2011-12-11 10:44:05 +01:00
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==================
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libtorrent hacking
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==================
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:Author: Arvid Norberg, arvid@rasterbar.com
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2012-06-10 18:20:00 +02:00
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:Version: 0.16.1
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2011-12-11 10:44:05 +01:00
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.. contents:: Table of contents
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:depth: 2
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:backlinks: none
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terminology
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===========
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This section describes some of the terminology used throughout the
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libtorrent source. Having a good understanding of some of these keywords
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helps understanding what's going on.
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A *piece* is a part of the data of a torrent that has a SHA-1 hash in
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the .torrent file. Pieces are almost always a power of two in size, but not
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necessarily. Each piece is plit up in *blocks*, which is a 16 kiB. A block
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never spans two pieces. If a piece is smaller than 16 kiB or not divisible
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by 16 kiB, there are blocks smaller than that.
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16 kiB is a de-facto standard of the largest transfer unit in the bittorrent
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protocol. Clients typically reject any request for larger pieces than this.
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The *piece picker* is the part of a bittorrent client that is responsible for
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the logic to determine which requests to send to peers. It doesn't actually
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pick full pieces, but blocks (from pieces).
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The file layout of a torrent is represented by *file storage* objects. This
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class contains a list of all files in the torrent (in a well defined order),
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the size of the pieces and implicitly the total size of the whole torrent and
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number of pieces. The file storage determines the mapping from *pieces*
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to *files*. This representation may be quite complex in order to keep it extremely
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compact. This is useful to load very large torrents without exploding in memory
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usage.
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A *torrent* object represents all the state of swarm download. This includes
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a piece picker, a list of peer connections, file storage (torrent file). One
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important distiction is between a connected peer (*peer_connection*) and a peer
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we just know about, and may have been connected to, and may connect to in the
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future (*policy::peer*). The list of (not connected) peers may grow very large
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if not limited (through tracker responses, DHT and peer exchange). This list
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is typically limited to a few thousand peers.
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The *policy* in libtorrent is somewhat poorly named. It was initially intended
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to be a customization point where a client could define peer selection behavior
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and unchoke logic. It didn't end up being though, and a more accurate name would
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be peer_list. It really just maintains a potentially large list of known peers
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for a swarm (not necessarily connected).
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structure
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=========
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This is the high level structure of libtorrent. Bold types are part of the public
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interface:
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.. parsed-literal::
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+=========+ pimpl +-------------------+
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| **session** | ---------> | aux::session_impl |
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+=========+ +-------------------+
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m_torrents[] | |
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+================+ | |
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| **torrent_handle** | ------+ | |
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+================+ | | |
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| | | m_connections[]
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m_picker v v |
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+--------------+ +---------+---------+-- . . |
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| piece_picker | <--+-| torrent | torrent | to |
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+--------------+ | +---------+---------+-- . . |
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m_torrent_file | | m_connections[] |
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+==============+ | | |
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| **torrent_info** | <--+ v v
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+==============+ | +-----------------+-----------------+-- . .
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m_policy | | peer_connection | peer_connection | pe
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+--------+ | +-----------------+-----------------+-- . .
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| policy | <--------+ | | m_socket
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+--------+ | |
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| m_peers[] | v
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| | +-----------------------+
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| | | socket_type (variant) |
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v | +-----------------------+
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+--------------+ |
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| policy::peer | |
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+--------------+ |
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| policy::peer | |
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+--------------+ m_peer_info|
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| policy::peer | <----------+
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+--------------+
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. .
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+ - - - - - - -+
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session_impl
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------------
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This is the session state object, containing all session global information, such as:
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* the list of all torrents ``m_torrent``.
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* the list of all peer connections ``m_connections``.
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* the global rate limits ``m_settings``.
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* the DHT state ``m_dht``.
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* the port mapping state, ``m_upnp`` and ``m_natpmp``.
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session
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-------
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This is the public interface to the session. It implements pimpl (pointer to implementation)
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in order to hide the internal representation of the ``session_impl`` object from the user and
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make binary compatibility simpler to maintain.
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torrent_handle
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--------------
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This is the public interface to a ``torrent``. It holds a weak reference to the internal
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``torrent`` object and manipulates it by sending messages to the network thread.
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torrent
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-------
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peer_connection
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---------------
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policy
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------
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piece_picker
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------------
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torrent_info
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------------
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threads
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=======
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libtorrent starts 2 or 3 threads.
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* The first thread is the main thread that will sit
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idle in a ``kqueue()`` or ``epoll`` call most of the time.
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This thread runs the main loop that will send and receive
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data on all connections.
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* The second thread is the disk I/O thread. All disk read and write operations
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are passed to this thread and messages are passed back to the main thread when
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the operation completes. The disk thread also verifies the piece hashes.
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* The third and forth threads are spawned by asio on systems that don't support
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non-blocking host name resolution to simulate non-blocking getaddrinfo().
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