionality, set this to 0. It defaults |
|
to 0 on all platforms except windows. |
|
|
|
``lock_disk_cache`` if lock disk cache is set to true the disk cache |
|
that's in use, will be locked in physical memory, preventing it from |
|
being swapped out. |
|
|
|
``max_rejects`` is the number of piece requests we will reject in a row |
|
while a peer is choked before the peer is considered abusive and is |
|
disconnected. |
|
|
|
|
|
``recv_socket_buffer_size`` and ``send_socket_buffer_size`` specifies |
|
the buffer sizes set on peer sockets. 0 (which is the default) means |
|
the OS default (i.e. don't change the buffer sizes). The socket buffer |
|
sizes are changed using setsockopt() with SOL_SOCKET/SO_RCVBUF and |
|
SO_SNDBUFFER. |
|
|
|
``optimize_hashing_for_speed`` chooses between two ways of reading back |
|
piece data from disk when its complete and needs to be verified against |
|
the piece hash. This happens if some blocks were flushed to the disk |
|
out of order. Everything that is flushed in order is hashed as it goes |
|
along. Optimizing for speed will allocate space to fit all the the |
|
remaingin, unhashed, part of the piece, reads the data into it in a single |
|
call and hashes it. This is the default. If ``optimizing_hashing_for_speed`` |
|
is false, a single block will be allocated (16 kB), and the unhashed parts |
|
of the piece are read, one at a time, and hashed in this single block. This |
|
is appropriate on systems that are memory constrained. |
|
|
|
``file_checks_delay_per_block`` is the number of milliseconds to sleep |
|
in between disk read operations when checking torrents. This defaults |
|
to 0, but can be set to higher numbers to slow down the rate at which |
|
data is read from the disk while checking. This may be useful for |
|
background tasks that doesn't matter if they take a bit longer, as long |
|
as they leave disk I/O time for other processes. |
|
|
|
``disk_cache_algorithm`` tells the disk I/O thread which cache flush |
|
algorithm to use. The default algorithm is largest_contiguous. This |
|
flushes the entire piece, in the write cache, that was least recently |
|
written to. This is specified by the ``session_settings::lru`` enum |
|
value. ``session_settings::largest_contiguous`` will flush the largest |
|
sequences of contiguous blocks from the write cache, regarless of the |
|
piece's last use time. ``session_settings::avoid_readback`` will prioritize |
|
flushing blocks that will avoid having to read them back in to verify |
|
the hash of the piece once it's done. This is especially useful for high |
|
throughput setups, where reading from the disk is especially expensive. |
|
|
|
``read_cache_line_size`` is the number of blocks to read into the read |
|
cache when a read cache miss occurs. Setting this to 0 is essentially |
|
the same thing as disabling read cache. The number of blocks read |
|
into the read cache is always capped by the piece boundry. |
|
|
|
When a piece in the write cache has ``write_cache_line_size`` contiguous |
|
blocks in it, they will be flushed. Setting this to 1 effectively |
|
disables the write cache. |
|
|
|
``optimistic_disk_retry`` is the number of seconds from a disk write |
|
errors occur on a torrent until libtorrent will take it out of the |
|
upload mode, to test if the error condition has been fixed. |
|
|
|
libtorrent will only do this automatically for auto managed torrents. |
|
|
|
You can explicitly take a torrent out of upload only mode using |
|
`set_upload_mode()`_. |
|
|
|
``disable_hash_checks`` controls if downloaded pieces are verified against |
|
the piece hashes in the torrent file or not. The default is false, i.e. |
|
to verify all downloaded data. It may be useful to turn this off for performance |
|
profiling and simulation scenarios. Do not disable the hash check for regular |
|
bittorrent clients. |
|
|
|
``max_suggest_pieces`` is the max number of suggested piece indices received |
|
from a peer that's remembered. If a peer floods suggest messages, this limit |
|
prevents libtorrent from using too much RAM. It defaults to 10. |
|
|
|
If ``drop_skipped_requests`` is set to true (it defaults to false), piece |
|
requests that have been skipped enough times when piece messages |
|
are received, will be considered lost. Requests are considered skipped |
|
when the returned piece messages are re-ordered compared to the order |
|
of the requests. This was an attempt to get out of dead-locks caused by |
|
BitComet peers silently ignoring some requests. It may cause problems |
|
at high rates, and high level of reordering in the uploading peer, that's |
|
why it's disabled by default. |
|
|
|
``low_prio_disk`` determines if the disk I/O should use a normal |
|
or low priority policy. This defaults to true, which means that |
|
it's low priority by default. Other processes doing disk I/O will |
|
normally take priority in this mode. This is meant to improve the |
|
overall responsiveness of the system while downloading in the |
|
background. For high-performance server setups, this might not |
|
be desirable. |
|
|
|
``local_service_announce_interval`` is the time between local |
|
network announces for a torrent. By default, when local service |
|
discovery is enabled a torrent announces itself every 5 minutes. |
|
This interval is specified in seconds. |
|
|
|
``dht_announce_interval`` is the number of seconds between announcing |
|
torrents to the distributed hash table (DHT). This is specified to |
|
be 15 minutes which is its default. |
|
|
|
``dht_max_torrents`` is the max number of torrents we will track |
|
in the DHT. |
|
|
|
``udp_tracker_token_expiry`` is the number of seconds libtorrent |
|
will keep UDP tracker connection tokens around for. This is specified |
|
to be 60 seconds, and defaults to that. The higher this value is, the |
|
fewer packets have to be sent to the UDP tracker. In order for higher |
|
values to work, the tracker needs to be configured to match the |
|
expiration time for tokens. |
|
|
|
``volatile_read_cache``, if this is set to true, read cache blocks |
|
that are hit by peer read requests are removed from the disk cache |
|
to free up more space. This is useful if you don't expect the disk |
|
cache to create any cache hits from other peers than the one who |
|
triggered the cache line to be read into the cache in the first place. |
|
|
|
``guided_read_cache`` enables the disk cache to adjust the size |
|
of a cache line generated by peers to depend on the upload rate |
|
you are sending to that peer. The intention is to optimize the RAM |
|
usage of the cache, to read ahead further for peers that you're |
|
sending faster to. |
|
|
|
``default_cache_min_age`` is the minimum number of seconds any read |
|
cache line is kept in the cache. This defaults to one second but |
|
may be greater if ``guided_read_cache`` is enabled. Having a lower |
|
bound on the time a cache line stays in the cache is an attempt |
|
to avoid swapping the same pieces in and out of the cache in case |
|
there is a shortage of spare cache space. |
|
|
|
``num_optimistic_unchoke_slots`` is the number of optimistic unchoke |
|
slots to use. It defaults to 0, which means automatic. Having a higher |
|
number of optimistic unchoke slots mean you will find the good peers |
|
faster but with the trade-off to use up more bandwidth. When this is |
|
set to 0, libtorrent opens up 20% of your allowed upload slots as |
|
optimistic unchoke slots. |
|
|
|
``no_atime_storage`` this is a linux-only option and passes in the |
|
``O_NOATIME`` to ``open()`` when opening files. This may lead to |
|
some disk performance improvements. |
|
|
|
``default_est_reciprocation_rate`` is the assumed reciprocation rate |
|
from peers when using the BitTyrant choker. This defaults to 14 kiB/s. |
|
If set too high, you will over-estimate your peers and be more altruistic |
|
while finding the true reciprocation rate, if it's set too low, you'll |
|
be too stingy and waste finding the true reciprocation rate. |
|
|
|
``increase_est_reciprocation_rate`` specifies how many percent the |
|
extimated reciprocation rate should be increased by each unchoke |
|
interval a peer is still choking us back. This defaults to 20%. |
|
This only applies to the BitTyrant choker. |
|
|
|
``decrease_est_reciprocation_rate`` specifies how many percent the |
|
estimated reciprocation rate should be decreased by each unchoke |
|
interval a peer unchokes us. This default to 3%. |
|
This only applies to the BitTyrant choker. |
|
|
|
``incoming_starts_queued_torrents`` defaults to false. If a torrent |
|
has been paused by the auto managed feature in libtorrent, i.e. |
|
the torrent is paused and auto managed, this feature affects whether |
|
or not it is automatically started on an incoming connection. The |
|
main reason to queue torrents, is not to make them unavailable, but |
|
to save on the overhead of announcing to the trackers, the DHT and to |
|
avoid spreading one's unchoke slots too thin. If a peer managed to |
|
find us, even though we're no in the torrent anymore, this setting |
|
can make us start the torrent and serve it. |
|
|
|
When ``report_true_downloaded`` is true, the ``&downloaded=`` argument |
|
sent to trackers will include redundant downloaded bytes. It defaults |
|
to ``false``, which means redundant bytes are not reported to the tracker. |
|
|
|
``strict_end_game_mode`` defaults to true, and controls when a block |
|
may be requested twice. If this is ``true``, a block may only be requested |
|
twice when there's ay least one request to every piece that's left to |
|
download in the torrent. This may slow down progress on some pieces |
|
sometimes, but it may also avoid downloading a lot of redundant bytes. |
|
If this is ``false``, libtorrent attempts to use each peer connection |
|
to its max, by always requesting something, even if it means requesting |
|
something that has been requested from another peer already. |
|
|
|
if ``broadcast_lsd`` is set to true, the local peer discovery |
|
(or Local Service Discovery) will not only use IP multicast, but also |
|
broadcast its messages. This can be useful when running on networks |
|
that don't support multicast. Since broadcast messages might be |
|
expensive and disruptive on networks, only every 8th announce uses |
|
broadcast. |
|
|
|
``enable_outgoing_utp``, ``enable_incoming_utp``, ``enable_outgoing_tcp``, |
|
``enable_incoming_tcp`` all determines if libtorrent should attempt to make |
|
outgoing connections of the specific type, or allow incoming connection. By |
|
default all of them are enabled. |
|
|
|
``ignore_resume_timestamps`` determines if the storage, when loading |
|
resume data files, should verify that the file modification time |
|
with the timestamps in the resume data. This defaults to false, which |
|
means timestamps are taken into account, and resume data is less likely |
|
to accepted (torrents are more likely to be fully checked when loaded). |
|
It might be useful to set this to true if your network is faster than your |
|
disk, and it would be faster to redownload potentially missed pieces than |
|
to go through the whole storage to look for them. |
|
|
|
``no_recheck_incomplete_resume`` determines if the storage should check |
|
the whole files when resume data is incomplete or missing or whether |
|
it should simply assume we don't have any of the data. By default, this |
|
is determined by the existance of any of the files. By setting this setting |
|
to true, the files won't be checked, but will go straight to download |
|
mode. |
|
|
|
``anonymous_mode`` defaults to false. When set to true, the client tries |
|
to hide its identity to a certain degree. The peer-ID will no longer |
|
include the client's fingerprint. The user-agent will be reset to an |
|
empty string. |
|
|
|
If you're using I2P, it might make sense to enable anonymous mode. |
|
|
|
``force_proxy`` disables any communication that's not going over a proxy. |
|
Enabling this requires a proxy to be configured as well, see ``set_proxy_settings``. |
|
The listen sockets are closed, and incoming connections will |
|
only be accepted through a SOCKS5 or I2P proxy (if a peer proxy is set up and |
|
is run on the same machine as the tracker proxy). This setting also |
|
disabled peer country lookups, since those are done via DNS lookups that |
|
aren't supported by proxies. |
|
|
|
``tick_interval`` specifies the number of milliseconds between internal |
|
ticks. This is the frequency with which bandwidth quota is distributed to |
|
peers. It should not be more than one second (i.e. 1000 ms). Setting this |
|
to a low value (around 100) means higher resolution bandwidth quota distribution, |
|
setting it to a higher value saves CPU cycles. |
|
|
|
``share_mode_target`` specifies the target share ratio for share mode torrents. |
|
This defaults to 3, meaning we'll try to upload 3 times as much as we download. |
|
Setting this very high, will make it very conservative and you might end up |
|
not downloading anything ever (and not affecting your share ratio). It does |
|
not make any sense to set this any lower than 2. For instance, if only 3 peers |
|
need to download the rarest piece, it's impossible to download a single piece |
|
and upload it more than 3 times. If the share_mode_target is set to more than 3, |
|
nothing is downloaded. |
|
|
|
``upload_rate_limit``, ``download_rate_limit``, ``local_upload_rate_limit`` |
|
and ``local_download_rate_limit`` sets the session-global limits of upload |
|
and download rate limits, in bytes per second. The local rates refer to peers |
|
on the local network. By default peers on the local network are not rate limited. |
|
|
|
These rate limits are only used for local peers (peers within the same subnet as |
|
the client itself) and it is only used when ``session_settings::ignore_limits_on_local_network`` |
|
is set to true (which it is by default). These rate limits default to unthrottled, |
|
but can be useful in case you want to treat local peers preferentially, but not |
|
quite unthrottled. |
|
|
|
A value of 0 means unlimited. |
|
|
|
``dht_upload_rate_limit`` sets the rate limit on the DHT. This is specified in |
|
bytes per second and defaults to 4000. For busy boxes with lots of torrents |
|
that requires more DHT traffic, this should be raised. |
|
|
|
``unchoke_slots_limit`` is the max number of unchoked peers in the session. The |
|
number of unchoke slots may be ignored depending on what ``choking_algorithm`` |
|
is set to. A value of -1 means infinite. |
|
|
|
``half_open_limit`` sets the maximum number of half-open connections |
|
libtorrent will have when connecting to peers. A half-open connection is one |
|
where connect() has been called, but the connection still hasn't been established |
|
(nor failed). Windows XP Service Pack 2 sets a default, system wide, limit of |
|
the number of half-open connections to 10. So, this limit can be used to work |
|
nicer together with other network applications on that system. The default is |
|
to have no limit, and passing -1 as the limit, means to have no limit. When |
|
limiting the number of simultaneous connection attempts, peers will be put in |
|
a queue waiting for their turn to get connected. |
|
|
|
``connections_limit`` sets a global limit on the number of connections |
|
opened. The number of connections is set to a hard minimum of at least two per |
|
torrent, so if you set a too low connections limit, and open too many torrents, |
|
the limit will not be met. |
|
|
|
``utp_target_delay`` is the target delay for uTP sockets in milliseconds. A high |
|
value will make uTP connections more aggressive and cause longer queues in the upload |
|
bottleneck. It cannot be too low, since the noise in the measurements would cause |
|
it to send too slow. The default is 50 milliseconds. |
|
|
|
``utp_gain_factor`` is the number of bytes the uTP congestion window can increase |
|
at the most in one RTT. This defaults to 300 bytes. If this is set too high, |
|
the congestion controller reacts too hard to noise and will not be stable, if it's |
|
set too low, it will react slow to congestion and not back off as fast. |
|
|
|
``utp_min_timeout`` is the shortest allowed uTP socket timeout, specified in milliseconds. |
|
This defaults to 500 milliseconds. The timeout depends on the RTT of the connection, but |
|
is never smaller than this value. A connection times out when every packet in a window |
|
is lost, or when a packet is lost twice in a row (i.e. the resent packet is lost as well). |
|
|
|
The shorter the timeout is, the faster the connection will recover from this situation, |
|
assuming the RTT is low enough. |
|
|
|
``utp_syn_resends`` is the number of SYN packets that are sent (and timed out) before |
|
giving up and closing the socket. |
|
|
|
``utp_num_resends`` is the number of times a packet is sent (and lossed or timed out) |
|
before giving up and closing the connection. |
|
|
|
``utp_connect_timeout`` is the number of milliseconds of timeout for the initial SYN |
|
packet for uTP connections. For each timed out packet (in a row), the timeout is doubled. |
|
|
|
``utp_dynamic_sock_buf`` controls if the uTP socket manager is allowed to increase |
|
the socket buffer if a network interface with a large MTU is used (such as loopback |
|
or ethernet jumbo frames). This defaults to true and might improve uTP throughput. |
|
For RAM constrained systems, disabling this typically saves around 30kB in user space |
|
and probably around 400kB in kernel socket buffers (it adjusts the send and receive |
|
buffer size on the kernel socket, both for IPv4 and IPv6). |
|
|
|
``utp_loss_multiplier`` controls how the congestion window is changed when a packet |
|
loss is experienced. It's specified as a percentage multiplier for ``cwnd``. By default |
|
it's set to 50 (i.e. cut in half). Do not change this value unless you know what |
|
you're doing. Never set it higher than 100. |
|
|
|
The ``mixed_mode_algorithm`` determines how to treat TCP connections when there are |
|
uTP connections. Since uTP is designed to yield to TCP, there's an inherent problem |
|
when using swarms that have both TCP and uTP connections. If nothing is done, uTP |
|
connections would often be starved out for bandwidth by the TCP connections. This mode |
|
is ``prefer_tcp``. The ``peer_proportional`` mode simply looks at the current throughput |
|
and rate limits all TCP connections to their proportional share based on how many of |
|
the connections are TCP. This works best if uTP connections are not rate limited by |
|
the global rate limiter (which they aren't by default). |
|
|
|
``rate_limit_utp`` determines if uTP connections should be throttled by the global rate |
|
limiter or not. By default they are. |
|
|
|
``listen_queue_size`` is the value passed in to listen() for the listen socket. |
|
It is the number of outstanding incoming connections to queue up while we're not |
|
actively waiting for a connection to be accepted. The default is 5 which should |
|
be sufficient for any normal client. If this is a high performance server which |
|
expects to receive a lot of connections, or used in a simulator or test, it |
|
might make sense to raise this number. It will not take affect until listen_on() |
|
is called again (or for the first time). |
|
|
|
if ``announce_double_nat`` is true, the ``&ip=`` argument in tracker requests |
|
(unless otherwise specified) will be set to the intermediate IP address, if the |
|
user is double NATed. If ther user is not double NATed, this option has no affect. |
|
|
|
``torrent_connect_boost`` is the number of peers to try to connect to immediately |
|
when the first tracker response is received for a torrent. This is a boost to |
|
given to new torrents to accelerate them starting up. The normal connect scheduler |
|
is run once every second, this allows peers to be connected immediately instead |
|
of waiting for the session tick to trigger connections. |
|
|
|
``seeding_outgoing_connections`` determines if seeding (and finished) torrents |
|
should attempt to make outgoing connections or not. By default this is true. It |
|
may be set to false in very specific applications where the cost of making |
|
outgoing connections is high, and there are no or small benefits of doing so. |
|
For instance, if no nodes are behind a firewall or a NAT, seeds don't need to |
|
make outgoing connections. |
|
|
|
if ``no_connect_privileged_ports`` is true (which is the default), libtorrent |
|
will not connect to any peers on priviliged ports (<= 1023). This can mitigate |
|
using bittorrent swarms for certain DDoS attacks. |
|
|
|
``alert_queue_size`` is the maximum number of alerts queued up internally. If |
|
alerts are not popped, the queue will eventually fill up to this level. This |
|
defaults to 1000. |
|
|
|
``max_metadata_size`` is the maximum allowed size (in bytes) to be received |
|
by the metadata extension, i.e. magnet links. It defaults to 1 MiB. |
|
|
|
``smooth_connects`` is true by default, which means the number of connection |
|
attempts per second may be limited to below the ``connection_speed``, in case |
|
we're close to bump up against the limit of number of connections. The intention |
|
of this setting is to more evenly distribute our connection attempts over time, |
|
instead of attempting to connectin in batches, and timing them out in batches. |
|
|
|
``always_send_user_agent`` defaults to false. When set to true, web connections |
|
will include a user-agent with every request, as opposed to just the first |
|
request in a connection. |
|
|
|
``apply_ip_filter_to_trackers`` defaults to true. It determines whether the |
|
IP filter applies to trackers as well as peers. If this is set to false, |
|
trackers are exempt from the IP filter (if there is one). If no IP filter |
|
is set, this setting is irrelevant. |
|
|
|
``read_job_every`` is used to avoid starvation of read jobs in the disk I/O |
|
thread. By default, read jobs are deferred, sorted by physical disk location |
|
and serviced once all write jobs have been issued. In scenarios where the |
|
download rate is enough to saturate the disk, there's a risk the read jobs will |
|
never be serviced. With this setting, every *x* write job, issued in a row, will |
