diff --git a/docs/index.html b/docs/index.html index 4a00ce33b..e69de29bb 100755 --- a/docs/index.html +++ b/docs/index.html @@ -1,70 +0,0 @@ - - - -
- - -sourceforge page | -documentation | -report bugs | -screenshot | -mailing list | -
libtorrent is a C++ library that aims to be a good alternative to all the -other bittorrent implementations around. It is a -library and not a full featured client, although it comes with a working -example client.
-The main goals of libtorrent are:
----
-- to be cpu efficient
-- to be memory efficient
-- to be very easy to use
-
Support the development of libtorrent
-There's a mailing list, general libtorrent discussion.
-You can usually find me as hydri in #btports @ irc.freenode.net.
-Written by Arvid Norberg. Copyright (c) 2003
-Contributions by Magnus Jonsson and Daniel Wallin
-Thanks to Reimond Retz for bugfixes, suggestions and testing
-Project is hosted by sourceforge.
- -libtorrent is a C++ library that aims to be a good alternative to all the +other bittorrent implementations around. It is a +library and not a full featured client, although it comes with a working +example client.
+The main goals of libtorrent are:
++++
+- to be cpu efficient
+- to be memory efficient
+- to be very easy to use
+
libtorrent is not finished. It is an ongoing project (including this documentation). +The current state includes the following features:
++++
+- multitracker extension support (as described by John Hoffman)
+- serves multiple torrents on a single port and a single thread
+- supports http proxies and proxy authentication
+- gzipped tracker-responses
+- piece picking on block-level like in Azureus (as opposed to piece-level).
+- queues torrents for file check, instead of checking all of them in parallel.
+- uses separate threads for checking files and for main downloader, with a fool-proof +thread-safe library interface. (i.e. There's no way for the user to cause a deadlock).
+- can limit the upload and download bandwidth usage and the maximum number of unchoked peers
+- piece-wise, unordered, file allocation
+- implements fair trade. User settable trade-ratio, must at least be 1:1, +but one can choose to trade 1 for 2 or any other ratio that isn't unfair to the other +party. (i.e. real tit for tat)
+- fast resume support, a way to get rid of the costly piece check at the start +of a resumed torrent. Saves the storage state, piece_picker state as well as all local +peers in a separate fast-resume file.
+- supports the extension protocol described by Nolar. See extensions.
+- supports files > 2 gigabytes.
+- supports the no_peer_id=1 extension that will ease the load off trackers.
+- supports the udp-tracker protocol by Olaf van der Spek.
+- possibility to limit the number of connections.
+- delays have messages if there's no other outgoing traffic to the peer, and doesn't +send have messages to peers that already has the piece. This saves bandwidth.
+- does not have any requirements on the piece order in a torrent that it resumes. This +means it can resume a torrent downloaded by any client.
+- adjusts the length of the request queue depending on download rate.
+- supports the compact=1 tracker parameter.
+
Functions that are yet to be implemented:
++++
+- better identification of peers that send bad data
+- ip-filters
+- file-level priority
+
libtorrent is portable at least among windows, macosx, and other UNIX-systems. It uses Boost.Thread, +Boost.Filesystem, Boost.Date_time and various other boost libraries as well as zlib.
+libtorrent has been successfully compiled and tested on:
++++
+- Windows 2000 vc7.1
+- Linux x86 GCC 3.0.4, GCC 3.2.3, GCC 3.4.2
+- MacOS X, GCC 3.3
+- SunOS 5.8 GCC 3.1
+- Cygwin GCC 3.3.3
+
Fails on:
++++
+- GCC 2.95.4 (std::ios_base is missing)
+- msvc6 sp5
+
libtorrent is released under the BSD-license.
+To acquire the latest version of libtorrent, you'll have to grab it from CVS. You'll find instructions +on how to do this here (see Anonymous CVS access).
+The easiest way to build libtorrent is probably to use boost-build. Make sure you install it +correctly by setting the environment variable BOOST_BUILD_PATH to point to your boost build +installation. Also you have to modify the user_config.jam to reflect the toolsets you have installed. +(if you're building with gcc, uncomment the line "using gcc ;")
+You also need to install boost (at least version 1.31.0).
