premiere-libtorrent/include/libtorrent/session_settings.hpp

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67 KiB
C++

/*
Copyright (c) 2003-2012, Arvid Norberg
All rights reserved.
Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
are met:
* Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
* Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in
the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
* Neither the name of the author nor the names of its
contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived
from this software without specific prior written permission.
THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS"
AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE
LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR
CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF
SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS
INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN
CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE)
ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE
POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
*/
#ifndef TORRENT_SESSION_SETTINGS_HPP_INCLUDED
#define TORRENT_SESSION_SETTINGS_HPP_INCLUDED
#include "libtorrent/version.hpp"
#include "libtorrent/config.hpp"
#include "libtorrent/version.hpp"
#include <string>
namespace libtorrent
{
// The ``proxy_settings`` structs contains the information needed to
// direct certain traffic to a proxy.
struct TORRENT_EXPORT proxy_settings
{
proxy_settings() : port(0), type(none)
, proxy_hostnames(true)
, proxy_peer_connections(true)
{}
// 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.
std::string hostname;
int port;
std::string username;
std::string password;
enum proxy_type
{
// This is the default, no proxy server is used, all other fields
// are ignored.
none,
// The server is assumed to be a `SOCKS4 server`_ that
// requires a username.
//
// .. _`SOCKS4 server`: http://www.ufasoft.com/doc/socks4_protocol.htm
socks4,
// The server is assumed to be a SOCKS5 server (`RFC 1928`_) that
// does not require any authentication. The username and password are ignored.
//
// .. _`RFC 1928`: http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc1928.html
socks5,
// 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.
//
// .. _`RFC 1929`: http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc1929.html
socks5_pw,
// 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.
//
// .. _CONNECT: http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-luotonen-web-proxy-tunneling-01
http,
// The server is assumed to be an HTTP proxy that requires
// user authorization. The username and password will be sent to the proxy.
http_pw,
// route through a i2p SAM proxy
i2p_proxy
};
// tells libtorrent what kind of proxy server it is. See proxy_type
// enum for options
proxy_type type;
// 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.
bool proxy_hostnames;
// 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.
bool proxy_peer_connections;
};
struct TORRENT_EXPORT session_settings
{
session_settings(std::string const& user_agent = "libtorrent/"
LIBTORRENT_VERSION);
~session_settings();
// automatically set to the libtorrent version you're using
// in order to be forward binary compatible. This field should not be changed.
int version;
// 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.
std::string user_agent;
// 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.
int tracker_completion_timeout;
// 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.
int tracker_receive_timeout;
// the time to wait when sending a stopped message
// before considering a tracker to have timed out.
// this is usually shorter, to make the client quit
// faster
//
// This is given in seconds. Default is
// 10 seconds.
int stop_tracker_timeout;
// 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.
int tracker_maximum_response_length;
// controls the number of seconds from a request is sent until
// it times out if no piece response is returned.
int piece_timeout;
// the number of seconds one block (16kB) is expected
// to be received within. If it's not, the block is
// requested from a different peer
int request_timeout;
// 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.
int request_queue_time;
// 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 sent) the last request will be dropped.
// the higher this is, the faster upload speeds the
// client can get to a single peer.
int max_allowed_in_request_queue;
// 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.
int max_out_request_queue;
// if a whole piece can be downloaded in this number
// of seconds, or less, the peer_connection will prefer
// to request 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.
int whole_pieces_threshold;
// the number of seconds to wait for any activity on
// the peer wire before closing the connectiong 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.
int peer_timeout;
// same as peer_timeout, but only applies to url-seeds.
// this is usually set lower, because web servers are
// expected to be more reliable.