|
instead pick one read job off of the sorted queue, where *x* is ``read_job_every``. |
|
|
|
``use_disk_read_ahead`` defaults to true and will attempt to optimize disk reads |
|
by giving the operating system heads up of disk read requests as they are queued |
|
in the disk job queue. This gives a significant performance boost for seeding. |
|
|
|
``lock_files`` determines whether or not to lock files which libtorrent is downloading |
|
to or seeding from. This is implemented using ``fcntl(F_SETLK)`` on unix systems and |
|
by not passing in ``SHARE_READ`` and ``SHARE_WRITE`` on windows. This might prevent |
|
3rd party processes from corrupting the files under libtorrent's feet. |
|
|
|
``ssl_listen`` sets the listen port for SSL connections. If this is set to 0, |
|
no SSL listen port is opened. Otherwise a socket is opened on this port. This |
|
setting is only taken into account when opening the regular listen port, and |
|
won't re-open the listen socket simply by changing this setting. |
|
|
|
It defaults to port 4433. |
|
|
|
``tracker_backoff`` determines how aggressively to back off from retrying |
|
failing trackers. This value determines *x* in the following formula, determining |
|
the number of seconds to wait until the next retry: |
|
|
|
delay = 5 + 5 * x / 100 * fails^2 |
|
|
|
It defaults to 250. |
|
|
|
This setting may be useful to make libtorrent more or less aggressive in hitting |
|
trackers. |
|
|
|
``ban_web_seeds`` enables banning web seeds. By default, web seeds that send |
|
corrupt data are banned. |
|
|
|
``max_http_recv_buffer_size`` specifies the max number of bytes to receive into |
|
RAM buffers when downloading stuff over HTTP. Specifically when specifying a |
|
URL to a .torrent file when adding a torrent or when announcing to an HTTP |
|
tracker. The default is 2 MiB. |
|
|
|
``support_share_mode`` enables or disables the share mode extension. This is |
|
enabled by default. |
|
|
|
``support_merkle_torrents`` enables or disables the merkle tree torrent support. |
|
This is enabled by default. |
|
|
|
``report_redundant_bytes`` enables or disables reporting redundant bytes to the tracker. |
|
This is enabled by default. |
|
|
|
``handshake_client_version`` is the client name advertized in the peer handshake. If |
|
set to an empty string, the user_agent string is used. |
|
|
|
``use_disk_cache_pool`` enables using a pool allocator for disk cache blocks. This is |
|
disabled by default. Enabling it makes the cache perform better at high throughput. |
|
It also makes the cache less likely and slower at returning memory back to the system |
|
once allocated. |
|
|
|
pe_settings |
|
=========== |
|
|
|
The ``pe_settings`` structure is used to control the settings related |
|
to peer protocol encryption:: |
|
|
|
struct pe_settings |
|
{ |
|
pe_settings(); |
|
|
|
enum enc_policy |
|
{ |
|
forced, |
|
enabled, |
|
disabled |
|
}; |
|
|
|
enum enc_level |
|
{ |
|
plaintext, |
|
rc4, |
|
both |
|
}; |
|
|
|
enc_policy out_enc_policy; |
|
enc_policy in_enc_policy; |
|
enc_level allowed_enc_level; |
|
bool prefer_rc4; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
|
|
``in_enc_policy`` and ``out_enc_policy`` control the settings for incoming |
|
and outgoing connections respectively. The settings for these are: |
|
|
|
* ``forced`` - Only encrypted connections are allowed. Incoming connections |
|
that are not encrypted are closed and if the encrypted outgoing connection |
|
fails, a non-encrypted retry will not be made. |
|
|
|
* ``enabled`` - encrypted connections are enabled, but non-encrypted |
|
connections are allowed. An incoming non-encrypted connection will |
|
be accepted, and if an outgoing encrypted connection fails, a non- |
|
encrypted connection will be tried. |
|
|
|
* ``disabled`` - only non-encrypted connections are allowed. |
|
|
|
``allowed_enc_level`` determines the encryption level of the |
|
connections. This setting will adjust which encryption scheme is |
|
offered to the other peer, as well as which encryption scheme is |
|
selected by the client. The settings are: |
|
|
|
* ``plaintext`` - only the handshake is encrypted, the bulk of the traffic |
|
remains unchanged. |
|
|
|
* ``rc4`` - the entire stream is encrypted with RC4 |
|
|
|
* ``both`` - both RC4 and plaintext connections are allowed. |
|
|
|
``prefer_rc4`` can be set to true if you want to prefer the RC4 encrypted stream. |
|
|
|
|
|
proxy_settings |
|
============== |
|
|
|
The ``proxy_settings`` structs contains the information needed to |
|
direct certain traffic to a proxy. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct proxy_settings |
|
{ |
|
proxy_settings(); |
|
|
|
std::string hostname; |
|
int port; |
|
|
|
std::string username; |
|
std::string password; |
|
|
|
enum proxy_type |
|
{ |
|
none, |
|
socks4, |
|
socks5, |
|
socks5_pw, |
|
http, |
|
http_pw |
|
}; |
|
|
|
proxy_type type; |
|
bool proxy_hostnames; |
|
bool proxy_peer_connections; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
``hostname`` is the name or IP of the proxy server. ``port`` is the |
|
port number the proxy listens to. If required, ``username`` and ``password`` |
|
can be set to authenticate with the proxy. |
|
|
|
The ``type`` tells libtorrent what kind of proxy server it is. The following |
|
options are available: |
|
|
|
* ``none`` - This is the default, no proxy server is used, all other fields |
|
are ignored. |
|
|
|
* ``socks4`` - The server is assumed to be a `SOCKS4 server`_ that |
|
requires a username. |
|
|
|
* ``socks5`` - The server is assumed to be a SOCKS5 server (`RFC 1928`_) that |
|
does not require any authentication. The username and password are ignored. |
|
|
|
* ``socks5_pw`` - The server is assumed to be a SOCKS5 server that supports |
|
plain text username and password authentication (`RFC 1929`_). The username |
|
and password specified may be sent to the proxy if it requires. |
|
|
|
* ``http`` - The server is assumed to be an HTTP proxy. If the transport used |
|
for the connection is non-HTTP, the server is assumed to support the |
|
CONNECT_ method. i.e. for web seeds and HTTP trackers, a plain proxy will |
|
suffice. The proxy is assumed to not require authorization. The username |
|
and password will not be used. |
|
|
|
* ``http_pw`` - The server is assumed to be an HTTP proxy that requires |
|
user authorization. The username and password will be sent to the proxy. |
|
|
|
.. _`SOCKS4 server`: http://www.ufasoft.com/doc/socks4_protocol.htm |
|
.. _`RFC 1928`: http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc1928.html |
|
.. _`RFC 1929`: http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc1929.html |
|
.. _CONNECT: draft-luotonen-web-proxy-tunneling-01.txt |
|
|
|
``proxy_hostnames`` defaults to true. It means that hostnames should be |
|
attempted to be resolved through the proxy instead of using the local DNS |
|
service. This is only supported by SOCKS5 and HTTP. |
|
|
|
``proxy_peer_connections`` determines whether or not to excempt peer and |
|
web seed connections from using the proxy. This defaults to true, i.e. peer |
|
connections are proxied by default. |
|
|
|
ip_filter |
|
========= |
|
|
|
The ``ip_filter`` class is a set of rules that uniquely categorizes all |
|
ip addresses as allowed or disallowed. The default constructor creates |
|
a single rule that allows all addresses (0.0.0.0 - 255.255.255.255 for |
|
the IPv4 range, and the equivalent range covering all addresses for the |
|
IPv6 range). |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
template <class Addr> |
|
struct ip_range |
|
{ |
|
Addr first; |
|
Addr last; |
|
int flags; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
class ip_filter |
|
{ |
|
public: |
|
enum access_flags { blocked = 1 }; |
|
|
|
ip_filter(); |
|
void add_rule(address first, address last, int flags); |
|
int access(address const& addr) const; |
|
|
|
typedef boost::tuple<std::vector<ip_range<address_v4> > |
|
, std::vector<ip_range<address_v6> > > filter_tuple_t; |
|
|
|
filter_tuple_t export_filter() const; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
|
|
ip_filter() |
|
----------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
ip_filter() |
|
|
|
Creates a default filter that doesn't filter any address. |
|
|
|
postcondition: |
|
``access(x) == 0`` for every ``x`` |
|
|
|
|
|
add_rule() |
|
---------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
void add_rule(address first, address last, int flags); |
|
|
|
Adds a rule to the filter. ``first`` and ``last`` defines a range of |
|
ip addresses that will be marked with the given flags. The ``flags`` |
|
can currently be 0, which means allowed, or ``ip_filter::blocked``, which |
|
means disallowed. |
|
|
|
precondition: |
|
``first.is_v4() == last.is_v4() && first.is_v6() == last.is_v6()`` |
|
|
|
postcondition: |
|
``access(x) == flags`` for every ``x`` in the range [``first``, ``last``] |
|
|
|
This means that in a case of overlapping ranges, the last one applied takes |
|
precedence. |
|
|
|
|
|
access() |
|
-------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
int access(address const& addr) const; |
|
|
|
Returns the access permissions for the given address (``addr``). The permission |
|
can currently be 0 or ``ip_filter::blocked``. The complexity of this operation |
|
is O(``log`` n), where n is the minimum number of non-overlapping ranges to describe |
|
the current filter. |
|
|
|
|
|
export_filter() |
|
--------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
boost::tuple<std::vector<ip_range<address_v4> > |
|
, std::vector<ip_range<address_v6> > > export_filter() const; |
|
|
|
This function will return the current state of the filter in the minimum number of |
|
ranges possible. They are sorted from ranges in low addresses to high addresses. Each |
|
entry in the returned vector is a range with the access control specified in its |
|
``flags`` field. |
|
|
|
The return value is a tuple containing two range-lists. One for IPv4 addresses |
|
and one for IPv6 addresses. |
|
|
|
|
|
big_number |
|
========== |
|
|
|
Both the ``peer_id`` and ``sha1_hash`` types are typedefs of the class |
|
``big_number``. It represents 20 bytes of data. Its synopsis follows:: |
|
|
|
class big_number |
|
{ |
|
public: |
|
bool operator==(const big_number& n) const; |
|
bool operator!=(const big_number& n) const; |
|
bool operator<(const big_number& n) const; |
|
|
|
const unsigned char* begin() const; |
|
const unsigned char* end() const; |
|
|
|
unsigned char* begin(); |
|
unsigned char* end(); |
|
}; |
|
|
|
The iterators gives you access to individual bytes. |
|
|
|
|
|
bitfield |
|
======== |
|
|
|
The bitfiled type stores any number of bits as a bitfield in an array. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
class bitfield |
|
{ |
|
bitfield(); |
|
bitfield(int bits); |
|
bitfield(int bits, bool val); |
|
bitfield(char const* bytes, int bits); |
|
bitfield(bitfield const& rhs); |
|
|
|
void borrow_bytes(char* bytes, int bits); |
|
~bitfield(); |
|
|
|
void assign(char const* bytes, int bits); |
|
|
|
bool operator[](int index) const; |
|
|
|
bool get_bit(int index) const; |
|
|
|
void clear_bit(int index); |
|
void set_bit(int index); |
|
|
|
std::size_t size() const; |
|
bool empty() const; |
|
|
|
char const* bytes() const; |
|
|
|
bitfield& operator=(bitfield const& rhs); |
|
|
|
int count() const; |
|
|
|
typedef const_iterator; |
|
const_iterator begin() const; |
|
const_iterator end() const; |
|
|
|
void resize(int bits, bool val); |
|
void set_all(); |
|
void clear_all(); |
|
void resize(int bits); |
|
}; |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
hasher |
|
====== |
|
|
|
This class creates sha1-hashes. Its declaration looks like this:: |
|
|
|
class hasher |
|
{ |
|
public: |
|
hasher(); |
|
hasher(char const* data, unsigned int len); |
|
|
|
void update(char const* data, unsigned int len); |
|
sha1_hash final(); |
|
void reset(); |
|
}; |
|
|
|
|
|
You use it by first instantiating it, then call ``update()`` to feed it |
|
with data. i.e. you don't have to keep the entire buffer of which you want to |
|
create the hash in memory. You can feed the hasher parts of it at a time. When |
|
You have fed the hasher with all the data, you call ``final()`` and it |
|
will return the sha1-hash of the data. |
|
|
|
The constructor that takes a ``char const*`` and an integer will construct the |
|
sha1 context and feed it the data passed in. |
|
|
|
If you want to reuse the hasher object once you have created a hash, you have to |
|
call ``reset()`` to reinitialize it. |
|
|
|
The sha1-algorithm used was implemented by Steve Reid and released as public domain. |
|
For more info, see ``src/sha1.cpp``. |
|
|
|
|
|
fingerprint |
|
=========== |
|
|
|
The fingerprint class represents information about a client and its version. It is used |
|
to encode this information into the client's peer id. |
|
|
|
This is the class declaration:: |
|
|
|
struct fingerprint |
|
{ |
|
fingerprint(const char* id_string, int major, int minor |
|
, int revision, int tag); |
|
|
|
std::string to_string() const; |
|
|
|
char name[2]; |
|
char major_version; |
|
char minor_version; |
|
char revision_version; |
|
char tag_version; |
|
|
|
}; |
|
|
|
The constructor takes a ``char const*`` that should point to a string constant containing |
|
exactly two characters. These are the characters that should be unique for your client. Make |
|
sure not to clash with anybody else. Here are some taken id's: |
|
|
|
+----------+-----------------------+ |
|
| id chars | client | |
|
+==========+=======================+ |
|
| 'AZ' | Azureus | |
|
+----------+-----------------------+ |
|
| 'LT' | libtorrent (default) | |
|
+----------+-----------------------+ |
|
| 'BX' | BittorrentX | |
|
+----------+-----------------------+ |
|
| 'MT' | Moonlight Torrent | |
|
+----------+-----------------------+ |
|
| 'TS' | Torrent Storm | |
|
+----------+-----------------------+ |
|
| 'SS' | Swarm Scope | |
|
+----------+-----------------------+ |
|
| 'XT' | Xan Torrent | |
|
+----------+-----------------------+ |
|
|
|
There's currently an informal directory of client id's here__. |
|
|
|
__ http://wiki.theory.org/BitTorrentSpecification#peer_id |
|
|
|
|
|
The ``major``, ``minor``, ``revision`` and ``tag`` parameters are used to identify the |
|
version of your client. All these numbers must be within the range [0, 9]. |
|
|
|
``to_string()`` will generate the actual string put in the peer-id, and return it. |
|
|
|
|
|
UPnP and NAT-PMP |
|
================ |
|
|
|
The ``upnp`` and ``natpmp`` classes contains the state for all UPnP and NAT-PMP mappings, |
|
by default 1 or two mappings are made by libtorrent, one for the listen port and one |
|
for the DHT port (UDP). |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
class upnp |
|
{ |
|
public: |
|
|
|
enum protocol_type { none = 0, udp = 1, tcp = 2 }; |
|
int add_mapping(protocol_type p, int external_port, int local_port); |
|
void delete_mapping(int mapping_index); |
|
|
|
void discover_device(); |
|
void close(); |
|
|
|
std::string router_model(); |
|
}; |
|
|
|
class natpmp |
|
{ |
|
public: |
|
|
|
enum protocol_type { none = 0, udp = 1, tcp = 2 }; |
|
int add_mapping(protocol_type p, int external_port, int local_port); |
|
void delete_mapping(int mapping_index); |
|
|
|
void close(); |
|
void rebind(address const& listen_interface); |
|
}; |
|
|
|
``discover_device()``, ``close()`` and ``rebind()`` are for internal uses and should |
|
not be called directly by clients. |
|
|
|
add_mapping() |
|
------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
int add_mapping(protocol_type p, int external_port, int local_port); |
|
|
|
Attempts to add a port mapping for the specified protocol. Valid protocols are |
|
``upnp::tcp`` and ``upnp::udp`` for the UPnP class and ``natpmp::tcp`` and |
|
``natpmp::udp`` for the NAT-PMP class. |
|
|
|
``external_port`` is the port on the external address that will be mapped. This |
|
is a hint, you are not guaranteed that this port will be available, and it may |
|
end up being something else. In the portmap_alert_ notification, the actual |
|
external port is reported. |
|
|
|
``local_port`` is the port in the local machine that the mapping should forward |
|
to. |
|
|
|
The return value is an index that identifies this port mapping. This is used |
|
to refer to mappings that fails or succeeds in the portmap_error_alert_ and |
|
portmap_alert_ respectively. If The mapping fails immediately, the return value |
|
is -1, which means failure. There will not be any error alert notification for |
|
mappings that fail with a -1 return value. |
|
|
|
delete_mapping() |
|
---------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
void delete_mapping(int mapping_index); |
|
|
|
This function removes a port mapping. ``mapping_index`` is the index that refers |
|
to the mapping you want to remove, which was returned from `add_mapping()`_. |
|
|
|
router_model() |
|
-------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
std::string router_model(); |
|
|
|
This is only available for UPnP routers. If the model is advertized by |
|
the router, it can be queried through this function. |
|
|
|
|
|
free functions |
|
============== |
|
|
|
identify_client() |
|
----------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
std::string identify_client(peer_id const& id); |
|
|
|
This function is declared in the header ``<libtorrent/identify_client.hpp>``. It can can be used |
|
to extract a string describing a client version from its peer-id. It will recognize most clients |
|
that have this kind of identification in the peer-id. |
|
|
|
|
|
client_fingerprint() |
|
-------------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
boost::optional<fingerprint> client_fingerprint(peer_id const& p); |
|
|
|
Returns an optional fingerprint if any can be identified from the peer id. This can be used |
|
to automate the identification of clients. It will not be able to identify peers with non- |
|
standard encodings. Only Azureus style, Shadow's style and Mainline style. This function is |
|
declared in the header ``<libtorrent/identify_client.hpp>``. |
|
|
|
|
|
lazy_bdecode() |
|
-------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
int lazy_bdecode(char const* start, char const* end, lazy_entry& ret |
|
, error_code& ec, int* error_pos = 0, int depth_limit = 1000 |
|
, int item_limit = 1000000); |
|
|
|
This function decodes bencoded_ data. |
|
|
|
.. _bencoded: http://wiki.theory.org/index.php/BitTorrentSpecification |
|
|
|
Whenever possible, ``lazy_bdecode()`` should be preferred over ``bdecode()``. |
|
It is more efficient and more secure. It supports having constraints on the |
|
amount of memory is consumed by the parser. |
|
|
|
*lazy* refers to the fact that it doesn't copy any actual data out of the |
|
bencoded buffer. It builds a tree of ``lazy_entry`` which has pointers into |
|
the bencoded buffer. This makes it very fast and efficient. On top of that, |
|
it is not recursive, which saves a lot of stack space when parsing deeply |
|
nested trees. However, in order to protect against potential attacks, the |
|
``depth_limit`` and ``item_limit`` control how many levels deep the tree is |
|
allowed to get. With recursive parser, a few thousand levels would be enough |
|
to exhaust the threads stack and terminate the process. The ``item_limit`` |
|
protects against very large structures, not necessarily deep. Each bencoded |
|
item in the structure causes the parser to allocate some amount of memory, |
|
this memory is constant regardless of how much data actually is stored in |
|
the item. One potential attack is to create a bencoded list of hundreds of |
|
thousands empty strings, which would cause the parser to allocate a significant |
|
amount of memory, perhaps more than is available on the machine, and effectively |
|
provide a denial of service. The default item limit is set as a reasonable |
|
upper limit for desktop computers. Very few torrents have more items in them. |
|
The limit corresponds to about 25 MB, which might be a bit much for embedded |
|
systems. |
|
|
|
``start`` and ``end`` defines the bencoded buffer to be decoded. ``ret`` is |
|
the ``lazy_entry`` which is filled in with the whole decoded tree. ``ec`` |
|
is a reference to an ``error_code`` which is set to describe the error encountered |
|
in case the function fails. ``error_pos`` is an optional pointer to an int, |
|
which will be set to the byte offset into the buffer where an error occurred, |
|
in case the function fails. |
|
|
|
bdecode() bencode() |
|
-------------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
template<class InIt> entry bdecode(InIt start, InIt end); |
|
template<class OutIt> void bencode(OutIt out, const entry& e); |
|
|
|
These functions will encode data to bencoded_ or decode bencoded_ data. |
|
|
|
If possible, `lazy_bdecode()`_ should be preferred over ``bdecode()``. |
|
|
|
The entry_ class is the internal representation of the bencoded data |
|
and it can be used to retrieve information, an entry_ can also be build by |
|
the program and given to ``bencode()`` to encode it into the ``OutIt`` |
|
iterator. |
|
|
|
The ``OutIt`` and ``InIt`` are iterators |
|
(InputIterator_ and OutputIterator_ respectively). They |
|
are templates and are usually instantiated as ostream_iterator_, |
|
back_insert_iterator_ or istream_iterator_. These |
|
functions will assume that the iterator refers to a character |
|
(``char``). So, if you want to encode entry ``e`` into a buffer |
|
in memory, you can do it like this:: |
|
|
|
std::vector<char> buffer; |
|
bencode(std::back_inserter(buf), e); |
|
|
|
.. _InputIterator: http://www.sgi.com/tech/stl/InputIterator.html |
|
.. _OutputIterator: http://www.sgi.com/tech/stl/OutputIterator.html |
|
.. _ostream_iterator: http://www.sgi.com/tech/stl/ostream_iterator.html |
|
.. _back_insert_iterator: http://www.sgi.com/tech/stl/back_insert_iterator.html |
|
.. _istream_iterator: http://www.sgi.com/tech/stl/istream_iterator.html |
|
|
|
If you want to decode a torrent file from a buffer in memory, you can do it like this:: |
|
|
|
std::vector<char> buffer; |
|
// ... |
|