+Before you invoke bjam you have to set the environment variable BOOST_ROOT to the +path where you installed boost. This will be used to build and link against the required +boost libraries as well as be used as include path for boost headers.
+To build you just have to run:
++bjam <toolset> link=static ++
in the libtorrent directory.
+If you're building on a platform where dlls share the same heap, you can build libtorrent +as a dll too, by typing link=shared instead of link=static.
+To build on MacOS X, you need the latest version of boost-build, from the boost cvs.
+If you're making your own project file, note that there are two versions of the file +abstraction. There's one file_win.cpp which relies on windows file API that supports +files larger than 2 Gigabytes. This does not work in vc6 for some reason, possibly because +it may require windows NT and above. The other file, file.cpp is the default +implementation that simply relies on the standard low level io routines (read, write etc.), +this is the preferred implementation that should be used in all cases. The file_win.cpp +have had some problems with failing seeks (I don't know why), so I advise everyone to use +the other file.
+Note that if you're building on windows using the msvc toolset, you cannot run it +from a cygwin terminal, you'll have to run it from a cmd terminal. The same goes for +cygwin, if you're building with gcc (mingw) you'll have to run it from a cygwin terminal. +Also, make sure the paths are correct in the different environments. In cygwin, the paths +(BOOST_BUILD_PATH and BOOST_ROOT) should be in the typical unix-format (e.g. +/cygdrive/c/boost_1_32_0). In the windows environment, they should have the typical +windows format (c:/boost_1_32_0).
+If you're building in developer studio, you may have to set the compiler options +"force conformance in for loop scope", "treat wchar_t as built-in type" and +"Enable Run-Time Type Info" to Yes.
+The Jamfile can build both a release and debug version of libtorrent. In debug mode, +libtorrent will have pretty expensive invariant checks and asserts built into it. If you +want to disable such checks (you want to do that in a release build) you can see the +table below for which defines you can use to control the build. The Jamfile will define +NDEBUG when it's building a release build.
+macro | +description | +
---|---|
NDEBUG | +If you define this macro, all asserts, +invariant checks and general debug code will be +removed. This option takes precedence over +other debug settings. | +
TORRENT_VERBOSE_LOGGING | +If you define this macro, every peer connection +will log its traffic to a log file. +This setting requires a debug build, i.e. +if you set NDEBUG aswell, no logs will be +written. | +
TORRENT_STORAGE_DEBUG | +This will enable extra expensive invariant +checks in the storage, including logging of +piece sorting. | +
If you experience that libtorrent uses unreasonable amounts of cpu, it will definately help to +define NDEBUG, since it will remove the invariant checks within the library.
+The interface of libtorrent consists of a few classes. The main class is +the session, it contains the main loop that serves all torrents.
+The basic usage is as follows:
+conststruct a session
+parse .torrent-files and add them to the session (see bdecode() bencode())
+save resume data for all torrent_handles (optional)
+destruct session object
+Each class and function is described in this manual.
+The session class has the following synopsis:
++class session: public boost::noncopyable +{ + + session(const fingerprint& print = libtorrent::fingerprint("LT", 0, 1, 0, 0)); + + session( + const fingerprint& print + , std::pair<int, int> listen_port_range + , const char* listen_interface = 0); + + torrent_handle add_torrent( + entry const& e + , boost::filesystem::path const& save_path + , entry const& resume_data = entry()); + + torrent_handle add_torrent( + char const* tracker_url + , sha1_hash const& info_hash + , boost::filesystem::path const& save_path + , entry const& resume_data = entry()); + + void remove_torrent(torrent_handle const& h); + + void disable_extensions(); + void enable_extension(peer_connection::extension_index); + + void set_http_settings(const http_settings& settings); + + void set_upload_rate_limit(int bytes_per_second); + void set_download_rate_limit(int bytes_per_second); + void set_max_uploads(int limit); + void set_max_connections(int limit); + + session_status status() const; + + bool is_listening() const; + unsigned short listen_port() const; + bool listen_on( + std::pair<int, int> const& port_range + , char const* interface = 0); + + + std::auto_ptr<alert> pop_alert(); + void set_severity_level(alert::severity_t s); +}; ++
Once it's created, the session object will spawn the main thread that will do all the work. +The main thread will be idle as long it doesn't have any torrents to participate in.