// This value defaults to 20 seconds.
int urlseed_timeout;
// 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.
int urlseed_pipeline_size;
// time to wait until a new retry takes place
int urlseed_wait_retry;
// sets 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.
int file_pool_size;
// 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.
bool allow_multiple_connections_per_ip;
// the maximum times we try to connect to a peer before
// stop connecting again. If a peer succeeds, its failcounter is reset. If
// a peer is retrieved from a peer source (other than DHT) the failcount is
// decremented by one, allowing another try.
int max_failcount;
// the number of seconds to wait to reconnect to a peer.
// this time is multiplied with the failcount.
int min_reconnect_time;
// 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.
int peer_connect_timeout;
// if set to true, upload, download and unchoke limits
// are ignored for peers on the local network.
bool ignore_limits_on_local_network;
// 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.
int connection_speed;
// if this is set to true, 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.
bool send_redundant_have;
// 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 an old attempt to prevent certain ISPs
// from stopping people from seeding.
bool lazy_bitfields;
// if a peer is uninteresting and uninterested for longer
// than this number of seconds, it will be disconnected.
// default is 10 minutes
int inactivity_timeout;
// 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.
int unchoke_interval;
// the number of seconds between
// each *optimistic* unchoke. On this timer, the currently optimistically
// unchoked peer will change.
int optimistic_unchoke_interval;
// the ip address passed along to trackers as the ``&ip=`` parameter.
// If left as the default (an empty string), that parameter is omitted.
// Most trackers ignore this argument. This is here for completeness
// for edge-cases where it may be useful.
std::string announce_ip;
// the number of peers we want from each tracker request. It defines
// what is sent as the ``&num_want=`` parameter to the tracker.
// Stopped messages always send num_want=0. This setting control what
// to say in the case where we actually want peers.
int num_want;
// 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.
int initial_picker_threshold;
// the number of allowed pieces to send to choked peers
// that supports the fast extensions
int allowed_fast_set_size;
// options for session_settings::suggest_mode.
enum suggest_mode_t
{
// the default. will not send out suggest messages.
no_piece_suggestions = 0,
// send out suggest messages for the most
// recent pieces that are in the read cache.
suggest_read_cache = 1
};
// this determines which pieces will be suggested to peers
// suggest read cache will make libtorrent suggest pieces
// that are fresh in the disk read cache, to potentially
// lower disk access and increase the cache hit ratio
//
// for options, see suggest_mode_t.
int suggest_mode;
// the maximum number of bytes a connection may have
// pending in the disk write queue before its download
// rate is being throttled. This prevents fast downloads
// to slow medias to allocate more memory
// indefinitely. This should be set to at least 16 kB
// to not completely disrupt normal downloads. If it's
// set to 0, you will be starving the disk thread and
// nothing will be written to disk.
// this is a per session setting.
//
// 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.
int max_queued_disk_bytes;
// this is the low watermark for the disk buffer queue.
// whenever the number of queued bytes exceed the
// max_queued_disk_bytes, libtorrent will wait for
// it to drop below this value before issuing more
// reads from the sockets. If set to 0, the
// low watermark will be half of the max queued disk bytes
int max_queued_disk_bytes_low_watermark;
// the number of seconds to wait for a handshake
// response from a peer. If no response is received
// within this time, the peer is disconnected.
int handshake_timeout;
// 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.
bool use_dht_as_fallback;
// 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() and add_torrent() for instance.
bool free_torrent_hashes;
// 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.
bool upnp_ignore_nonrouters;
// This is the minimum send buffer target size (send buffer
// includes bytes pending being read from disk). For good
// and snappy seeding performance, set this fairly high, to
// at least fit a few blocks. This is essentially the initial
// window size which will determine how fast we can ramp up
// the send rate
int send_buffer_low_watermark;
// 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.
int send_buffer_watermark;
// the current upload rate to a peer is multiplied by
// this factor to get the send buffer watermark. The
// factor is specified as a percentage. i.e. 50 indicates
// a factor of 0.5.