entry e = bdecode(buf.begin(), buf.end()); |
|
|
|
Or, if you have a raw char buffer:: |
|
|
|
const char* buf; |
|
// ... |
|
entry e = bdecode(buf, buf + data_size); |
|
|
|
Now we just need to know how to retrieve information from the entry_. |
|
|
|
If ``bdecode()`` encounters invalid encoded data in the range given to it |
|
it will throw libtorrent_exception_. |
|
|
|
add_magnet_uri() |
|
---------------- |
|
|
|
*deprecated* |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
torrent_handle add_magnet_uri(session& ses, std::string const& uri |
|
add_torrent_params p); |
|
torrent_handle add_magnet_uri(session& ses, std::string const& uri |
|
add_torrent_params p, error_code& ec); |
|
|
|
This function parses the magnet URI (``uri``) as a bittorrent magnet link, |
|
and adds the torrent to the specified session (``ses``). It returns the |
|
handle to the newly added torrent, or an invalid handle in case parsing |
|
failed. To control some initial settings of the torrent, sepcify those in |
|
the ``add_torrent_params``, ``p``. See `async_add_torrent() add_torrent()`_. |
|
|
|
The overload that does not take an ``error_code`` throws an exception on |
|
error and is not available when building without exception support. |
|
|
|
A simpler way to add a magnet link to a session is to pass in the |
|
link through ``add_torrent_params::url`` argument to ``session::add_torrent()``. |
|
|
|
For more information about magnet links, see `magnet links`_. |
|
|
|
parse_magnet_uri() |
|
------------------ |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
void parse_magnet_uri(std::string const& uri, add_torrent_params& p, error_code& ec); |
|
|
|
This function parses out information from the magnet link and populates the |
|
``add_torrent_params`` object. |
|
|
|
make_magnet_uri() |
|
----------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
std::string make_magnet_uri(torrent_handle const& handle); |
|
|
|
Generates a magnet URI from the specified torrent. If the torrent |
|
handle is invalid, an empty string is returned. |
|
|
|
For more information about magnet links, see `magnet links`_. |
|
|
|
|
|
alerts |
|
====== |
|
|
|
The ``pop_alert()`` function on session is the interface for retrieving |
|
alerts, warnings, messages and errors from libtorrent. If no alerts have |
|
been posted by libtorrent ``pop_alert()`` will return a default initialized |
|
``auto_ptr`` object. If there is an alert in libtorrent's queue, the alert |
|
from the front of the queue is popped and returned. |
|
You can then use the alert object and query |
|
|
|
By default, only errors are reported. `set_alert_mask()`_ can be |
|
used to specify which kinds of events should be reported. The alert mask |
|
is a bitmask with the following bits: |
|
|
|
+--------------------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``error_notification`` | Enables alerts that report an error. This includes: | |
|
| | | |
|
| | * tracker errors | |
|
| | * tracker warnings | |
|
| | * file errors | |
|
| | * resume data failures | |
|
| | * web seed errors | |
|
| | * .torrent files errors | |
|
| | * listen socket errors | |
|
| | * port mapping errors | |
|
+--------------------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``peer_notification`` | Enables alerts when peers send invalid requests, get banned or | |
|
| | snubbed. | |
|
+--------------------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``port_mapping_notification`` | Enables alerts for port mapping events. For NAT-PMP and UPnP. | |
|
+--------------------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``storage_notification`` | Enables alerts for events related to the storage. File errors and | |
|
| | synchronization events for moving the storage, renaming files etc. | |
|
+--------------------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``tracker_notification`` | Enables all tracker events. Includes announcing to trackers, | |
|
| | receiving responses, warnings and errors. | |
|
+--------------------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``debug_notification`` | Low level alerts for when peers are connected and disconnected. | |
|
+--------------------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``status_notification`` | Enables alerts for when a torrent or the session changes state. | |
|
+--------------------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``progress_notification`` | Alerts for when blocks are requested and completed. Also when | |
|
| | pieces are completed. | |
|
+--------------------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``ip_block_notification`` | Alerts when a peer is blocked by the ip blocker or port blocker. | |
|
+--------------------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``performance_warning`` | Alerts when some limit is reached that might limit the download | |
|
| | or upload rate. | |
|
+--------------------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``stats_notification`` | If you enable these alerts, you will receive a ``stats_alert`` | |
|
| | approximately once every second, for every active torrent. | |
|
| | These alerts contain all statistics counters for the interval since | |
|
| | the lasts stats alert. | |
|
+--------------------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``dht_notification`` | Alerts on events in the DHT node. For incoming searches or | |
|
| | bootstrapping being done etc. | |
|
+--------------------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``rss_notification`` | Alerts on RSS related events, like feeds being updated, feed error | |
|
| | conditions and successful RSS feed updates. Enabling this categoty | |
|
| | will make you receive ``rss_alert`` alerts. | |
|
+--------------------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``all_categories`` | The full bitmask, representing all available categories. | |
|
+--------------------------------+---------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
|
|
Every alert belongs to one or more category. There is a small cost involved in posting alerts. Only |
|
alerts that belong to an enabled category are posted. Setting the alert bitmask to 0 will disable |
|
all alerts |
|
|
|
When you get an alert, you can use ``alert_cast<>`` to attempt to cast the pointer to a |
|
more specific alert type, to be queried for more information about the alert. ``alert_cast`` |
|
has the followinf signature:: |
|
|
|
template <T> T* alert_cast(alert* a); |
|
template <T> T const* alert_cast(alert const* a); |
|
|
|
You can also use a `alert dispatcher`_ mechanism that's available in libtorrent. |
|
|
|
All alert types are defined in the ``<libtorrent/alert_types.hpp>`` header file. |
|
|
|
The ``alert`` class is the base class that specific messages are derived from. This |
|
is its synopsis: |
|
|
|
.. parsed-literal:: |
|
|
|
class alert |
|
{ |
|
public: |
|
|
|
enum category_t |
|
{ |
|
error_notification = *implementation defined*, |
|
peer_notification = *implementation defined*, |
|
port_mapping_notification = *implementation defined*, |
|
storage_notification = *implementation defined*, |
|
tracker_notification = *implementation defined*, |
|
debug_notification = *implementation defined*, |
|
status_notification = *implementation defined*, |
|
progress_notification = *implementation defined*, |
|
ip_block_notification = *implementation defined*, |
|
performance_warning = *implementation defined*, |
|
dht_notification = *implementation defined*, |
|
stats_notification = *implementation defined*, |
|
rss_notification = *implementation defined*, |
|
|
|
all_categories = *implementation defined* |
|
}; |
|
|
|
ptime timestamp() const; |
|
|
|
virtual ~alert(); |
|
|
|
virtual int type() const = 0; |
|
virtual std::string message() const = 0; |
|
virtual char const* what() const = 0; |
|
virtual int category() const = 0; |
|
virtual bool discardable() const; |
|
virtual std::auto_ptr<alert> clone() const = 0; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
``type()`` returns an integer that is unique to this alert type. It can be |
|
compared against a specific alert by querying a static constant called ``alert_type`` |
|
in the alert. It can be used to determine the run-time type of an alert* in |
|
order to cast to that alert type and access specific members. |
|
|
|
e.g:: |
|
|
|
std::auto_ptr<alert> a = ses.pop_alert(); |
|
switch (a->type()) |
|
{ |
|
case read_piece_alert::alert_type: |
|
{ |
|
read_piece_alert* p = (read_piece_alert*)a.get(); |
|
if (p->ec) { |
|
// read_piece failed |
|
break; |
|
} |
|
// use p |
|
break; |
|
} |
|
case file_renamed_alert::alert_type: |
|
{ |
|
// etc... |
|
} |
|
} |
|
|
|
``what()`` returns a string literal describing the type of the alert. It does |
|
not include any information that might be bundled with the alert. |
|
|
|
``category()`` returns a bitmask specifying which categories this alert belong to. |
|
|
|
``clone()`` returns a pointer to a copy of the alert. |
|
|
|
``discardable()`` determines whether or not an alert is allowed to be discarded |
|
when the alert queue is full. There are a few alerts which may not be discared, |
|
since they would break the user contract, such as ``save_resume_data_alert``. |
|
|
|
``message()`` generate a string describing the alert and the information bundled |
|
with it. This is mainly intended for debug and development use. It is not suitable |
|
to use this for applications that may be localized. Instead, handle each alert |
|
type individually and extract and render the information from the alert depending |
|
on the locale. |
|
|
|
There's another alert base class that most alerts derives from, all the |
|
alerts that are generated for a specific torrent are derived from:: |
|
|
|
struct torrent_alert: alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
torrent_handle handle; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
There's also a base class for all alerts referring to tracker events:: |
|
|
|
struct tracker_alert: torrent_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
std::string url; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
The specific alerts are: |
|
|
|
torrent_added_alert |
|
------------------- |
|
|
|
The ``torrent_added_alert`` is posted once every time a torrent is successfully |
|
added. It doesn't contain any members of its own, but inherits the torrent handle |
|
from its base class. |
|
It's posted when the ``status_notification`` bit is set in the alert mask. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct torrent_added_alert: torrent_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
}; |
|
|
|
|
|
add_torrent_alert |
|
----------------- |
|
|
|
This alert is always posted when a torrent was attempted to be added |
|
and contains the return status of the add operation. The torrent handle of the new |
|
torrent can be found in the base class' ``handle`` member. If adding |
|
the torrent failed, ``error`` contains the error code. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct add_torrent_alert: torrent_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
add_torrent_params params; |
|
error_code error; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
``params`` is a copy of the parameters used when adding the torrent, it can be used |
|
to identify which invocation to ``async_add_torrent()`` caused this alert. |
|
|
|
``error`` is set to the error, if one occurred while adding the torrent. |
|
|
|
|
|
torrent_removed_alert |
|
--------------------- |
|
|
|
The ``torrent_removed_alert`` is posted whenever a torrent is removed. Since |
|
the torrent handle in its baseclass will always be invalid (since the torrent |
|
is already removed) it has the info hash as a member, to identify it. |
|
It's posted when the ``status_notification`` bit is set in the alert mask. |
|
|
|
Even though the ``handle`` member doesn't point to an existing torrent anymore, |
|
it is still useful for comparing to other handles, which may also no |
|
longer point to existing torrents, but to the same non-existing torrents. |
|
|
|
The ``torrent_handle`` acts as a ``weak_ptr``, even though its object no |
|
longer exists, it can still compare equal to another weak pointer which |
|
points to the same non-existent object. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct torrent_removed_alert: torrent_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
sha1_hash info_hash; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
read_piece_alert |
|
---------------- |
|
|
|
This alert is posted when the asynchronous read operation initiated by |
|
a call to `read_piece()`_ is completed. If the read failed, the torrent |
|
is paused and an error state is set and the buffer member of the alert |
|
is 0. If successful, ``buffer`` points to a buffer containing all the data |
|
of the piece. ``piece`` is the piece index that was read. ``size`` is the |
|
number of bytes that was read. |
|
|
|
If the operation fails, ec will indicat what went wrong. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct read_piece_alert: torrent_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
error_code ec; |
|
boost::shared_ptr<char> buffer; |
|
int piece; |
|
int size; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
external_ip_alert |
|
----------------- |
|
|
|
Whenever libtorrent learns about the machines external IP, this alert is |
|
generated. The external IP address can be acquired from the tracker (if it |
|
supports that) or from peers that supports the extension protocol. |
|
The address can be accessed through the ``external_address`` member. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct external_ip_alert: alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
address external_address; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
|
|
listen_failed_alert |
|
------------------- |
|
|
|
This alert is generated when none of the ports, given in the port range, to |
|
session_ can be opened for listening. The ``endpoint`` member is the |
|
interface and port that failed, ``error`` is the error code describing |
|
the failure. |
|
|
|
libtorrent may sometimes try to listen on port 0, if all other ports failed. |
|
Port 0 asks the operating system to pick a port that's free). If that fails |
|
you may see a listen_failed_alert_ with port 0 even if you didn't ask to |
|
listen on it. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct listen_failed_alert: alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
tcp::endpoint endpoint; |
|
error_code error; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
listen_succeeded_alert |
|
---------------------- |
|
|
|
This alert is posted when the listen port succeeds to be opened on a |
|
particular interface. ``endpoint`` is the endpoint that successfully |
|
was opened for listening. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct listen_succeeded_alert: alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
tcp::endpoint endpoint; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
|
|
portmap_error_alert |
|
------------------- |
|
|
|
This alert is generated when a NAT router was successfully found but some |
|
part of the port mapping request failed. It contains a text message that |
|
may help the user figure out what is wrong. This alert is not generated in |
|
case it appears the client is not running on a NAT:ed network or if it |
|
appears there is no NAT router that can be remote controlled to add port |
|
mappings. |
|
|
|
``mapping`` refers to the mapping index of the port map that failed, i.e. |
|
the index returned from `add_mapping()`_. |
|
|
|
``map_type`` is 0 for NAT-PMP and 1 for UPnP. |
|
|
|
``error`` tells you what failed. |
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct portmap_error_alert: alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
int mapping; |
|
int type; |
|
error_code error; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
portmap_alert |
|
------------- |
|
|
|
This alert is generated when a NAT router was successfully found and |
|
a port was successfully mapped on it. On a NAT:ed network with a NAT-PMP |
|
capable router, this is typically generated once when mapping the TCP |
|
port and, if DHT is enabled, when the UDP port is mapped. |
|
|
|
``mapping`` refers to the mapping index of the port map that failed, i.e. |
|
the index returned from `add_mapping()`_. |
|
|
|
``external_port`` is the external port allocated for the mapping. |
|
|
|
``type`` is 0 for NAT-PMP and 1 for UPnP. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct portmap_alert: alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
int mapping; |
|
int external_port; |
|
int map_type; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
portmap_log_alert |
|
----------------- |
|
|
|
This alert is generated to log informational events related to either |
|
UPnP or NAT-PMP. They contain a log line and the type (0 = NAT-PMP |
|
and 1 = UPnP). Displaying these messages to an end user is only useful |
|
for debugging the UPnP or NAT-PMP implementation. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct portmap_log_alert: alert |
|
{ |
|
//... |
|
int map_type; |
|
std::string msg; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
file_error_alert |
|
---------------- |
|
|
|
If the storage fails to read or write files that it needs access to, this alert is |
|
generated and the torrent is paused. |
|
|
|
``file`` is the path to the file that was accessed when the error occurred. |
|
|
|
``error`` is the error code describing the error. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct file_error_alert: torrent_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
std::string file; |
|
error_code error; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
torrent_error_alert |
|
------------------- |
|
|
|
This is posted whenever a torrent is transitioned into the error state. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct torrent_error_alert: torrent_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
error_code error; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
The ``error`` specifies which error the torrent encountered. |
|
|
|
file_renamed_alert |
|
------------------ |
|
|
|
This is posted as a response to a ``torrent_handle::rename_file`` call, if the rename |
|
operation succeeds. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct file_renamed_alert: torrent_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
std::string name; |
|
int index; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
The ``index`` member refers to the index of the file that was renamed, |
|
``name`` is the new name of the file. |
|
|
|
|
|
file_rename_failed_alert |
|
------------------------ |
|
|
|
This is posted as a response to a ``torrent_handle::rename_file`` call, if the rename |
|
operation failed. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct file_rename_failed_alert: torrent_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
int index; |
|
error_code error; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
The ``index`` member refers to the index of the file that was supposed to be renamed, |
|
``error`` is the error code returned from the filesystem. |
|
|
|
tracker_announce_alert |
|
---------------------- |
|
|
|
This alert is generated each time a tracker announce is sent (or attempted to be sent). |
|
There are no extra data members in this alert. The url can be found in the base class |
|
however. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct tracker_announce_alert: tracker_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
int event; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
Event specifies what event was sent to the tracker. It is defined as: |
|
|
|
0. None |
|
1. Completed |
|
2. Started |
|
3. Stopped |
|
|
|
|
|
tracker_error_alert |
|
------------------- |
|
|
|
This alert is generated on tracker time outs, premature disconnects, invalid response or |
|
a HTTP response other than "200 OK". From the alert you can get the handle to the torrent |
|
the tracker belongs to. |
|
|
|
The ``times_in_row`` member says how many times in a row this tracker has failed. |
|
``status_code`` is the code returned from the HTTP server. 401 means the tracker needs |
|
authentication, 404 means not found etc. If the tracker timed out, the code will be set |
|
to 0. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct tracker_error_alert: tracker_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
int times_in_row; |
|
int status_code; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
|
|
tracker_reply_alert |
|
------------------- |
|
|
|
This alert is only for informational purpose. It is generated when a tracker announce |
|
succeeds. It is generated regardless what kind of tracker was used, be it UDP, HTTP or |
|
the DHT. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct tracker_reply_alert: tracker_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
int num_peers; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
The ``num_peers`` tells how many peers the tracker returned in this response. This is |
|
not expected to be more thant the ``num_want`` settings. These are not necessarily |
|
all new peers, some of them may already be connected. |
|
|
|
tracker_warning_alert |
|
--------------------- |
|
|
|
This alert is triggered if the tracker reply contains a warning field. Usually this |
|
means that the tracker announce was successful, but the tracker has a message to |
|
the client. The ``msg`` string in the alert contains the warning message from |
|
the tracker. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct tracker_warning_alert: tracker_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
std::string msg; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
scrape_reply_alert |
|
------------------ |
|
|
|
This alert is generated when a scrape request succeeds. ``incomplete`` |
|
and ``complete`` is the data returned in the scrape response. These numbers |
|
may be -1 if the reponse was malformed. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct scrape_reply_alert: tracker_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
int incomplete; |
|