++++session(const fingerprint& print = libtorrent::fingerprint("LT", 0, 1, 0, 0)); +session( + const fingerprint& print + , std::pair<int, int> listen_port_range + , const char* listen_interface = 0); ++
If the fingerprint in the first overload is ommited, the client will get a default +fingerprint stating the version of libtorrent. The fingerprint is a short string that will be +used in the peer-id to identify the client and the client's version. For more details see the +fingerprint class. The constructor that only takes a fingerprint will not open a +listen port for the session, to get it running you'll have to call session::listen_on(). +The other constructor, that takes a port range and an interface as well as the fingerprint +will automatically try to listen on a port on the given interface. For more information about +the parameters, see listen_on() function.
+The destructor of session will notify all trackers that our torrents have been shut down. +If some trackers are down, they will time out. All this before the destructor of session +returns. So, it's adviced that any kind of interface (such as windows) are closed before +destructing the sessoin object. Because it can take a few second for it to finish. The +timeout can be set with set_http_settings().
++++torrent_handle add_torrent( + entry const& e + , boost::filesystem::path const& save_path + , entry const& resume_data = entry()); +torrent_handle add_torrent( + char const* tracker_url + , sha1_hash const& info_hash + , boost::filesystem::path const& save_path + , entry const& resume_data = entry()); ++
You add torrents through the add_torrent() function where you give an +object representing the information found in the torrent file and the path where you +want to save the files. The save_path will be prepended to the directory +structure in the torrent-file.
+If the torrent you are trying to add already exists in the session (is either queued +for checking, being checked or downloading) add_torrent() will throw +duplicate_torrent which derives from std::exception.
+The optional last parameter, resume_data can be given if up to date fast-resume data +is available. The fast-resume data can be acquired from a running torrent by calling +torrent_handle::write_resume_data(). See fast resume.
+The torrent_handle returned by add_torrent() can be used to retrieve information +about the torrent's progress, its peers etc. It is also used to abort a torrent.
+The second overload that takes a tracker url and an info-hash instead of metadata (entry) +can be used with torrents where (at least some) peers support the metadata extension. For +the overload to be available, libtorrent must be built with extensions enabled +(TORRENT_ENABLE_EXTENSIONS defined).
++++void remove_torrent(torrent_handle const& h); ++
remove_torrent() will close all peer connections associated with the torrent and tell +the tracker that we've stopped participating in the swarm.
++++void disable_extensions(); +void enable_extension(peer_connection::extension_index); ++
disable_extensions() will disable all extensions available in libtorrent. +enable_extension() will enable a single extension. The available extensions +are enumerated in the peer_connection class. These are the available extensions:
++enum extension_index +{ + extended_chat_message, + extended_metadata_message, + extended_peer_exchange_message, + extended_listen_port_message, + num_supported_extensions +}; ++
peer_exchange is not implemented yet
+By default, all extensions are enabled. +For more information about the extensions, see the extensions section.
++++void set_upload_rate_limit(int bytes_per_second); +void set_download_rate_limit(int bytes_per_second); ++
set_upload_rate_limit() set the maximum number of bytes allowed to be +sent to peers per second. This bandwidth is distributed among all the peers. If +you don't want to limit upload rate, you can set this to -1 (the default). +set_download_rate_limit() works the same way but for download rate instead +of upload rate.
++++void set_max_uploads(int limit); +void set_max_connections(int limit); ++
These functions will set a global limit on the number of unchoked peers (uploads) +and the number of connections opened. The number of connections is set to a hard +minimum of at least two connections per torrent, so if you set a too low +connections limit, and open too many torrents, the limit will not be met. The +number of uploads is at least one per torrent.