//
// This product is clamped to the send_buffer_watermark
// setting to not exceed the max. For high speed
// upload, this should be set to a greater value than
// 100. The default is 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.
int send_buffer_watermark_factor;
#ifndef TORRENT_NO_DEPRECATE
// deprecated in 0.16
// 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``.
bool auto_upload_slots;
// When 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.
bool auto_upload_slots_rate_based;
#endif
enum choking_algorithm_t
{
// the traditional choker with a fixed number of unchoke
// slots, as specified by session::set_max_uploads()..
fixed_slots_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.
auto_expand_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.
rate_based_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
bittyrant_choker
};
// 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``. For options, see choking_algorithm_t.
int choking_algorithm;
enum seed_choking_algorithm_t
{
// 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.
round_robin,
// unchokes the peers we can send to the fastest. This might be
// a bit more reliable in utilizing all available capacity.
fastest_upload,
// 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.
anti_leech
};
// controls the seeding unchoke behavior. For options, see seed_choking_algorithm_t.
int seed_choking_algorithm;
// 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.
bool use_parole_mode;
// 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.
int cache_size;
// this is the number of disk buffer blocks (16 kiB)
// that should be allocated at a time. It must be
// at least 1. Lower number saves memory at the expense
// of more heap allocations
int cache_buffer_chunk_size;
// the number of seconds a write cache entry sits
// idle in the cache before it's forcefully flushed
// to disk.
int cache_expiry;
// when set to true (default), the disk cache is also used to
// cache pieces read from disk. Blocks for writing pieces takes presedence.
bool use_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.
bool explicit_read_cache;
// 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.
int explicit_cache_interval;
enum io_buffer_mode_t
{
// This is the default and files are opened normally, with the OS caching
// reads and writes.
enable_os_cache = 0,
// 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_for_aligned_files = 1,
// 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``.
disable_os_cache = 2
};
// determines how files are
// opened when they're in read only mode versus read and write mode. For options,
// see io_buffer_mode_t.
//
// 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.
int disk_io_write_mode;
int disk_io_read_mode;
bool coalesce_reads;
bool coalesce_writes;
// 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.
std::pair<int, int> outgoing_ports;
// 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/
char peer_tos;
// for auto managed torrents, these are the limits
// they are subject to. If there are too many torrents
// some of the auto managed ones will be paused until
// some slots free up.
//
// ``active_dht_limit`` and ``active_tracker_limit`` limits the
// number of torrents that will be active on the DHT
// and their tracker. If the active limit is set higher
// than these numbers, some torrents will be "active" in
// the sense that they will accept incoming connections,
// but not announce on the DHT or their trackers.
//
// ``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).
//
// ``active_limit`` is a hard limit on the number of active torrents. This applies even to
// slow torrents.
//
// 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.
//
// ``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.
int active_downloads;
int active_seeds;
int active_dht_limit;
int active_tracker_limit;
int active_lsd_limit;
int active_limit;
// prefer seeding torrents when determining which torrents to give
// active slots to, the default is false which gives preference to
// downloading torrents
bool auto_manage_prefer_seeds;
// if 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.
bool dont_count_slow_torrents;
// the number of seconds in between recalculating which
// torrents to activate and which ones to queue
int auto_manage_interval;
// when a seeding torrent reaches either the share ratio
// (bytes up / bytes down) or the seed time ratio
// (seconds as seed / seconds as downloader) or the seed
// time limit (seconds as seed) it is considered
// done, and it will leave room for other torrents
// the default value for share ratio is 2
// the default seed time ratio is 7, because that's a common
// asymmetry ratio on connections
//
//.. note::
// This is an out-dated option that doesn't make much sense.