int complete; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
|
|
scrape_failed_alert |
|
------------------- |
|
|
|
If a scrape request fails, this alert is generated. This might be due |
|
to the tracker timing out, refusing connection or returning an http response |
|
code indicating an error. ``msg`` contains a message describing the error. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct scrape_failed_alert: tracker_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
std::string msg; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
url_seed_alert |
|
-------------- |
|
|
|
This alert is generated when a HTTP seed name lookup fails. |
|
|
|
It contains ``url`` to the HTTP seed that failed along with an error message. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct url_seed_alert: torrent_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
std::string url; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
|
|
hash_failed_alert |
|
----------------- |
|
|
|
This alert is generated when a finished piece fails its hash check. You can get the handle |
|
to the torrent which got the failed piece and the index of the piece itself from the alert. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct hash_failed_alert: torrent_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
int piece_index; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
|
|
peer_alert |
|
---------- |
|
|
|
The peer alert is a base class for alerts that refer to a specific peer. It includes all |
|
the information to identify the peer. i.e. ``ip`` and ``peer-id``. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct peer_alert: torrent_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
tcp::endpoint ip; |
|
peer_id pid; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
peer_connect_alert |
|
------------------ |
|
|
|
This alert is posted every time an outgoing peer connect attempts succeeds. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct peer_connect_alert: peer_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
}; |
|
|
|
peer_ban_alert |
|
-------------- |
|
|
|
This alert is generated when a peer is banned because it has sent too many corrupt pieces |
|
to us. ``ip`` is the endpoint to the peer that was banned. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct peer_ban_alert: peer_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
}; |
|
|
|
|
|
peer_snubbed_alert |
|
------------------ |
|
|
|
This alert is generated when a peer is snubbed, when it stops sending data when we request |
|
it. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct peer_snubbed_alert: peer_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
}; |
|
|
|
|
|
peer_unsnubbed_alert |
|
-------------------- |
|
|
|
This alert is generated when a peer is unsnubbed. Essentially when it was snubbed for stalling |
|
sending data, and now it started sending data again. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct peer_unsnubbed_alert: peer_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
}; |
|
|
|
|
|
peer_error_alert |
|
---------------- |
|
|
|
This alert is generated when a peer sends invalid data over the peer-peer protocol. The peer |
|
will be disconnected, but you get its ip address from the alert, to identify it. |
|
|
|
The ``error_code`` tells you what error caused this alert. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct peer_error_alert: peer_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
error_code error; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
|
|
peer_connected_alert |
|
-------------------- |
|
|
|
This alert is generated when a peer is connected. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct peer_connected_alert: peer_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
}; |
|
|
|
|
|
peer_disconnected_alert |
|
----------------------- |
|
|
|
This alert is generated when a peer is disconnected for any reason (other than the ones |
|
covered by ``peer_error_alert``). |
|
|
|
The ``error_code`` tells you what error caused peer to disconnect. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct peer_disconnected_alert: peer_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
error_code error; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
|
|
invalid_request_alert |
|
--------------------- |
|
|
|
This is a debug alert that is generated by an incoming invalid piece request. |
|
``ip`` is the address of the peer and the ``request`` is the actual incoming |
|
request from the peer. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct invalid_request_alert: peer_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
peer_request request; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
|
|
struct peer_request |
|
{ |
|
int piece; |
|
int start; |
|
int length; |
|
bool operator==(peer_request const& r) const; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
|
|
The ``peer_request`` contains the values the client sent in its ``request`` message. ``piece`` is |
|
the index of the piece it want data from, ``start`` is the offset within the piece where the data |
|
should be read, and ``length`` is the amount of data it wants. |
|
|
|
request_dropped_alert |
|
--------------------- |
|
|
|
This alert is generated when a peer rejects or ignores a piece request. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct request_dropped_alert: peer_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
int block_index; |
|
int piece_index; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
|
|
block_timeout_alert |
|
------------------- |
|
|
|
This alert is generated when a block request times out. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct block_timeout_alert: peer_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
int block_index; |
|
int piece_index; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
|
|
block_finished_alert |
|
-------------------- |
|
|
|
This alert is generated when a block request receives a response. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct block_finished_alert: peer_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
int block_index; |
|
int piece_index; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
|
|
lsd_peer_alert |
|
-------------- |
|
|
|
This alert is generated when we receive a local service discovery message from a peer |
|
for a torrent we're currently participating in. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct lsd_peer_alert: peer_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
}; |
|
|
|
|
|
file_completed_alert |
|
-------------------- |
|
|
|
This is posted whenever an individual file completes its download. i.e. |
|
All pieces overlapping this file have passed their hash check. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct file_completed_alert: torrent_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
int index; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
The ``index`` member refers to the index of the file that completed. |
|
|
|
|
|
block_downloading_alert |
|
----------------------- |
|
|
|
This alert is generated when a block request is sent to a peer. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct block_downloading_alert: peer_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
int block_index; |
|
int piece_index; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
|
|
unwanted_block_alert |
|
-------------------- |
|
|
|
This alert is generated when a block is received that was not requested or |
|
whose request timed out. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct unwanted_block_alert: peer_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
int block_index; |
|
int piece_index; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
|
|
torrent_delete_failed_alert |
|
--------------------------- |
|
|
|
This alert is generated when a request to delete the files of a torrent fails. |
|
|
|
The ``error_code`` tells you why it failed. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct torrent_delete_failed_alert: torrent_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
error_code error; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
torrent_deleted_alert |
|
--------------------- |
|
|
|
This alert is generated when a request to delete the files of a torrent complete. |
|
|
|
The ``info_hash`` is the info-hash of the torrent that was just deleted. Most of |
|
the time the torrent_handle in the ``torrent_alert`` will be invalid by the time |
|
this alert arrives, since the torrent is being deleted. The ``info_hash`` member |
|
is hence the main way of identifying which torrent just completed the delete. |
|
|
|
This alert is posted in the ``storage_notification`` category, and that bit |
|
needs to be set in the alert mask. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct torrent_deleted_alert: torrent_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
sha1_hash info_hash; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
torrent_finished_alert |
|
---------------------- |
|
|
|
This alert is generated when a torrent switches from being a downloader to a seed. |
|
It will only be generated once per torrent. It contains a torrent_handle to the |
|
torrent in question. |
|
|
|
There are no additional data members in this alert. |
|
|
|
|
|
performance_alert |
|
----------------- |
|
|
|
This alert is generated when a limit is reached that might have a negative impact on |
|
upload or download rate performance. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct performance_alert: torrent_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
|
|
enum performance_warning_t |
|
{ |
|
outstanding_disk_buffer_limit_reached, |
|
outstanding_request_limit_reached, |
|
upload_limit_too_low, |
|
download_limit_too_low, |
|
send_buffer_watermark_too_low, |
|
too_many_optimistic_unchoke_slots, |
|
too_high_disk_queue_limit, |
|
too_few_outgoing_ports |
|
}; |
|
|
|
performance_warning_t warning_code; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
outstanding_disk_buffer_limit_reached |
|
This warning means that the number of bytes queued to be written to disk |
|
exceeds the max disk byte queue setting (``session_settings::max_queued_disk_bytes``). |
|
This might restrict the download rate, by not queuing up enough write jobs |
|
to the disk I/O thread. When this alert is posted, peer connections are |
|
temporarily stopped from downloading, until the queued disk bytes have fallen |
|
below the limit again. Unless your ``max_queued_disk_bytes`` setting is already |
|
high, you might want to increase it to get better performance. |
|
|
|
outstanding_request_limit_reached |
|
This is posted when libtorrent would like to send more requests to a peer, |
|
but it's limited by ``session_settings::max_out_request_queue``. The queue length |
|
libtorrent is trying to achieve is determined by the download rate and the |
|
assumed round-trip-time (``session_settings::request_queue_time``). The assumed |
|
rount-trip-time is not limited to just the network RTT, but also the remote disk |
|
access time and message handling time. It defaults to 3 seconds. The target number |
|
of outstanding requests is set to fill the bandwidth-delay product (assumed RTT |
|
times download rate divided by number of bytes per request). When this alert |
|
is posted, there is a risk that the number of outstanding requests is too low |
|
and limits the download rate. You might want to increase the ``max_out_request_queue`` |
|
setting. |
|
|
|
upload_limit_too_low |
|
This warning is posted when the amount of TCP/IP overhead is greater than the |
|
upload rate limit. When this happens, the TCP/IP overhead is caused by a much |
|
faster download rate, triggering TCP ACK packets. These packets eat into the |
|
rate limit specified to libtorrent. When the overhead traffic is greater than |
|
the rate limit, libtorrent will not be able to send any actual payload, such |
|
as piece requests. This means the download rate will suffer, and new requests |
|
can be sent again. There will be an equilibrium where the download rate, on |
|
average, is about 20 times the upload rate limit. If you want to maximize the |
|
download rate, increase the upload rate limit above 5% of your download capacity. |
|
|
|
download_limit_too_low |
|
This is the same warning as ``upload_limit_too_low`` but referring to the download |
|
limit instead of upload. This suggests that your download rate limit is mcuh lower |
|
than your upload capacity. Your upload rate will suffer. To maximize upload rate, |
|
make sure your download rate limit is above 5% of your upload capacity. |
|
|
|
send_buffer_watermark_too_low |
|
We're stalled on the disk. We want to write to the socket, and we can write |
|
but our send buffer is empty, waiting to be refilled from the disk. |
|
This either means the disk is slower than the network connection |
|
or that our send buffer watermark is too small, because we can |
|
send it all before the disk gets back to us. |
|
The number of bytes that we keep outstanding, requested from the disk, is calculated |
|
as follows:: |
|
|
|
min(512, max(upload_rate * send_buffer_watermark_factor / 100, send_buffer_watermark)) |
|
|
|
If you receive this alert, you migth want to either increase your ``send_buffer_watermark`` |
|
or ``send_buffer_watermark_factor``. |
|
|
|
too_many_optimistic_unchoke_slots |
|
If the half (or more) of all upload slots are set as optimistic unchoke slots, this |
|
warning is issued. You probably want more regular (rate based) unchoke slots. |
|
|
|
too_high_disk_queue_limit |
|
If the disk write queue ever grows larger than half of the cache size, this warning |
|
is posted. The disk write queue eats into the total disk cache and leaves very little |
|
left for the actual cache. This causes the disk cache to oscillate in evicting large |
|
portions of the cache before allowing peers to download any more, onto the disk write |
|
queue. Either lower ``max_queued_disk_bytes`` or increase ``cache_size``. |
|
|
|
too_few_outgoing_ports |
|
This is generated if outgoing peer connections are failing because of *address in use* |
|
errors, indicating that ``session_settings::outgoing_ports`` is set and is too small of |
|
a range. Consider not using the ``outgoing_ports`` setting at all, or widen the range to |
|
include more ports. |
|
|
|
state_changed_alert |
|
------------------- |
|
|
|
Generated whenever a torrent changes its state. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct state_changed_alert: torrent_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
|
|
torrent_status::state_t state; |
|
torrent_status::state_t prev_state; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
``state`` is the new state of the torrent. ``prev_state`` is the previous state. |
|
|
|
|
|
metadata_failed_alert |
|
--------------------- |
|
|
|
This alert is generated when the metadata has been completely received and the info-hash |
|
failed to match it. i.e. the metadata that was received was corrupt. libtorrent will |
|
automatically retry to fetch it in this case. This is only relevant when running a |
|
torrent-less download, with the metadata extension provided by libtorrent. |
|
|
|
There are no additional data members in this alert. |
|
|
|
|
|
metadata_received_alert |
|
----------------------- |
|
|
|
This alert is generated when the metadata has been completely received and the torrent |
|
can start downloading. It is not generated on torrents that are started with metadata, but |
|
only those that needs to download it from peers (when utilizing the libtorrent extension). |
|
|
|
There are no additional data members in this alert. |
|
|
|
Typically, when receiving this alert, you would want to save the torrent file in order |
|
to load it back up again when the session is restarted. Here's an example snippet of |
|
code to do that:: |
|
|
|
torrent_handle h = alert->handle(); |
|
if (h.is_valid()) { |
|
boost::intrusive_ptr<torrent_info const> ti = h.torrent_file(); |
|
create_torrent ct(*ti); |
|
entry te = ct.generate(); |
|
std::vector<char> buffer; |
|
bencode(std::back_inserter(buffer), te); |
|
FILE* f = fopen((to_hex(ti->info_hash().to_string()) + ".torrent").c_str(), "wb+"); |
|
if (f) { |
|
fwrite(&buffer[0], 1, buffer.size(), f); |
|
fclose(f); |
|
} |
|
} |
|
|
|
fastresume_rejected_alert |
|
------------------------- |
|
|
|
This alert is generated when a fastresume file has been passed to ``add_torrent`` but the |
|
files on disk did not match the fastresume file. The ``error_code`` explains the reason why the |
|
resume file was rejected. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct fastresume_rejected_alert: torrent_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
error_code error; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
|
|
peer_blocked_alert |
|
------------------ |
|
|
|
This alert is posted when an incoming peer connection, or a peer that's about to be added |
|
to our peer list, is blocked for some reason. This could be any of: |
|
|
|
* the IP filter |
|
* i2p mixed mode restrictions (a normal peer is not allowed on an i2p swarm) |
|
* the port filter |
|
* the peer has a low port and ``no_connect_privileged_ports`` is enabled |
|
* the protocol of the peer is blocked (uTP/TCP blocking) |
|
|
|
The ``ip`` member is the address that was blocked. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct peer_blocked_alert: torrent_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
address ip; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
|
|
storage_moved_alert |
|
------------------- |
|
|
|
The ``storage_moved_alert`` is generated when all the disk IO has completed and the |
|
files have been moved, as an effect of a call to ``torrent_handle::move_storage``. This |
|
is useful to synchronize with the actual disk. The ``path`` member is the new path of |
|
the storage. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct storage_moved_alert: torrent_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
std::string path; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
|
|
storage_moved_failed_alert |
|
-------------------------- |
|
|
|
The ``storage_moved_failed_alert`` is generated when an attempt to move the storage |
|
(via torrent_handle::move_storage()) fails. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct storage_moved_failed_alert: torrent_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
error_code error; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
|
|
torrent_paused_alert |
|
-------------------- |
|
|
|
This alert is generated as a response to a ``torrent_handle::pause`` request. It is |
|
generated once all disk IO is complete and the files in the torrent have been closed. |
|
This is useful for synchronizing with the disk. |
|
|
|
There are no additional data members in this alert. |
|
|
|
torrent_resumed_alert |
|
--------------------- |
|
|
|
This alert is generated as a response to a ``torrent_handle::resume`` request. It is |
|
generated when a torrent goes from a paused state to an active state. |
|
|
|
There are no additional data members in this alert. |
|
|
|
save_resume_data_alert |
|
---------------------- |
|
|
|
This alert is generated as a response to a ``torrent_handle::save_resume_data`` request. |
|
It is generated once the disk IO thread is done writing the state for this torrent. |
|
The ``resume_data`` member points to the resume data. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct save_resume_data_alert: torrent_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
boost::shared_ptr<entry> resume_data; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
save_resume_data_failed_alert |
|
----------------------------- |
|
|
|
This alert is generated instead of ``save_resume_data_alert`` if there was an error |
|
generating the resume data. ``error`` describes what went wrong. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct save_resume_data_failed_alert: torrent_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
error_code error; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
stats_alert |
|
----------- |
|
|
|
This alert is posted approximately once every second, and it contains |
|
byte counters of most statistics that's tracked for torrents. Each active |
|
torrent posts these alerts regularly. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct stats_alert: torrent_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
enum stats_channel |
|
{ |
|
upload_payload, |
|
upload_protocol, |
|
upload_ip_protocol, |
|
upload_dht_protocol, |
|
upload_tracker_protocol, |
|
download_payload, |
|
download_protocol, |
|
download_ip_protocol, |
|
download_dht_protocol, |
|
download_tracker_protocol, |
|
num_channels |
|
}; |
|
|
|
int transferred[num_channels]; |
|
int interval; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
``transferred`` this is an array of samples. The enum describes what each |
|
sample is a measurement of. All of these are raw, and not smoothing is performed. |
|
|
|
``interval`` the number of milliseconds during which these stats |
|
were collected. This is typically just above 1000, but if CPU is |
|
limited, it may be higher than that. |
|
|
|
|
|
cache_flushed_alert |
|
------------------- |
|
|
|
This alert is posted when the disk cache has been flushed for a specific torrent |
|
as a result of a call to `flush_cache()`_. This alert belongs to the |
|
``storage_notification`` category, which must be enabled to let this alert through. |
|
The alert is also posted when removing a torrent from the session, once the outstanding |
|
cache flush is complete and the torrent does no longer have any files open. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct flush_cached_alert: torrent_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
}; |
|
|
|
torrent_need_cert_alert |
|
----------------------- |
|
|
|
This is always posted for SSL torrents. This is a reminder to the client that |
|
the torrent won't work unless torrent_handle::set_ssl_certificate() is called with |
|
a valid certificate. Valid certificates MUST be signed by the SSL certificate |
|
in the .torrent file. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct torrent_need_cert_alert: tracker_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
