Author: | Arvid Norberg, arvid@rasterbar.com |
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Building the libtorrent python bindings will produce a shared library (DLL) which is a python module that can be imported in a python program.
The only supported build system for the bindings are currently boost build. To set up your build environment, you need to add some settings to your $BOOST_BUILD_PATH/user-config.jam.
Make sure your user config contains the following line:
using python : 2.3 ;
Set the version to the version of python you have installed or want to use. If you've installed python in a non-standard location, you have to add the prefix path used when you installed python as a second option. Like this:
using python : 2.3 : /usr ;
The bindings require at least python version 2.2.
For more information on how to install and set up boost-build, see the building libtorrent section.
Once you have boost-build set up, you cd to the bindings/python directory and invoke bjam with the apropriate settings. For the available build variants, see libtorrent build options.
For example:
$ bjam dht-support=on boost=source release link=static
On Mac OS X, this will produce the following python module:
bin/darwin-4.0/release/dht-support-on/link-static/logging-none/threading-multi/libtorrent.so
The python interface is nearly identical to the C++ interface. Please refer to the main library reference.
For an example python program, see client.py in the bindings/python directory.
A very simple example usage of the module would be something like this:
import libtorrent as lt import time ses = lt.session() ses.listen_on(6881, 6891) e = lt.bdecode(open("test.torrent", 'rb').read()) info = lt.torrent_info(e) h = ses.add_torrent(info, "./", storage_mode=storage_mode_sparse) while (not h.is_seed()): s = h.status() state_str = ['queued', 'checking', 'connecting', 'downloading metadata', \ 'downloading', 'finished', 'seeding', 'allocating'] print '%.2f%% complete (down: %.1f kb/s up: %.1f kB/s peers: %d) %s' % \ (s.progress * 100, s.download_rate / 1000, s.upload_rate / 1000, \ s.num_peers, state_str[s.state]) time.sleep(1)