// It will be removed in future versions of libtorrent
float share_ratio_limit;
// the seeding time / downloading time ratio limit
// for considering a seeding torrent to have met the seed limit criteria. See queuing_.
float seed_time_ratio_limit;
// 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_.
int seed_time_limit;
// controls a feature where libtorrent periodically can disconnect
// the least useful peers in the hope of connecting to better ones. ``peer_turnover_interval`` 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).
int peer_turnover_interval;
float peer_turnover;
float peer_turnover_cutoff;
// 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``.
bool close_redundant_connections;
// 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.
int auto_scrape_interval;
// 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.
int auto_scrape_min_interval;
// 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.
int max_peerlist_size;
// 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.
int max_paused_peerlist_size;
// 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.
int min_announce_interval;
// If 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.
bool prioritize_partial_pieces;
// 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.
int auto_manage_startup;
// if set to true, the estimated TCP/IP overhead is
// drained from the rate limiters, to avoid exceeding
// the limits with the total traffic
bool rate_limit_ip_overhead;
// 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.
bool announce_to_all_trackers;
// 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.
bool announce_to_all_tiers;
// 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.
bool prefer_udp_trackers;
// 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.
bool strict_super_seeding;
// 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.
int seeding_piece_quota;
// 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.
int max_sparse_regions;
#ifndef TORRENT_DISABLE_MLOCK
// 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.
bool lock_disk_cache;
#endif
// 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.
int max_rejects;
// 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.
int recv_socket_buffer_size;
int send_socket_buffer_size;
// 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.
bool optimize_hashing_for_speed;
// 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.
int file_checks_delay_per_block;
enum disk_cache_algo_t
{
// This
// flushes the entire piece, in the write cache, that was least recently
// written to.
lru,
// will flush the largest
// sequences of contiguous blocks from the write cache, regarless of the
// piece's last use time.
largest_contiguous,
// 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.
avoid_readback
};
// tells the disk I/O thread which cache flush
// algorithm to use. The default algorithm is largest_contiguous. This is
// specified by the disk_cache_algo_t enum.
disk_cache_algo_t disk_cache_algorithm;
// 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.
int read_cache_line_size;
// whenever a contiguous range of this many
// blocks is found in the write cache, it
// is flushed immediately
int write_cache_line_size;
// 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().
int optimistic_disk_retry;
// 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.
bool disable_hash_checks;
// if this is true, disk read operations may
// be re-ordered based on their physical disk
// read offset. This greatly improves throughput
// when uploading to many peers. This assumes
// a traditional hard drive with a read head
// and spinning platters. If your storage medium
// is a solid state drive, this optimization
// doesn't give you an benefits
bool allow_reordered_disk_operations;
// if this is true, i2p torrents are allowed
// to also get peers from other sources than
// the tracker, and connect to regular IPs,
// not providing any anonymization. This may
// be useful if the user is not interested in
// the anonymization of i2p, but still wants to
// be able to connect to i2p peers.
bool allow_i2p_mixed;
// 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.
int max_suggest_pieces;
// If 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.
bool drop_skipped_requests;
// 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.
bool low_prio_disk;
// 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.
int local_service_announce_interval;
// the number of seconds between announcing
// torrents to the distributed hash table (DHT). This is specified to
// be 15 minutes which is its default.
int dht_announce_interval;
// 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.
int udp_tracker_token_expiry;
// 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.
bool volatile_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.
bool guided_read_cache;
// 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.
int default_cache_min_age;
// 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.
int num_optimistic_unchoke_slots;
// 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.
bool no_atime_storage;
// 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.
int default_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.
int increase_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.
int decrease_est_reciprocation_rate;
// 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.
bool incoming_starts_queued_torrents;
// when set to true, the downloaded counter sent to trackers
// will include the actual number of payload bytes donwnloaded
// including redundant bytes. If set to false, it will not include
// any redundany bytes
bool report_true_downloaded;
// 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.
bool strict_end_game_mode;
// if 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.
bool broadcast_lsd;
// these 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.
bool enable_outgoing_utp;
bool enable_incoming_utp;
bool enable_outgoing_tcp;
bool enable_incoming_tcp;
// the max number of peers we accept from pex messages from a single peer.