}; |
|
|
|
dht_announce_alert |
|
------------------ |
|
|
|
This alert is generated when a DHT node announces to an info-hash on our DHT node. It belongs |
|
to the ``dht_notification`` category. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct dht_announce_alert: alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
address ip; |
|
int port; |
|
sha1_hash info_hash; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
dht_get_peers_alert |
|
------------------- |
|
|
|
This alert is generated when a DHT node sends a ``get_peers`` message to our DHT node. |
|
It belongs to the ``dht_notification`` category. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct dht_get_peers_alert: alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
sha1_hash info_hash; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
dht_reply_alert |
|
--------------- |
|
|
|
This alert is generated each time the DHT receives peers from a node. ``num_peers`` |
|
is the number of peers we received in this packet. Typically these packets are |
|
received from multiple DHT nodes, and so the alerts are typically generated |
|
a few at a time. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct dht_reply_alert: tracker_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
int num_peers; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
dht_bootstrap_alert |
|
------------------- |
|
|
|
This alert is posted when the initial DHT bootstrap is done. There's no any other |
|
relevant information associated with this alert. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct dht_bootstrap_alert: alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
}; |
|
|
|
anonymous_mode_alert |
|
-------------------- |
|
|
|
This alert is posted when a bittorrent feature is blocked because of the |
|
anonymous mode. For instance, if the tracker proxy is not set up, no |
|
trackers will be used, because trackers can only be used through proxies |
|
when in anonymous mode. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct anonymous_mode_alert: tracker_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
enum kind_t |
|
{ |
|
tracker_not_anonymous = 1 |
|
}; |
|
int kind; |
|
std::string str; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
``kind`` specifies what error this is, it's one of: |
|
|
|
``tracker_not_anonymous`` means that there's no proxy set up for tracker |
|
communication and the tracker will not be contacted. The tracker which |
|
this failed for is specified in the ``str`` member. |
|
|
|
rss_alert |
|
--------- |
|
|
|
This alert is posted on RSS feed events such as start of RSS feed updates, |
|
successful completed updates and errors during updates. |
|
|
|
This alert is only posted if the ``rss_notifications`` category is enabled |
|
in the alert mask. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct rss_alert: alert |
|
{ |
|
// .. |
|
virtual std::string message() const; |
|
|
|
enum state_t |
|
{ |
|
state_updating, state_updated, state_error |
|
}; |
|
|
|
feed_handle handle; |
|
std::string url; |
|
int state; |
|
error_code error; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
``handle`` is the handle to the feed which generated this alert. |
|
|
|
``url`` is a short cut to access the url of the feed, without |
|
having to call ``get_settings()``. |
|
|
|
``state`` is one of: |
|
|
|
``rss_alert::state_updating`` |
|
An update of this feed was just initiated, it will either succeed |
|
or fail soon. |
|
|
|
``rss_alert::state_updated`` |
|
The feed just completed a successful update, there may be new items |
|
in it. If you're adding torrents manually, you may want to request |
|
the feed status of the feed and look through the ``items`` vector. |
|
|
|
``rss_akert::state_error`` |
|
An error just occurred. See the ``error`` field for information on |
|
what went wrong. |
|
|
|
``error`` is an error code used for when an error occurs on the feed. |
|
|
|
rss_item_alert |
|
-------------- |
|
|
|
This alert is posted every time a new RSS item (i.e. torrent) is received |
|
from an RSS feed. |
|
|
|
It is only posted if the ``rss_notifications`` category is enabled in the |
|
alert mask. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct rss_alert : alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
virtual std::string message() const; |
|
|
|
feed_handle handle; |
|
feed_item item; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
incoming_connection_alert |
|
------------------------- |
|
|
|
The incoming connection alert is posted every time we successfully accept |
|
an incoming connection, through any mean. The most straigh-forward ways |
|
of accepting incoming connections are through the TCP listen socket and |
|
the UDP listen socket for uTP sockets. However, connections may also be |
|
accepted ofer a Socks5 or i2p listen socket, or via a torrent specific |
|
listen socket for SSL torrents. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct incoming_connection_alert: alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
virtual std::string message() const; |
|
|
|
int socket_type; |
|
tcp::endpoint ip; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
``socket_type`` tells you what kind of socket the connection was accepted |
|
as: |
|
|
|
+----------+-------------------------------------+ |
|
| value | type | |
|
+==========+=====================================+ |
|
| 0 | none (no socket instantiated) | |
|
+----------+-------------------------------------+ |
|
| 1 | TCP | |
|
+----------+-------------------------------------+ |
|
| 2 | Socks5 | |
|
+----------+-------------------------------------+ |
|
| 3 | HTTP | |
|
+----------+-------------------------------------+ |
|
| 4 | uTP | |
|
+----------+-------------------------------------+ |
|
| 5 | i2p | |
|
+----------+-------------------------------------+ |
|
| 6 | SSL/TCP | |
|
+----------+-------------------------------------+ |
|
| 7 | SSL/Socks5 | |
|
+----------+-------------------------------------+ |
|
| 8 | HTTPS (SSL/HTTP) | |
|
+----------+-------------------------------------+ |
|
| 9 | SSL/uTP | |
|
+----------+-------------------------------------+ |
|
|
|
``ip`` is the IP address and port the connection came from. |
|
|
|
state_update_alert |
|
------------------ |
|
|
|
This alert is only posted when requested by the user, by calling `post_torrent_updates()`_ |
|
on the session. It contains the torrent status of all torrents that changed |
|
since last time this message was posted. Its category is ``status_notification``, but |
|
it's not subject to filtering, since it's only manually posted anyway. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
|
|
struct state_update_alert: alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
std::vector<torrent_status> status; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
``status`` contains the torrent status of all torrents that changed since last time |
|
this message was posted. Note that you can map a torrent status to a specific torrent |
|
via its ``handle`` member. The receiving end is suggested to have all torrents sorted |
|
by the ``torrent_handle`` or hashed by it, for efficient updates. |
|
|
|
torrent_update_alert |
|
-------------------- |
|
|
|
When a torrent changes its info-hash, this alert is posted. This only happens in very |
|
specific cases. For instance, when a torrent is downloaded from a URL, the true info |
|
hash is not known immediately. First the .torrent file must be downloaded and parsed. |
|
|
|
Once this download completes, the ``torrent_update_alert`` is posted to notify the client |
|
of the info-hash changing. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct torrent_update_alert: torrent_alert |
|
{ |
|
// ... |
|
sha1_hash old_ih; |
|
sha1_hash new_ih; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
``old_ih`` and ``new_ih`` are the previous and new info-hash for the torrent, respectively. |
|
|
|
alert dispatcher |
|
================ |
|
|
|
The ``handle_alert`` class is defined in ``<libtorrent/alert.hpp>``. |
|
|
|
Examples usage:: |
|
|
|
struct my_handler |
|
{ |
|
void operator()(portmap_error_alert const& a) const |
|
{ |
|
std::cout << "Portmapper: " << a.msg << std::endl; |
|
} |
|
|
|
void operator()(tracker_warning_alert const& a) const |
|
{ |
|
std::cout << "Tracker warning: " << a.msg << std::endl; |
|
} |
|
|
|
void operator()(torrent_finished_alert const& a) const |
|
{ |
|
// write fast resume data |
|
// ... |
|
|
|
std::cout << a.handle.torrent_file()->name() << "completed" |
|
<< std::endl; |
|
} |
|
}; |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
std::auto_ptr<alert> a; |
|
a = ses.pop_alert(); |
|
my_handler h; |
|
while (a.get()) |
|
{ |
|
handle_alert<portmap_error_alert |
|
, tracker_warning_alert |
|
, torrent_finished_alert |
|
>::handle_alert(h, a); |
|
a = ses.pop_alert(); |
|
} |
|
|
|
In this example 3 alert types are used. You can use any number of template |
|
parameters to select between more types. If the number of types are more than |
|
15, you can define ``TORRENT_MAX_ALERT_TYPES`` to a greater number before |
|
including ``<libtorrent/alert.hpp>``. |
|
|
|
|
|
exceptions |
|
========== |
|
|
|
Many functions in libtorrent have two versions, one that throws exceptions on |
|
errors and one that takes an ``error_code`` reference which is filled with the |
|
error code on errors. |
|
|
|
There is one exception class that is used for errors in libtorrent, it is based |
|
on boost.system's ``error_code`` class to carry the error code. |
|
|
|
libtorrent_exception |
|
-------------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct libtorrent_exception: std::exception |
|
{ |
|
libtorrent_exception(error_code const& s); |
|
virtual const char* what() const throw(); |
|
virtual ~libtorrent_exception() throw() {} |
|
boost::system::error_code error() const; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
|
|
error_code |
|
========== |
|
|
|
libtorrent uses boost.system's ``error_code`` class to represent errors. libtorrent has |
|
its own error category (``libtorrent::get_libtorrent_category()``) whith the following error |
|
codes: |
|
|
|
====== ========================================= ================================================================= |
|
code symbol description |
|
====== ========================================= ================================================================= |
|
0 no_error Not an error |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
1 file_collision Two torrents has files which end up overwriting each other |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
2 failed_hash_check A piece did not match its piece hash |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
3 torrent_is_no_dict The .torrent file does not contain a bencoded dictionary at |
|
its top level |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
4 torrent_missing_info The .torrent file does not have an ``info`` dictionary |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
5 torrent_info_no_dict The .torrent file's ``info`` entry is not a dictionary |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
6 torrent_missing_piece_length The .torrent file does not have a ``piece length`` entry |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
7 torrent_missing_name The .torrent file does not have a ``name`` entry |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
8 torrent_invalid_name The .torrent file's name entry is invalid |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
9 torrent_invalid_length The length of a file, or of the whole .torrent file is invalid. |
|
Either negative or not an integer |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
10 torrent_file_parse_failed Failed to parse a file entry in the .torrent |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
11 torrent_missing_pieces The ``pieces`` field is missing or invalid in the .torrent file |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
12 torrent_invalid_hashes The ``pieces`` string has incorrect length |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
13 too_many_pieces_in_torrent The .torrent file has more pieces than is supported by libtorrent |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
14 invalid_swarm_metadata The metadata (.torrent file) that was received from the swarm |
|
matched the info-hash, but failed to be parsed |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
15 invalid_bencoding The file or buffer is not correctly bencoded |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
16 no_files_in_torrent The .torrent file does not contain any files |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
17 invalid_escaped_string The string was not properly url-encoded as expected |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
18 session_is_closing Operation is not permitted since the session is shutting down |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
19 duplicate_torrent There's already a torrent with that info-hash added to the |
|
session |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
20 invalid_torrent_handle The supplied torrent_handle is not referring to a valid torrent |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
21 invalid_entry_type The type requested from the entry did not match its type |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
22 missing_info_hash_in_uri The specified URI does not contain a valid info-hash |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
23 file_too_short One of the files in the torrent was unexpectadly small. This |
|
might be caused by files being changed by an external process |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
24 unsupported_url_protocol The URL used an unknown protocol. Currently ``http`` and |
|
``https`` (if built with openssl support) are recognized. For |
|
trackers ``udp`` is recognized as well. |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
25 url_parse_error The URL did not conform to URL syntax and failed to be parsed |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
26 peer_sent_empty_piece The peer sent a 'piece' message of length 0 |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
27 parse_failed A bencoded structure was currupt and failed to be parsed |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
28 invalid_file_tag The fast resume file was missing or had an invalid file version |
|
tag |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
29 missing_info_hash The fast resume file was missing or had an invalid info-hash |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
30 mismatching_info_hash The info-hash in the resume file did not match the torrent |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
31 invalid_hostname The URL contained an invalid hostname |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
32 invalid_port The URL had an invalid port |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
33 port_blocked The port is blocked by the port-filter, and prevented the |
|
connection |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
34 expected_close_bracket_in_address The IPv6 address was expected to end with ']' |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
35 destructing_torrent The torrent is being destructed, preventing the operation to |
|
succeed |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
36 timed_out The connection timed out |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
37 upload_upload_connection The peer is upload only, and we are upload only. There's no point |
|
in keeping the connection |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
38 uninteresting_upload_peer The peer is upload only, and we're not interested in it. There's |
|
no point in keeping the connection |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
39 invalid_info_hash The peer sent an unknown info-hash |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
40 torrent_paused The torrent is paused, preventing the operation from succeeding |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
41 invalid_have The peer sent an invalid have message, either wrong size or |
|
referring to a piece that doesn't exist in the torrent |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
42 invalid_bitfield_size The bitfield message had the incorrect size |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
43 too_many_requests_when_choked The peer kept requesting pieces after it was choked, possible |
|
abuse attempt. |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
44 invalid_piece The peer sent a piece message that does not correspond to a |
|
piece request sent by the client |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
45 no_memory memory allocation failed |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
46 torrent_aborted The torrent is aborted, preventing the operation to succeed |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
47 self_connection The peer is a connection to ourself, no point in keeping it |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
48 invalid_piece_size The peer sent a piece message with invalid size, either negative |
|
or greater than one block |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
49 timed_out_no_interest The peer has not been interesting or interested in us for too |
|
long, no point in keeping it around |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
50 timed_out_inactivity The peer has not said anything in a long time, possibly dead |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
51 timed_out_no_handshake The peer did not send a handshake within a reasonable amount of |
|
time, it might not be a bittorrent peer |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
52 timed_out_no_request The peer has been unchoked for too long without requesting any |
|
data. It might be lying about its interest in us |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
53 invalid_choke The peer sent an invalid choke message |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
54 invalid_unchoke The peer send an invalid unchoke message |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
55 invalid_interested The peer sent an invalid interested message |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
56 invalid_not_interested The peer sent an invalid not-interested message |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
57 invalid_request The peer sent an invalid piece request message |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
58 invalid_hash_list The peer sent an invalid hash-list message (this is part of the |
|
merkle-torrent extension) |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
59 invalid_hash_piece The peer sent an invalid hash-piece message (this is part of the |
|
merkle-torrent extension) |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
60 invalid_cancel The peer sent an invalid cancel message |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
61 invalid_dht_port The peer sent an invalid DHT port-message |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
62 invalid_suggest The peer sent an invalid suggest piece-message |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
63 invalid_have_all The peer sent an invalid have all-message |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
64 invalid_have_none The peer sent an invalid have none-message |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
65 invalid_reject The peer sent an invalid reject message |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
66 invalid_allow_fast The peer sent an invalid allow fast-message |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
67 invalid_extended The peer sent an invalid extesion message ID |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
68 invalid_message The peer sent an invalid message ID |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
69 sync_hash_not_found The synchronization hash was not found in the encrypted handshake |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
70 invalid_encryption_constant The encryption constant in the handshake is invalid |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
71 no_plaintext_mode The peer does not support plaintext, which is the selected mode |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
72 no_rc4_mode The peer does not support rc4, which is the selected mode |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
73 unsupported_encryption_mode The peer does not support any of the encryption modes that the |
|
client supports |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
74 unsupported_encryption_mode_selected The peer selected an encryption mode that the client did not |
|
advertise and does not support |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
75 invalid_pad_size The pad size used in the encryption handshake is of invalid size |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
76 invalid_encrypt_handshake The encryption handshake is invalid |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
77 no_incoming_encrypted The client is set to not support incoming encrypted connections |
|
and this is an encrypted connection |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
78 no_incoming_regular The client is set to not support incoming regular bittorrent |
|
connections, and this is a regular connection |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
79 duplicate_peer_id The client is already connected to this peer-ID |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
80 torrent_removed Torrent was removed |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
81 packet_too_large The packet size exceeded the upper sanity check-limit |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
82 reserved |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
83 http_error The web server responded with an error |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
84 missing_location The web server response is missing a location header |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