// this limits the number of concurrent peers any of our peers claims to
// be connected to. If they clain to be connected to more than this, we'll
// ignore any peer that exceeds this limit
int max_pex_peers;
// 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.
bool ignore_resume_timestamps;
// 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.
bool no_recheck_incomplete_resume;
// 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. It will also try to not leak other identifying information,
// such as your local listen port, your IP etc.
//
// If you're using I2P, a VPN or a proxy, it might make sense to enable anonymous mode.
bool anonymous_mode;
// 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.
bool force_proxy;
// 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.
int tick_interval;
// specifies whether downloads from web seeds is reported to the
// tracker or not. Defaults to on
bool report_web_seed_downloads;
// 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.
int share_mode_target;
// 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.
int upload_rate_limit;
int download_rate_limit;
int local_upload_rate_limit;
int local_download_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.
int dht_upload_rate_limit;
// 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.
int unchoke_slots_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.
int half_open_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.
int connections_limit;
// the number of extra incoming connections allowed
// temporarily, in order to support replacing peers
int connections_slack;
// 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.
int utp_target_delay;
// 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.
int utp_gain_factor;
// 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.
int utp_min_timeout;
// the number of SYN packets that are sent (and timed out) before
// giving up and closing the socket.
int utp_syn_resends;
// the number of resent packets sent on a closed socket before giving up
int utp_fin_resends;
// the number of times a packet is sent (and lossed or timed out)
// before giving up and closing the connection.
int utp_num_resends;
// 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.
int utp_connect_timeout;
#ifndef TORRENT_NO_DEPRECATE
// number of milliseconds of delaying ACKing packets the most
int utp_delayed_ack;
#endif
// 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).
bool utp_dynamic_sock_buf;
// 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.
int utp_loss_multiplier;
enum bandwidth_mixed_algo_t
{
// disables the mixed mode bandwidth balancing
prefer_tcp = 0,
// does not throttle uTP, throttles TCP to the same proportion
// of throughput as there are TCP connections
peer_proportional = 1
};
// 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).
//
// see bandwidth_mixed_algo_t for options.
int mixed_mode_algorithm;
// determines if uTP connections should be throttled by the global rate
// limiter or not. By default they are.
bool rate_limit_utp;
// 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).
int listen_queue_size;
// if 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.
bool announce_double_nat;
// 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.
int torrent_connect_boost;
// 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.
bool seeding_outgoing_connections;
// if 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.
bool no_connect_privileged_ports;
// 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.
int alert_queue_size;
// the maximum allowed size (in bytes) to be received
// by the metadata extension, i.e. magnet links. It defaults to 1 MiB.
int max_metadata_size;
// 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.
bool smooth_connects;
// 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.
bool always_send_user_agent;
// 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.
bool apply_ip_filter_to_trackers;
// 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``.
int read_job_every;
// 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.
bool use_disk_read_ahead;
// 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.
bool lock_files;
// 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.
//
// if this is 0, outgoing SSL connections are disabled
//
// It defaults to port 4433.
int ssl_listen;
// ``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.
//
int tracker_backoff;
// enables banning web seeds. By default, web seeds that send
// corrupt data are banned.
bool ban_web_seeds;
// 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.
int max_http_recv_buffer_size;
// enables or disables the share mode extension. This is
// enabled by default.
bool support_share_mode;
// enables or disables the merkle tree torrent support.
// This is enabled by default.
bool support_merkle_torrents;
// enables or disables reporting redundant bytes to the tracker.
// This is enabled by default.
bool report_redundant_bytes;
// the version string to advertise for this client
// in the peer protocol handshake. If this is empty
// the user_agent is used
std::string handshake_client_version;
// if this is true, the disk cache uses a pool allocator
// for disk cache blocks. Enabling this improves
// performance of the disk cache with the side effect
// that the disk cache is less likely and slower at
// returning memory to the kernel when cache pressure
// is low.
bool use_disk_cache_pool;
};
// structure used to hold configuration options for the DHT
//
// The ``dht_settings`` struct used to contain a ``service_port`` member to control
// which port the DHT would listen on and send messages from. This field is deprecated
// and ignored. libtorrent always tries to open the UDP socket on the same port
// as the TCP socket.
struct dht_settings
{
dht_settings()
: max_peers_reply(100)
, search_branching(5)
#ifndef TORRENT_NO_DEPRECATE
, service_port(0)
#endif
, max_fail_count(20)
, max_torrents(2000)
, max_dht_items(700)
, max_torrent_search_reply(20)
, restrict_routing_ips(true)
, restrict_search_ips(true)
, extended_routing_table(true)
, aggressive_lookups(true)
{}
// the maximum number of peers to send in a
// reply to ``get_peers``
int max_peers_reply;
// the number of concurrent search request the node will
// send when announcing and refreshing the routing table. This parameter is
// called alpha in the kademlia paper
int search_branching;
#ifndef TORRENT_NO_DEPRECATE
// the listen port for the dht. This is a UDP port.
// zero means use the same as the tcp interface
int service_port;
#endif
// the maximum number of failed tries to contact a node
// before it is removed from the routing table. If there are known working nodes
// that are ready to replace a failing node, it will be replaced immediately,
// this limit is only used to clear out nodes that don't have any node that can
// replace them.
int max_fail_count;
// the total number of torrents to track from the DHT. This
// is simply an upper limit to make sure malicious DHT nodes cannot make us allocate
// an unbounded amount of memory.
int max_torrents;
// max number of items the DHT will store
int max_dht_items;
// the max number of torrents to return in a
// torrent search query to the DHT
int max_torrent_search_reply;
// determines if the routing table entries should restrict
// entries to one per IP. This defaults to true, which helps mitigate some attacks
// on the DHT. It prevents adding multiple nodes with IPs with a very close CIDR
// distance.
//
// when set, nodes whose IP address that's in
// the same /24 (or /64 for IPv6) range in the
// same routing table bucket. This is an attempt
// to mitigate node ID spoofing attacks
// also restrict any IP to only have a single
// entry in the whole routing table
bool restrict_routing_ips;
// determines if DHT searches should prevent adding nodes
// with IPs with very close CIDR distance. This also defaults to true and helps
// mitigate certain attacks on the DHT.
bool restrict_search_ips;
// makes the first buckets in the DHT routing
// table fit 128, 64, 32 and 16 nodes respectively, as opposed to the
// standard size of 8. All other buckets have size 8 still.
bool extended_routing_table;
// slightly changes the lookup behavior in terms of how
// many outstanding requests we keep. Instead of having branch factor be a hard
// limit, we always keep *branch factor* outstanding requests to the closest nodes.
// i.e. every time we get results back with closer nodes, we query them right away.
// It lowers the lookup times at the cost of more outstanding queries.
bool aggressive_lookups;
};
#ifndef TORRENT_DISABLE_ENCRYPTION
// The ``pe_settings`` structure is used to control the settings related
// to peer protocol encryption.
struct pe_settings
{
pe_settings()
: out_enc_policy(enabled)
, in_enc_policy(enabled)
, allowed_enc_level(both)
, prefer_rc4(false)
{}
enum enc_policy
{
// 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.
forced,
// 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.
enabled,
// only non-encrypted connections are allowed.
disabled
};
enum enc_level
{
plaintext = 1, // use only plaintext encryption
rc4 = 2, // use only rc4 encryption
both = 3 // allow both
};
// control the settings for incoming
// and outgoing connections respectively.
// see enc_policy enum for the available options.
enc_policy out_enc_policy;
enc_policy in_enc_policy;
// 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. See enc_level enum for options.
enc_level allowed_enc_level;
// if the allowed encryption level is both, setting this to
// true will prefer rc4 if both methods are offered, plaintext
// otherwise
bool prefer_rc4;
};
#endif
}
#endif