85 invalid_redirection The web seed redirected to a path that no longer matches the |
|
.torrent directory structure |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
86 redirecting The connection was closed becaused it redirected to a different |
|
URL |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
87 invalid_range The HTTP range header is invalid |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
88 no_content_length The HTTP response did not have a content length |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
89 banned_by_ip_filter The IP is blocked by the IP filter |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
90 too_many_connections At the connection limit |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
91 peer_banned The peer is marked as banned |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
92 stopping_torrent The torrent is stopping, causing the operation to fail |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
93 too_many_corrupt_pieces The peer has sent too many corrupt pieces and is banned |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
94 torrent_not_ready The torrent is not ready to receive peers |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
95 peer_not_constructed The peer is not completely constructed yet |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
96 session_closing The session is closing, causing the operation to fail |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
97 optimistic_disconnect The peer was disconnected in order to leave room for a |
|
potentially better peer |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
98 torrent_finished The torrent is finished |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
99 no_router No UPnP router found |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
100 metadata_too_large The metadata message says the metadata exceeds the limit |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
101 invalid_metadata_request The peer sent an invalid metadata request message |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
102 invalid_metadata_size The peer advertised an invalid metadata size |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
103 invalid_metadata_offset The peer sent a message with an invalid metadata offset |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
104 invalid_metadata_message The peer sent an invalid metadata message |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
105 pex_message_too_large The peer sent a peer exchange message that was too large |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
106 invalid_pex_message The peer sent an invalid peer exchange message |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
107 invalid_lt_tracker_message The peer sent an invalid tracker exchange message |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
108 too_frequent_pex The peer sent an pex messages too often. This is a possible |
|
attempt of and attack |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
109 no_metadata The operation failed because it requires the torrent to have |
|
the metadata (.torrent file) and it doesn't have it yet. |
|
This happens for magnet links before they have downloaded the |
|
metadata, and also torrents added by URL. |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
110 invalid_dont_have The peer sent an invalid ``dont_have`` message. The dont have |
|
message is an extension to allow peers to advertise that the |
|
no longer has a piece they previously had. |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
111 requires_ssl_connection The peer tried to connect to an SSL torrent without connecting |
|
over SSL. |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
112 invalid_ssl_cert The peer tried to connect to a torrent with a certificate |
|
for a different torrent. |
|
====== ========================================= ================================================================= |
|
|
|
NAT-PMP errors: |
|
|
|
====== ========================================= ================================================================= |
|
code symbol description |
|
====== ========================================= ================================================================= |
|
120 unsupported_protocol_version The NAT-PMP router responded with an unsupported protocol version |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
121 natpmp_not_authorized You are not authorized to map ports on this NAT-PMP router |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
122 network_failure The NAT-PMP router failed because of a network failure |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
123 no_resources The NAT-PMP router failed because of lack of resources |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
124 unsupported_opcode The NAT-PMP router failed because an unsupported opcode was sent |
|
====== ========================================= ================================================================= |
|
|
|
fastresume data errors: |
|
|
|
====== ========================================= ================================================================= |
|
code symbol description |
|
====== ========================================= ================================================================= |
|
130 missing_file_sizes The resume data file is missing the 'file sizes' entry |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
131 no_files_in_resume_data The resume data file 'file sizes' entry is empty |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
132 missing_pieces The resume data file is missing the 'pieces' and 'slots' entry |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
133 mismatching_number_of_files The number of files in the resume data does not match the number |
|
of files in the torrent |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
134 mismatching_files_size One of the files on disk has a different size than in the fast |
|
resume file |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
135 mismatching_file_timestamp One of the files on disk has a different timestamp than in the |
|
fast resume file |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
136 not_a_dictionary The resume data file is not a dictionary |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
137 invalid_blocks_per_piece The 'blocks per piece' entry is invalid in the resume data file |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
138 missing_slots The resume file is missing the 'slots' entry, which is required |
|
for torrents with compact allocation |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
139 too_many_slots The resume file contains more slots than the torrent |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
140 invalid_slot_list The 'slot' entry is invalid in the resume data |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
141 invalid_piece_index One index in the 'slot' list is invalid |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
142 pieces_need_reorder The pieces on disk needs to be re-ordered for the specified |
|
allocation mode. This happens if you specify sparse allocation |
|
and the files on disk are using compact storage. The pieces needs |
|
to be moved to their right position |
|
====== ========================================= ================================================================= |
|
|
|
HTTP errors: |
|
|
|
====== ========================================= ================================================================= |
|
150 http_parse_error The HTTP header was not correctly formatted |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
151 http_missing_location The HTTP response was in the 300-399 range but lacked a location |
|
header |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
152 http_failed_decompress The HTTP response was encoded with gzip or deflate but |
|
decompressing it failed |
|
====== ========================================= ================================================================= |
|
|
|
I2P errors: |
|
|
|
====== ========================================= ================================================================= |
|
160 no_i2p_router The URL specified an i2p address, but no i2p router is configured |
|
====== ========================================= ================================================================= |
|
|
|
tracker errors: |
|
|
|
====== ========================================= ================================================================= |
|
170 scrape_not_available The tracker URL doesn't support transforming it into a scrape |
|
URL. i.e. it doesn't contain "announce. |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
171 invalid_tracker_response invalid tracker response |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
172 invalid_peer_dict invalid peer dictionary entry. Not a dictionary |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
173 tracker_failure tracker sent a failure message |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
174 invalid_files_entry missing or invalid 'files' entry |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
175 invalid_hash_entry missing or invalid 'hash' entry |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
176 invalid_peers_entry missing or invalid 'peers' and 'peers6' entry |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
177 invalid_tracker_response_length udp tracker response packet has invalid size |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
178 invalid_tracker_transaction_id invalid transaction id in udp tracker response |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
179 invalid_tracker_action invalid action field in udp tracker response |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
190 expected_string expected string in bencoded string |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
191 expected_colon expected colon in bencoded string |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
192 unexpected_eof unexpected end of file in bencoded string |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
193 expected_value expected value (list, dict, int or string) in bencoded string |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
194 depth_exceeded bencoded recursion depth limit exceeded |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
195 item_limit_exceeded bencoded item count limit exceeded |
|
====== ========================================= ================================================================= |
|
|
|
The names of these error codes are declared in then ``libtorrent::errors`` namespace. |
|
|
|
There is also another error category, ``libtorrent::upnp_category``, defining errors |
|
retrned by UPnP routers. Here's a (possibly incomplete) list of UPnP error codes: |
|
|
|
====== ========================================= ==================================================== |
|
code symbol description |
|
====== ========================================= ==================================================== |
|
0 no_error No error |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ---------------------------------------------------- |
|
402 invalid_argument One of the arguments in the request is invalid |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ---------------------------------------------------- |
|
501 action_failed The request failed |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ---------------------------------------------------- |
|
714 value_not_in_array The specified value does not exist in the array |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ---------------------------------------------------- |
|
715 source_ip_cannot_be_wildcarded The source IP address cannot be wild-carded, but |
|
must be fully specified |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ---------------------------------------------------- |
|
716 external_port_cannot_be_wildcarded The external port cannot be wildcarded, but must |
|
be specified |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ---------------------------------------------------- |
|
718 port_mapping_conflict The port mapping entry specified conflicts with a |
|
mapping assigned previously to another client |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ---------------------------------------------------- |
|
724 internal_port_must_match_external Internal and external port value must be the same |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ---------------------------------------------------- |
|
725 only_permanent_leases_supported The NAT implementation only supports permanent |
|
lease times on port mappings |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ---------------------------------------------------- |
|
726 remote_host_must_be_wildcard RemoteHost must be a wildcard and cannot be a |
|
specific IP addres or DNS name |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- ---------------------------------------------------- |
|
727 external_port_must_be_wildcard ExternalPort must be a wildcard and cannot be a |
|
specific port |
|
====== ========================================= ==================================================== |
|
|
|
The UPnP errors are declared in the ``libtorrent::upnp_errors`` namespace. |
|
|
|
HTTP errors are reported in the ``libtorrent::http_category``, with error code enums in |
|
the ``libtorrent::errors`` namespace. |
|
|
|
====== ========================================= |
|
code symbol |
|
====== ========================================= |
|
100 cont |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- |
|
200 ok |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- |
|
201 created |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- |
|
202 accepted |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- |
|
204 no_content |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- |
|
300 multiple_choices |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- |
|
301 moved_permanently |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- |
|
302 moved_temporarily |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- |
|
304 not_modified |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- |
|
400 bad_request |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- |
|
401 unauthorized |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- |
|
403 forbidden |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- |
|
404 not_found |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- |
|
500 internal_server_error |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- |
|
501 not_implemented |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- |
|
502 bad_gateway |
|
------ ----------------------------------------- |
|
503 service_unavailable |
|
====== ========================================= |
|
|
|
translating error codes |
|
----------------------- |
|
|
|
The error_code::message() function will typically return a localized error string, |
|
for system errors. That is, errors that belong to the generic or system category. |
|
|
|
Errors that belong to the libtorrent error category are not localized however, they |
|
are only available in english. In order to translate libtorrent errors, compare the |
|
error category of the ``error_code`` object against ``libtorrent::get_libtorrent_category()``, |
|
and if matches, you know the error code refers to the list above. You can provide |
|
your own mapping from error code to string, which is localized. In this case, you |
|
cannot rely on ``error_code::message()`` to generate your strings. |
|
|
|
The numeric values of the errors are part of the API and will stay the same, although |
|
new error codes may be appended at the end. |
|
|
|
Here's a simple example of how to translate error codes:: |
|
|
|
std::string error_code_to_string(boost::system::error_code const& ec) |
|
{ |
|
if (ec.category() != libtorrent::get_libtorrent_category()) |
|
{ |
|
return ec.message(); |
|
} |
|
// the error is a libtorrent error |
|
|
|
int code = ec.value(); |
|
static const char const* swedish[] = |
|
{ |
|
"inget fel", |
|
"en fil i torrenten kolliderar med en fil fran en annan torrent", |
|
"hash check misslyckades", |
|
"torrent filen ar inte en dictionary", |
|
"'info'-nyckeln saknas eller ar korrupt i torrentfilen", |
|
"'info'-faltet ar inte en dictionary", |
|
"'piece length' faltet saknas eller ar korrupt i torrentfilen", |
|
"torrentfilen saknar namnfaltet", |
|
"ogiltigt namn i torrentfilen (kan vara en attack)", |
|
// ... more strings here |
|
}; |
|
|
|
// use the default error string in case we don't have it |
|
// in our translated list |
|
if (code < 0 || code >= sizeof(swedish)/sizeof(swedish[0])) |
|
return ec.message(); |
|
|
|
return swedish[code]; |
|
} |
|
|
|
storage_interface |
|
================= |
|
|
|
The storage interface is a pure virtual class that can be implemented to |
|
customize how and where data for a torrent is stored. The default storage |
|
implementation uses regular files in the filesystem, mapping the files in the |
|
torrent in the way one would assume a torrent is saved to disk. Implementing |
|
your own storage interface makes it possible to store all data in RAM, or in |
|
some optimized order on disk (the order the pieces are received for instance), |
|
or saving multifile torrents in a single file in order to be able to take |
|
advantage of optimized disk-I/O. |
|
|
|
It is also possible to write a thin class that uses the default storage but |
|
modifies some particular behavior, for instance encrypting the data before |
|
it's written to disk, and decrypting it when it's read again. |
|
|
|
The storage interface is based on slots, each slot is 'piece_size' number |
|
of bytes. All access is done by writing and reading whole or partial |
|
slots. One slot is one piece in the torrent, but the data in the slot |
|
does not necessarily correspond to the piece with the same index (in |
|
compact allocation mode it won't). |
|
|
|
libtorrent comes with two built-in storage implementations; ``default_storage`` |
|
and ``disabled_storage``. Their constructor functions are called ``default_storage_constructor`` |
|
and ``disabled_storage_constructor`` respectively. The disabled storage does |
|
just what it sounds like. It throws away data that's written, and it |
|
reads garbage. It's useful mostly for benchmarking and profiling purpose. |
|
|
|
|
|
The interface looks like this:: |
|
|
|
struct storage_interface |
|
{ |
|
virtual bool initialize(bool allocate_files) = 0; |
|
virtual bool has_any_file() = 0; |
|
virtual void hint_read(int slot, int offset, int len); |
|
virtual int readv(file::iovec_t const* bufs, int slot, int offset, int num_bufs) = 0; |
|
virtual int writev(file::iovec_t const* bufs, int slot, int offset, int num_bufs) = 0; |
|
virtual int sparse_end(int start) const; |
|
virtual bool move_storage(fs::path save_path) = 0; |
|
virtual bool verify_resume_data(lazy_entry const& rd, error_code& error) = 0; |
|
virtual bool write_resume_data(entry& rd) const = 0; |
|
virtual bool move_slot(int src_slot, int dst_slot) = 0; |
|
virtual bool swap_slots(int slot1, int slot2) = 0; |
|
virtual bool swap_slots3(int slot1, int slot2, int slot3) = 0; |
|
virtual bool rename_file(int file, std::string const& new_name) = 0; |
|
virtual bool release_files() = 0; |
|
virtual bool delete_files() = 0; |
|
virtual void finalize_file(int index) {} |
|
virtual ~storage_interface() {} |
|
|
|
// non virtual functions |
|
|
|
disk_buffer_pool* disk_pool(); |
|
void set_error(std::string const& file, error_code const& ec) const; |
|
error_code const& error() const; |
|
std::string const& error_file() const; |
|
void clear_error(); |
|
}; |
|
|
|
|
|
initialize() |
|
------------ |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
bool initialize(bool allocate_files) = 0; |
|
|
|
This function is called when the storage is to be initialized. The default storage |
|
will create directories and empty files at this point. If ``allocate_files`` is true, |
|
it will also ``ftruncate`` all files to their target size. |
|
|
|
Returning ``true`` indicates an error occurred. |
|
|
|
has_any_file() |
|
-------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
virtual bool has_any_file() = 0; |
|
|
|
This function is called when first checking (or re-checking) the storage for a torrent. |
|
It should return true if any of the files that is used in this storage exists on disk. |
|
If so, the storage will be checked for existing pieces before starting the download. |
|
|
|
hint_read() |
|
----------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
void hint_read(int slot, int offset, int len); |
|
|
|
This function is called when a read job is queued. It gives the storage wrapper an |
|
opportunity to hint the operating system about this coming read. For instance, the |
|
storage may call ``posix_fadvise(POSIX_FADV_WILLNEED)`` or ``fcntl(F_RDADVISE)``. |
|
|
|
readv() writev() |
|
---------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
int readv(file::iovec_t const* buf, int slot, int offset, int num_bufs) = 0; |
|
int write(const char* buf, int slot, int offset, int size) = 0; |
|
|
|
These functions should read or write the data in or to the given ``slot`` at the given ``offset``. |
|
It should read or write ``num_bufs`` buffers sequentially, where the size of each buffer |
|
is specified in the buffer array ``bufs``. The file::iovec_t type has the following members:: |
|
|
|
struct iovec_t |
|
{ |
|
void* iov_base; |
|
size_t iov_len; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
The return value is the number of bytes actually read or written, or -1 on failure. If |
|
it returns -1, the error code is expected to be set to |
|
|
|
Every buffer in ``bufs`` can be assumed to be page aligned and be of a page aligned size, |
|
except for the last buffer of the torrent. The allocated buffer can be assumed to fit a |
|
fully page aligned number of bytes though. This is useful when reading and writing the |
|
last piece of a file in unbuffered mode. |
|
|
|
The ``offset`` is aligned to 16 kiB boundries *most of the time*, but there are rare |
|
exceptions when it's not. Specifically if the read cache is disabled/or full and a |
|
client requests unaligned data, or the file itself is not aligned in the torrent. |
|
Most clients request aligned data. |
|
|
|
sparse_end() |
|
------------ |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
int sparse_end(int start) const; |
|
|
|
This function is optional. It is supposed to return the first piece, starting at |
|
``start`` that is fully contained within a data-region on disk (i.e. non-sparse |
|
region). The purpose of this is to skip parts of files that can be known to contain |
|
zeros when checking files. |
|
|
|
move_storage() |
|
-------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
bool move_storage(fs::path save_path) = 0; |
|
|
|
This function should move all the files belonging to the storage to the new save_path. |
|
The default storage moves the single file or the directory of the torrent. |
|
|
|
Before moving the files, any open file handles may have to be closed, like |
|
``release_files()``. |
|
|
|
Returning ``false`` indicates an error occurred. |
|
|
|
|
|
verify_resume_data() |
|
-------------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
bool verify_resume_data(lazy_entry const& rd, error_code& error) = 0; |
|
|
|
This function should verify the resume data ``rd`` with the files |
|
on disk. If the resume data seems to be up-to-date, return true. If |
|
not, set ``error`` to a description of what mismatched and return false. |
|
|
|
The default storage may compare file sizes and time stamps of the files. |
|
|
|
Returning ``false`` indicates an error occurred. |
|
|
|
|
|
write_resume_data() |
|
------------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
bool write_resume_data(entry& rd) const = 0; |
|
|
|
This function should fill in resume data, the current state of the |
|
storage, in ``rd``. The default storage adds file timestamps and |
|
sizes. |
|
|
|
Returning ``true`` indicates an error occurred. |
|
|
|
|
|
move_slot() |
|
----------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
bool move_slot(int src_slot, int dst_slot) = 0; |
|
|
|
This function should copy or move the data in slot ``src_slot`` to |
|
the slot ``dst_slot``. This is only used in compact mode. |
|
|
|
If the storage caches slots, this could be implemented more |
|
efficient than reading and writing the data. |
|
|
|
Returning ``true`` indicates an error occurred. |
|
|
|
|
|
swap_slots() |
|
------------ |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
bool swap_slots(int slot1, int slot2) = 0; |
|
|
|
This function should swap the data in ``slot1`` and ``slot2``. The default |
|
storage uses a scratch buffer to read the data into, then moving the other |
|
slot and finally writing back the temporary slot's data |
|
|
|
This is only used in compact mode. |
|
|
|
Returning ``true`` indicates an error occurred. |
|
|
|
|
|
swap_slots3() |
|
------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
bool swap_slots3(int slot1, int slot2, int slot3) = 0; |
|
|
|
This function should do a 3-way swap, or shift of the slots. ``slot1`` |
|
should move to ``slot2``, which should be moved to ``slot3`` which in turn |
|
should be moved to ``slot1``. |
|
|
|
This is only used in compact mode. |
|
|
|
Returning ``true`` indicates an error occurred. |
|
|
|
|
|
rename_file() |
|
------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
bool rename_file(int file, std::string const& new_name) = 0; |
|
|
|
Rename file with index ``file`` to the thame ``new_name``. If there is an error, |
|
``true`` should be returned. |
|
|
|
|
|
release_files() |
|
--------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
bool release_files() = 0; |
|
|
|
This function should release all the file handles that it keeps open to files |
|
belonging to this storage. The default implementation just calls |
|
``file_pool::release_files(this)``. |
|
|
|
Returning ``true`` indicates an error occurred. |
|
|
|
|
|
delete_files() |
|
-------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
bool delete_files() = 0; |
|
|
|
This function should delete all files and directories belonging to this storage. |
|
|
|
Returning ``true`` indicates an error occurred. |
|
|
|
The ``disk_buffer_pool`` is used to allocate and free disk buffers. It has the |
|
following members:: |
|
|
|
struct disk_buffer_pool : boost::noncopyable |
|
{ |
|
char* allocate_buffer(char const* category); |
|
void free_buffer(char* buf); |
|
|
|
char* allocate_buffers(int blocks, char const* category); |
|
void free_buffers(char* buf, int blocks); |
|
|
|
int block_size() const { return m_block_size; } |
|
|
|
void release_memory(); |
|
}; |
|
|
|
finalize_file() |
|
--------------- |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
virtual void finalize_file(int index); |
|
|
|
This function is called each time a file is completely downloaded. The |
|
storage implementation can perform last operations on a file. The file will |
|
not be opened for writing after this. |
|
|
|
``index`` is the index of the file that completed. |
|
|
|
On windows the default storage implementation clears the sparse file flag |
|
on the specified file. |
|
|
|
example |
|
------- |
|
|
|
This is an example storage implementation that stores all pieces in a ``std::map``, |
|
i.e. in RAM. It's not necessarily very useful in practice, but illustrates the |
|
basics of implementing a custom storage. |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
struct temp_storage : storage_interface |
|
{ |
|
temp_storage(file_storage const& fs) : m_files(fs) {} |
|
virtual bool initialize(bool allocate_files) { return false; } |
|
virtual bool has_any_file() { return false; } |
|
virtual int read(char* buf, int slot, int offset, int size) |
|
{ |
|
std::map<int, std::vector<char> >::const_iterator i = m_file_data.find(slot); |
|
if (i == m_file_data.end()) return 0; |
|
int available = i->second.size() - offset; |
|
if (available <= 0) return 0; |
|
if (available > size) available = size; |
|
memcpy(buf, &i->second[offset], available); |
|
return available; |
|
} |
|
virtual int write(const char* buf, int slot, int offset, int size) |
|
{ |
|
std::vector<char>& data = m_file_data[slot]; |
|
if (data.size() < offset + size) data.resize(offset + size); |
|
std::memcpy(&data[offset], buf, size); |
|
return size; |
|
} |
|
virtual bool rename_file(int file, std::string const& new_name) |
|
{ assert(false); return false; } |
|
virtual bool move_storage(std::string const& save_path) { return false; } |
|
virtual bool verify_resume_data(lazy_entry const& rd, error_code& error) { return false; } |
|
virtual bool write_resume_data(entry& rd) const { return false; } |
|
virtual bool move_slot(int src_slot, int dst_slot) { assert(false); return false; } |
|
virtual bool swap_slots(int slot1, int slot2) { assert(false); return false; } |
|
virtual bool swap_slots3(int slot1, int slot2, int slot3) { assert(false); return false; } |
|
virtual size_type physical_offset(int slot, int offset) |
|
{ return slot * m_files.piece_length() + offset; }; |
|
virtual sha1_hash hash_for_slot(int slot, partial_hash& ph, int piece_size) |
|
{ |
|
int left = piece_size - ph.offset; |
|
assert(left >= 0); |
|
if (left > 0) |
|
{ |
|
std::vector<char>& data = m_file_data[slot]; |
|
// if there are padding files, those blocks will be considered |
|
// completed even though they haven't been written to the storage. |
|
// in this case, just extend the piece buffer to its full size |
|
// and fill it with zeroes. |
|
if (data.size() < piece_size) data.resize(piece_size, 0); |
|
ph.h.update(&data[ph.offset], left); |
|
} |
|
return ph.h.final(); |
|
} |
|
virtual bool release_files() { return false; } |
|
virtual bool delete_files() { return false; } |
|
|
|
std::map<int, std::vector<char> > m_file_data; |
|
file_storage m_files; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
storage_interface* temp_storage_constructor( |
|
file_storage const& fs, file_storage const* mapped |
|
, std::string const& path, file_pool& fp |
|
, std::vector<boost::uint8_t> const& prio) |
|
{ |
|
return new temp_storage(fs); |
|
} |
|
|
|
magnet links |
|
============ |
|
|
|
Magnet links are URIs that includes an info-hash, a display name and optionally |
|
a tracker url. The idea behind magnet links is that an end user can click on a |
|
link in a browser and have it handled by a bittorrent application, to start a |
|
download, without any .torrent file. |
|
|
|
The format of the magnet URI is: |
|
|
|
**magnet:?xt=urn:btih:** *Base32 encoded info-hash* [ **&dn=** *name of download* ] [ **&tr=** *tracker URL* ]* |
|
|
|
queuing |
|
======= |
|
|
|
libtorrent supports *queuing*. Which means it makes sure that a limited number of |
|
torrents are being downloaded at any given time, and once a torrent is completely |
|
downloaded, the next in line is started. |
|
|
|
Torrents that are *auto managed* are subject to the queuing and the active torrents |
|
limits. To make a torrent auto managed, set ``auto_managed`` to true when adding the |
|
torrent (see `async_add_torrent() add_torrent()`_). |
|
|
|
The limits of the number of downloading and seeding torrents are controlled via |
|
``active_downloads``, ``active_seeds`` and ``active_limit`` in session_settings_. |
|
These limits takes non auto managed torrents into account as well. If there are |
|
more non-auto managed torrents being downloaded than the ``active_downloads`` |
|
setting, any auto managed torrents will be queued until torrents are removed so |
|
that the number drops below the limit. |
|
|
|
The default values are 8 active downloads and 5 active seeds. |
|
|
|
At a regular interval, torrents are checked if there needs to be any re-ordering of |
|
which torrents are active and which are queued. This interval can be controlled via |
|
``auto_manage_interval`` in session_settings_. It defaults to every 30 seconds. |
|
|
|
For queuing to work, resume data needs to be saved and restored for all torrents. |
|
See `save_resume_data()`_. |
|
|
|
downloading |
|
----------- |
|
|
|
Torrents that are currently being downloaded or incomplete (with bytes still to download) |
|
are queued. The torrents in the front of the queue are started to be actively downloaded |
|
and the rest are ordered with regards to their queue position. Any newly added torrent |
|
is placed at the end of the queue. Once a torrent is removed or turns into a seed, its |
|
queue position is -1 and all torrents that used to be after it in the queue, decreases their |
|
position in order to fill the gap. |
|
|
|
The queue positions are always in a sequence without any gaps. |
|
|
|
Lower queue position means closer to the front of the queue, and will be started sooner than |
|
torrents with higher queue positions. |
|
|
|
To query a torrent for its position in the queue, or change its position, see: |
|
`queue_position() queue_position_up() queue_position_down() queue_position_top() queue_position_bottom()`_. |
|
|
|
seeding |
|
------- |
|
|
|
Auto managed seeding torrents are rotated, so that all of them are allocated a fair |
|
amount of seeding. Torrents with fewer completed *seed cycles* are prioritized for |
|
seeding. A seed cycle is completed when a torrent meets either the share ratio limit |
|
(uploaded bytes / downloaded bytes), the share time ratio (time seeding / time |
|
downloaing) or seed time limit (time seeded). |
|
|
|
The relevant settings to control these limits are ``share_ratio_limit``, |
|
``seed_time_ratio_limit`` and ``seed_time_limit`` in session_settings_. |
|
|
|
|
|
fast resume |
|
=========== |
|
|
|
The fast resume mechanism is a way to remember which pieces are downloaded |
|
and where they are put between sessions. You can generate fast resume data by |
|
calling `save_resume_data()`_ on torrent_handle_. You can |
|
then save this data to disk and use it when resuming the torrent. libtorrent |
|
will not check the piece hashes then, and rely on the information given in the |
|
fast-resume data. The fast-resume data also contains information about which |
|
blocks, in the unfinished pieces, were downloaded, so it will not have to |
|
start from scratch on the partially downloaded pieces. |
|
|
|
To use the fast-resume data you simply give it to `async_add_torrent() add_torrent()`_, and it |
|
will skip the time consuming checks. It may have to do the checking anyway, if |
|
the fast-resume data is corrupt or doesn't fit the storage for that torrent, |
|
then it will not trust the fast-resume data and just do the checking. |
|
|
|
file format |
|
----------- |
|
|
|
The file format is a bencoded dictionary containing the following fields: |
|
|
|
+--------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``file-format`` | string: "libtorrent resume file" | |
|
| | | |
|
+--------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``file-version`` | integer: 1 | |
|
| | | |
|
+--------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``info-hash`` | string, the info hash of the torrent this data is saved for. | |
|
| | | |
|
+--------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``blocks per piece`` | integer, the number of blocks per piece. Must be: piece_size | |
|
| | / (16 * 1024). Clamped to be within the range [1, 256]. It | |
|
| | is the number of blocks per (normal sized) piece. Usually | |
|
| | each block is 16 * 1024 bytes in size. But if piece size is | |
|
| | greater than 4 megabytes, the block size will increase. | |
|
| | | |
|
+--------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``pieces`` | A string with piece flags, one character per piece. | |
|
| | Bit 1 means we have that piece. | |
|
| | Bit 2 means we have verified that this piece is correct. | |
|
| | This only applies when the torrent is in seed_mode. | |
|
+--------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``slots`` | list of integers. The list maps slots to piece indices. It | |
|
| | tells which piece is on which slot. If piece index is -2 it | |
|
| | means it is free, that there's no piece there. If it is -1, | |
|
| | means the slot isn't allocated on disk yet. The pieces have | |
|
| | to meet the following requirement: | |
|
| | | |
|
| | If there's a slot at the position of the piece index, | |
|
| | the piece must be located in that slot. | |
|
| | | |
|
+--------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``total_uploaded`` | integer. The number of bytes that have been uploaded in | |
|
| | total for this torrent. | |
|
+--------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``total_downloaded`` | integer. The number of bytes that have been downloaded in | |
|
| | total for this torrent. | |
|
+--------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``active_time`` | integer. The number of seconds this torrent has been active. | |
|
| | i.e. not paused. | |
|
+--------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``seeding_time`` | integer. The number of seconds this torrent has been active | |
|
| | and seeding. | |
|
+--------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``num_seeds`` | integer. An estimate of the number of seeds on this torrent | |
|
| | when the resume data was saved. This is scrape data or based | |
|
| | on the peer list if scrape data is unavailable. | |
|
+--------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``num_downloaders`` | integer. An estimate of the number of downloaders on this | |
|
| | torrent when the resume data was last saved. This is used as | |
|
| | an initial estimate until we acquire up-to-date scrape info. | |
|
+--------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``upload_rate_limit`` | integer. In case this torrent has a per-torrent upload rate | |
|
| | limit, this is that limit. In bytes per second. | |
|
+--------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``download_rate_limit`` | integer. The download rate limit for this torrent in case | |
|
| | one is set, in bytes per second. | |
|
+--------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``max_connections`` | integer. The max number of peer connections this torrent | |
|
| | may have, if a limit is set. | |
|
+--------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``max_uploads`` | integer. The max number of unchoked peers this torrent may | |
|
| | have, if a limit is set. | |
|
+--------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``seed_mode`` | integer. 1 if the torrent is in seed mode, 0 otherwise. | |
|
+--------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``file_priority`` | list of integers. One entry per file in the torrent. Each | |
|
| | entry is the priority of the file with the same index. | |
|
+--------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``piece_priority`` | string of bytes. Each byte is interpreted as an integer and | |
|
| | is the priority of that piece. | |
|
+--------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``auto_managed`` | integer. 1 if the torrent is auto managed, otherwise 0. | |
|
+--------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``sequential_download`` | integer. 1 if the torrent is in sequential download mode, | |
|
| | 0 otherwise. | |
|
+--------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``paused`` | integer. 1 if the torrent is paused, 0 otherwise. | |
|
+--------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``trackers`` | list of lists of strings. The top level list lists all | |
|
| | tracker tiers. Each second level list is one tier of | |
|
| | trackers. | |
|
+--------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``mapped_files`` | list of strings. If any file in the torrent has been | |
|
| | renamed, this entry contains a list of all the filenames. | |
|
| | In the same order as in the torrent file. | |
|
+--------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``url-list`` | list of strings. List of url-seed URLs used by this torrent. | |
|
| | The urls are expected to be properly encoded and not contain | |
|
| | any illegal url characters. | |
|
+--------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``httpseeds`` | list of strings. List of httpseed URLs used by this torrent. | |
|
| | The urls are expected to be properly encoded and not contain | |
|
| | any illegal url characters. | |
|
+--------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``merkle tree`` | string. In case this torrent is a merkle torrent, this is a | |
|
| | string containing the entire merkle tree, all nodes, | |
|
| | including the root and all leaves. The tree is not | |
|
| | necessarily complete, but complete enough to be able to send | |
|
| | any piece that we have, indicated by the have bitmask. | |
|
+--------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``peers`` | list of dictionaries. Each dictionary has the following | |
|
| | layout: | |
|
| | | |
|
| | +----------+-----------------------------------------------+ | |
|
| | | ``ip`` | string, the ip address of the peer. This is | | |
|
| | | | not a binary representation of the ip | | |
|
| | | | address, but the string representation. It | | |
|
| | | | may be an IPv6 string or an IPv4 string. | | |
|
| | +----------+-----------------------------------------------+ | |
|
| | | ``port`` | integer, the listen port of the peer | | |
|
| | +----------+-----------------------------------------------+ | |
|
| | | |
|
| | These are the local peers we were connected to when this | |
|
| | fast-resume data was saved. | |
|
| | | |
|
+--------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``unfinished`` | list of dictionaries. Each dictionary represents an | |
|
| | piece, and has the following layout: | |
|
| | | |
|
| | +-------------+--------------------------------------------+ | |
|
| | | ``piece`` | integer, the index of the piece this entry | | |
|
| | | | refers to. | | |
|
| | +-------------+--------------------------------------------+ | |
|
| | | ``bitmask`` | string, a binary bitmask representing the | | |
|
| | | | blocks that have been downloaded in this | | |
|
| | | | piece. | | |
|
| | +-------------+--------------------------------------------+ | |
|
| | | ``adler32`` | The adler32 checksum of the data in the | | |
|
| | | | blocks specified by ``bitmask``. | | |
|
| | | | | | |
|
| | +-------------+--------------------------------------------+ | |
|
| | | |
|
+--------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``file sizes`` | list where each entry corresponds to a file in the file list | |
|
| | in the metadata. Each entry has a list of two values, the | |
|
| | first value is the size of the file in bytes, the second | |
|
| | is the time stamp when the last time someone wrote to it. | |
|
| | This information is used to compare with the files on disk. | |
|
| | All the files must match exactly this information in order | |
|
| | to consider the resume data as current. Otherwise a full | |
|
| | re-check is issued. | |
|
+--------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``allocation`` | The allocation mode for the storage. Can be either ``full`` | |
|
| | or ``compact``. If this is full, the file sizes and | |
|
| | timestamps are disregarded. Pieces are assumed not to have | |
|
| | moved around even if the files have been modified after the | |
|
| | last resume data checkpoint. | |
|
+--------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------+ |
|
|
|
storage allocation |
|
================== |
|
|
|
There are two modes in which storage (files on disk) are allocated in libtorrent. |
|
|
|
1. The traditional *full allocation* mode, where the entire files are filled up with |
|
zeros before anything is downloaded. libtorrent will look for sparse files support |
|
in the filesystem that is used for storage, and use sparse files or file system |
|
zero fill support if present. This means that on NTFS, full allocation mode will |
|
only allocate storage for the downloaded pieces. |
|
|
|
2. The *sparse allocation*, sparse files are used, and pieces are downloaded directly |
|
to where they belong. This is the recommended (and default) mode. |
|
|
|
In previous versions of libtorrent, a 3rd mode was supported, *compact allocation*. |
|
Support for this is deprecated and will be removed in future versions of libtorrent. |
|
It's still described in here for completeness. |
|
|
|
The allocation mode is selected when a torrent is started. It is passed as an |
|
argument to ``session::add_torrent()`` (see `async_add_torrent() add_torrent()`_). |
|
|
|
The decision to use full allocation or compact allocation typically depends on whether |
|
any files have priority 0 and if the filesystem supports sparse files. |
|
|
|
sparse allocation |
|
----------------- |
|
|
|
On filesystems that supports sparse files, this allocation mode will only use |
|
as much space as has been downloaded. |
|
|
|
* It does not require an allocation pass on startup. |
|
|
|
* It supports skipping files (setting prioirty to 0 to not download). |
|
|
|
* Fast resume data will remain valid even when file time stamps are out of date. |
|
|
|
|
|
full allocation |
|
--------------- |
|
|
|
When a torrent is started in full allocation mode, the disk-io thread |
|
will make sure that the entire storage is allocated, and fill any gaps with zeros. |
|
This will be skipped if the filesystem supports sparse files or automatic zero filling. |
|
It will of course still check for existing pieces and fast resume data. The main |
|
drawbacks of this mode are: |
|
|
|
* It may take longer to start the torrent, since it will need to fill the files |
|
with zeros on some systems. This delay is linearly dependent on the size of |
|
the download. |
|
|
|
* The download may occupy unnecessary disk space between download sessions. In case |
|
sparse files are not supported. |
|
|
|
* Disk caches usually perform extremely poorly with random access to large files |
|
and may slow down a download considerably. |
|
|
|
The benefits of this mode are: |
|
|
|
* Downloaded pieces are written directly to their final place in the files and the |
|
total number of disk operations will be fewer and may also play nicer to |
|
filesystems' file allocation, and reduce fragmentation. |
|
|
|
* No risk of a download failing because of a full disk during download. Unless |
|
sparse files are being used. |
|
|
|
* The fast resume data will be more likely to be usable, regardless of crashes or |
|
out of date data, since pieces won't move around. |
|
|
|
* Can be used with prioritizing files to 0. |
|
|
|
compact allocation |
|
------------------ |
|
|
|
Note that support for compact allocation is deprecated in libttorrent, and will |
|
be removed in future versions. |
|
|
|
The compact allocation will only allocate as much storage as it needs to keep the |
|
pieces downloaded so far. This means that pieces will be moved around to be placed |
|
at their final position in the files while downloading (to make sure the completed |
|
download has all its pieces in the correct place). So, the main drawbacks are: |
|
|
|
* More disk operations while downloading since pieces are moved around. |
|
|
|
* Potentially more fragmentation in the filesystem. |
|
|
|
* Cannot be used while having files with priority 0. |
|
|
|
The benefits though, are: |
|
|
|
* No startup delay, since the files don't need allocating. |
|
|
|
* The download will not use unnecessary disk space. |
|
|
|
* Disk caches perform much better than in full allocation and raises the download |
|
speed limit imposed by the disk. |
|
|
|
* Works well on filesystems that don't support sparse files. |
|
|
|
The algorithm that is used when allocating pieces and slots isn't very complicated. |
|
For the interested, a description follows. |
|
|
|
storing a piece: |
|
|
|
1. let **A** be a newly downloaded piece, with index **n**. |
|
2. let **s** be the number of slots allocated in the file we're |
|
downloading to. (the number of pieces it has room for). |
|
3. if **n** >= **s** then allocate a new slot and put the piece there. |
|
4. if **n** < **s** then allocate a new slot, move the data at |
|
slot **n** to the new slot and put **A** in slot **n**. |
|
|
|
allocating a new slot: |
|
|
|
1. if there's an unassigned slot (a slot that doesn't |
|
contain any piece), return that slot index. |
|
2. append the new slot at the end of the file (or find an unused slot). |
|
3. let **i** be the index of newly allocated slot |
|
4. if we have downloaded piece index **i** already (to slot **j**) then |
|
|
|
1. move the data at slot **j** to slot **i**. |
|
2. return slot index **j** as the newly allocated free slot. |
|
|
|
5. return **i** as the newly allocated slot. |
|
|
|
|
|
extensions |
|
========== |
|
|
|
These extensions all operates within the `extension protocol`__. The |
|
name of the extension is the name used in the extension-list packets, |
|
and the payload is the data in the extended message (not counting the |
|
length-prefix, message-id nor extension-id). |
|
|
|
__ extension_protocol.html |
|
|
|
Note that since this protocol relies on one of the reserved bits in the |
|
handshake, it may be incompatible with future versions of the mainline |
|
bittorrent client. |
|
|
|
These are the extensions that are currently implemented. |
|
|
|
metadata from peers |
|
------------------- |
|
|
|
Extension name: "LT_metadata" |
|
|
|
This extension is deprecated in favor of the more widely supported ``ut_metadata`` |
|
extension, see `BEP 9`_. |
|
The point with this extension is that you don't have to distribute the |
|
metadata (.torrent-file) separately. The metadata can be distributed |
|
through the bittorrent swarm. The only thing you need to download such |
|
a torrent is the tracker url and the info-hash of the torrent. |
|
|
|
It works by assuming that the initial seeder has the metadata and that |
|
the metadata will propagate through the network as more peers join. |
|
|
|
There are three kinds of messages in the metadata extension. These packets |
|
are put as payload to the extension message. The three packets are: |
|
|
|
* request metadata |
|
* metadata |
|
* don't have metadata |
|
|
|
request metadata: |
|
|
|
+-----------+---------------+----------------------------------------+ |
|
| size | name | description | |
|
+===========+===============+========================================+ |
|
| uint8_t | msg_type | Determines the kind of message this is | |
|
| | | 0 means 'request metadata' | |
|
+-----------+---------------+----------------------------------------+ |
|
| uint8_t | start | The start of the metadata block that | |
|
| | | is requested. It is given in 256:ths | |
|
| | | of the total size of the metadata, | |
|
| | | since the requesting client don't know | |
|
| | | the size of the metadata. | |
|
+-----------+---------------+----------------------------------------+ |
|
| uint8_t | size | The size of the metadata block that is | |
|
| | | requested. This is also given in | |
|
| | | 256:ths of the total size of the | |
|
| | | metadata. The size is given as size-1. | |
|
| | | That means that if this field is set | |
|
| | | 0, the request wants one 256:th of the | |
|
| | | metadata. | |
|
+-----------+---------------+----------------------------------------+ |
|
|
|
metadata: |
|
|
|
+-----------+---------------+----------------------------------------+ |
|
| size | name | description | |
|
+===========+===============+========================================+ |
|
| uint8_t | msg_type | 1 means 'metadata' | |
|
+-----------+---------------+----------------------------------------+ |
|
| int32_t | total_size | The total size of the metadata, given | |
|
| | | in number of bytes. | |
|
+-----------+---------------+----------------------------------------+ |
|
| int32_t | offset | The offset of where the metadata block | |
|
| | | in this message belongs in the final | |
|
| | | metadata. This is given in bytes. | |
|
+-----------+---------------+----------------------------------------+ |
|
| uint8_t[] | metadata | The actual metadata block. The size of | |
|
| | | this part is given implicit by the | |
|
| | | length prefix in the bittorrent | |
|
| | | protocol packet. | |
|
+-----------+---------------+----------------------------------------+ |
|
|
|
Don't have metadata: |
|
|
|
+-----------+---------------+----------------------------------------+ |
|
| size | name | description | |
|
+===========+===============+========================================+ |
|
| uint8_t | msg_type | 2 means 'I don't have metadata'. | |
|
| | | This message is sent as a reply to a | |
|
| | | metadata request if the the client | |
|
| | | doesn't have any metadata. | |
|
+-----------+---------------+----------------------------------------+ |
|
|
|
.. _`BEP 9`: http://bittorrent.org/beps/bep_0009.html |
|
|
|
dont_have |
|
--------- |
|
|
|
Extension name: "lt_dont_have" |
|
|
|
The ``dont_have`` extension message is used to tell peers that the client no longer |
|
has a specific piece. The extension message should be advertised in the ``m`` dictionary |
|
as ``lt_dont_have``. The message format mimics the regular ``HAVE`` bittorrent message. |
|
|
|
Just like all extension messages, the first 2 bytes in the mssage itself are 20 (the |
|
bittorrent extension message) and the message ID assigned to this extension in the ``m`` |
|
dictionary in the handshake. |
|
|
|
+-----------+---------------+----------------------------------------+ |
|
| size | name | description | |
|
+===========+===============+========================================+ |
|
| uint32_t | piece | index of the piece the peer no longer | |
|
| | | has. | |
|
+-----------+---------------+----------------------------------------+ |
|
|
|
The length of this message (including the extension message prefix) is |
|
6 bytes, i.e. one byte longer than the normal ``HAVE`` message, because |
|
of the extension message wrapping. |
|
|
|
HTTP seeding |
|
------------ |
|
|
|
There are two kinds of HTTP seeding. One with that assumes a smart |
|
(and polite) client and one that assumes a smart server. These |
|
are specified in `BEP 19`_ and `BEP 17`_ respectively. |
|
|
|
libtorrent supports both. In the libtorrent source code and API, |
|
BEP 19 urls are typically referred to as *url seeds* and BEP 17 |
|
urls are typically referred to as *HTTP seeds*. |
|
|
|
The libtorrent implementation of `BEP 19`_ assumes that, if the URL ends with a slash |
|
('/'), the filename should be appended to it in order to request pieces from |
|
that file. The way this works is that if the torrent is a single-file torrent, |
|
only that filename is appended. If the torrent is a multi-file torrent, the |
|
torrent's name '/' the file name is appended. This is the same directory |
|
structure that libtorrent will download torrents into. |
|
|
|
.. _`BEP 17`: http://bittorrent.org/beps/bep_0017.html |
|
.. _`BEP 19`: http://bittorrent.org/beps/bep_0019.html |
|
|
|
piece picker |
|
============ |
|
|
|
The piece picker in libtorrent has the following features: |
|
|
|
* rarest first |
|
* sequential download |
|
* random pick |
|
* reverse order picking |
|
* parole mode |
|
* prioritize partial pieces |
|
* prefer whole pieces |
|
* piece affinity by speed category |
|
* piece priorities |
|
|
|
internal representation |
|
----------------------- |
|
|
|
It is optimized by, at all times, keeping a list of pieces ordered |
|
by rarity, randomly shuffled within each rarity class. This list |
|
is organized as a single vector of contigous memory in RAM, for |
|
optimal memory locality and to eliminate heap allocations and frees |
|
when updating rarity of pieces. |
|
|
|
Expensive events, like a peer joining or leaving, are evaluated |
|
lazily, since it's cheaper to rebuild the whole list rather than |
|
updating every single piece in it. This means as long as no blocks |
|
are picked, peers joining and leaving is no more costly than a single |
|
peer joining or leaving. Of course the special cases of peers that have |
|
all or no pieces are optimized to not require rebuilding the list. |
|
|
|
picker strategy |
|
--------------- |
|
|
|
The normal mode of the picker is of course *rarest first*, meaning |
|
pieces that few peers have are preferred to be downloaded over pieces |
|
that more peers have. This is a fundamental algorithm that is the |
|
basis of the performance of bittorrent. However, the user may set the |
|
piece picker into sequential download mode. This mode simply picks |
|
pieces sequentially, always preferring lower piece indices. |
|
|
|
When a torrent starts out, picking the rarest pieces means increased |
|
risk that pieces won't be completed early (since there are only a few |
|
peers they can be downloaded from), leading to a delay of having any |
|
piece to offer to other peers. This lack of pieces to trade, delays |
|
the client from getting started into the normal tit-for-tat mode of |
|
bittorrent, and will result in a long ramp-up time. The heuristic to |
|
mitigate this problem is to, for the first few pieces, pick random pieces |
|
rather than rare pieces. The threshold for when to leave this initial |
|
picker mode is determined by ``session_settings::initial_picker_threshold``. |
|
|
|
reverse order |
|
------------- |
|
|
|
An orthogonal setting is *reverse order*, which is used for *snubbed* |
|
peers. Snubbed peers are peers that appear very slow, and might have timed |
|
out a piece request. The idea behind this is to make all snubbed peers |
|
more likely to be able to do download blocks from the same piece, |
|
concentrating slow peers on as few pieces as possible. The reverse order |
|
means that the most common pieces are picked, instead of the rarest pieces |
|
(or in the case of sequential download, the last pieces, intead of the first). |
|
|
|
parole mode |
|
----------- |
|
|
|
Peers that have participated in a piece that failed the hash check, may be |
|
put in *parole mode*. This means we prefer downloading a full piece from this |
|
peer, in order to distinguish which peer is sending corrupt data. Whether to |
|
do this is or not is controlled by ``session_settings::use_parole_mode``. |
|
|
|
In parole mode, the piece picker prefers picking one whole piece at a time for |
|
a given peer, avoiding picking any blocks from a piece any other peer has |
|
contributed to (since that would defeat the purpose of parole mode). |
|
|
|
prioritize partial pieces |
|
------------------------- |
|
|
|
This setting determines if partially downloaded or requested pieces should always |
|
be preferred over other pieces. The benefit of doing this is that the number of |
|
partial pieces is minimized (and hence the turn-around time for downloading a block |
|
until it can be uploaded to others is minimized). It also puts less stress on the |
|
disk cache, since fewer partial pieces need to be kept in the cache. Whether or |
|
not to enable this is controlled by ``session_settings::prioritize_partial_pieces``. |
|
|
|
The main benefit of not prioritizing partial pieces is that the rarest first |
|
algorithm gets to have more influence on which pieces are picked. The picker is |
|
more likely to truly pick the rarest piece, and hence improving the performance |
|
of the swarm. |
|
|
|
This setting is turned on automatically whenever the number of partial pieces |
|
in the piece picker exceeds the number of peers we're connected to times 1.5. |
|
This is in order to keep the waste of partial pieces to a minimum, but still |
|
prefer rarest pieces. |
|
|
|
prefer whole pieces |
|
------------------- |
|
|
|
The *prefer whole pieces* setting makes the piece picker prefer picking entire |
|
pieces at a time. This is used by web connections (both http seeding |
|
standards), in order to be able to coalesce the small bittorrent requests |
|
to larger HTTP requests. This significantly improves performance when |
|
downloading over HTTP. |
|
|
|
It is also used by peers that are downloading faster than a certain |
|
threshold. The main advantage is that these peers will better utilize the |
|
other peer's disk cache, by requesting all blocks in a single piece, from |
|
the same peer. |
|
|
|
This threshold is controlled by ``session_settings::whole_pieces_threshold``. |
|
|
|
*TODO: piece affinity by speed category* |
|
*TODO: piece priorities* |
|
|
|
SSL torrents |
|
============ |
|
|
|
Torrents may have an SSL root (CA) certificate embedded in them. Such torrents |
|
are called *SSL torrents*. An SSL torrent talks to all bittorrent peers over SSL. |
|
The protocols are layered like this:: |
|
|
|
+-----------------------+ |
|
| BitTorrent protocol | |
|
+-----------------------+ |
|
| SSL | |
|
+-----------+-----------+ |
|
| TCP | uTP | |
|
| +-----------+ |
|
| | UDP | |
|
+-----------+-----------+ |
|
|
|
During the SSL handshake, both peers need to authenticate by providing a certificate |
|
that is signed by the CA certificate found in the .torrent file. These peer |
|
certificates are expected to be privided to peers through some other means than |
|
bittorrent. Typically by a peer generating a certificate request which is sent to |
|
the publisher of the torrent, and the publisher returning a signed certificate. |
|
|
|
In libtorrent, `set_ssl_certificate()`_ in torrent_handle_ is used to tell libtorrent where |
|
to find the peer certificate and the private key for it. When an SSL torrent is loaded, |
|
the torrent_need_cert_alert_ is posted to remind the user to provide a certificate. |
|
|
|
A peer connecting to an SSL torrent MUST provide the *SNI* TLS extension (server name |
|
indication). The server name is the hex encoded info-hash of the torrent to connect to. |
|
This is required for the client accepting the connection to know which certificate to |
|
present. |
|
|
|
SSL connections are accepted on a separate socket from normal bittorrent connections. To |
|
pick which port the SSL socket should bind to, set ``session_settings::ssl_listen`` to a |
|
different port. It defaults to port 4433. This setting is only taken into account when the |
|
normal listen socket is opened (i.e. just changing this setting won't necessarily close |
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and re-open the SSL socket). To not listen on an SSL socket at all, set ``ssl_listen`` to 0. |
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This feature is only available if libtorrent is build with openssl support (``TORRENT_USE_OPENSSL``) |
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and requires at least openSSL version 1.0, since it needs SNI support. |
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Peer certificates must have at least one *SubjectAltName* field of type dNSName. At least |
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one of the fields must *exactly* match the name of the torrent. This is a byte-by-byte comparison, |
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the UTF-8 encoding must be identical (i.e. there's no unicode normalization going on). This is |
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the recommended way of verifying certificates for HTTPS servers according to `RFC 2818`_. Note |
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the difference that for torrents only *dNSName* fields are taken into account (not IP address fields). |
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The most specific (i.e. last) *Common Name* field is also taken into account if no *SubjectAltName* |
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did not match. |
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If any of these fields contain a single asterisk ("*"), the certificate is considered covering |
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any torrent, allowing it to be reused for any torrent. |
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The purpose of matching the torrent name with the fields in the peer certificate is to allow |
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a publisher to have a single root certificate for all torrents it distributes, and issue |
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separate peer certificates for each torrent. A peer receiving a certificate will not necessarily |
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be able to access all torrents published by this root certificate (only if it has a "star cert"). |
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.. _`RFC 2818`: http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2818.txt |
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testing |
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------- |
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To test incoming SSL connections to an SSL torrent, one can use the following *openssl* command:: |
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openssl s_client -cert <peer-certificate>.pem -key <peer-private-key>.pem -CAfile <torrent-cert>.pem -debug -connect 127.0.0.1:4433 -tls1 -servername <info-hash> |
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To create a root certificate, the Distinguished Name (*DN*) is not taken into account |
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by bittorrent peers. You still need to specify something, but from libtorrent's point of |
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view, it doesn't matter what it is. libtorrent only makes sure the peer certificates are |
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signed by the correct root certificate. |
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One way to create the certificates is to use the ``CA.sh`` script that comes with openssl, like thisi (don't forget to enter a common Name for the certificate):: |
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CA.sh -newca |
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CA.sh -newreq |
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CA.sh -sign |
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The torrent certificate is located in ``./demoCA/private/demoCA/cacert.pem``, this is |
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the pem file to include in the .torrent file. |
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The peer's certificate is located in ``./newcert.pem`` and the certificate's |
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private key in ``./newkey.pem``. |
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