++++session_status status() const; ++
status() returns session wide-statistics and status. The session_status +struct has the following members:
++struct session_status +{ + bool has_incoming_connections; + + float upload_rate; + float download_rate; + + float payload_upload_rate; + float payload_download_rate; + + size_type total_download; + size_type total_upload; + + size_type total_payload_download; + size_type total_payload_upload; + + int num_peers; +}; ++
has_incoming_connections is false as long as no incoming connections have been +established on the listening socket. Every time you change the listen port, this will +be reset to false.
+upload_rate, download_rate, payload_download_rate and payload_upload_rate +are the total download and upload rates accumulated from all torrents. The payload +versions is the payload download only.
+total_download and total_upload are the total number of bytes downloaded and +uploaded to and from all torrents. total_payload_download and total_payload_upload +are the same thing but where only the payload is considered.
+num_peers is the total number of peer connections this session have.
++++bool is_listening() const; +unsigned short listen_port() const; +bool listen_on( + std::pair<int, int> const& port_range + , char const* interface = 0); ++
is_listening() will tell you wether or not the session has successfully +opened a listening port. If it hasn't, this function will return false, and +then you can use listen_on() to make another try.
+listen_port() returns the port we ended up listening on. Since you just pass +a port-range to the constructor and to listen_on(), to know which port it +ended up using, you have to ask the session using this function.
+listen_on() will change the listen port and/or the listen interface. If the +session is already listening on a port, this socket will be closed and a new socket +will be opened with these new settings. The port range is the ports it will try +to listen on, if the first port fails, it will continue trying the next port within +the range and so on. The interface parameter can be left as 0, in that case the +os will decide which interface to listen on, otherwise it should be the ip-address +of the interface you want the listener socket bound to. listen_on() returns true +if it managed to open the socket, and false if it failed. If it fails, it will also +generate an appropriate alert (listen_failed_alert).
+The interface parameter can also be a hostname that will resolve to the device you +want to listen on.
++++std::auto_ptr<alert> pop_alert(); +void set_severity_level(alert::severity_t s); ++
pop_alert() is used to ask the session if any errors or events has occured. With +set_severity_level() you can filter how serious the event has to be for you to +receive it through pop_alert(). For information, see alerts.
+The entry class represents one node in a bencoded hierarchy. It works as a +variant type, it can be either a list, a dictionary (std::map), an integer +or a string. This is its synopsis:
++class entry +{ +public: + + typedef std::list<std::pair<std::string, entry> > dictionary_type; + typedef std::string string_type; + typedef std::list<entry> list_type; + typedef size_type integer_type; + + enum data_type + { + int_t, + string_t, + list_t, + dictionary_t, + undefined_t + }; + + data_type type() const; + + entry(const dictionary_type&); + entry(const string_type&); + entry(const list_type&); + entry(const integer_type&); + + entry(); + entry(data_type t); + entry(const entry& e); + ~entry(); + + void operator=(const entry& e); + void operator=(const dictionary_type&); + void operator=(const string_type&); + void operator=(const list_type&); + void operator=(const integer_type&); + + integer_type& integer(); + integer_type const& integer() const; + string_type& string(); + string_type const& string() const; + list_type& list(); + list_type const& list() const; + dictionary_type& dict(); + dictionary_type const& dict() const; + + // these functions requires that the entry + // is a dictionary, otherwise they will throw + entry& operator[](char const* key); + entry& operator[](std::string const& key); + const entry& operator[](char const* key) const; + const entry& operator[](std::string const& key) const; + entry* find_key(char const* key); + entry const* find_key(char const* key) const; + + void print(std::ostream& os, int indent = 0) const; +}; ++
TODO: finish documentation of entry.
++++integer_type& integer(); +integer_type const& integer() const; +string_type& string(); +string_type const& string() const; +list_type& list(); +list_type const& list() const; +dictionary_type& dict(); +dictionary_type const& dict() const; ++
The integer(), string(), list() and dict() functions +are accessors that return the respecive type. If the entry object isn't of the +type you request, the accessor will throw type_error (which derives from +std::runtime_error). You can ask an entry for its type through the +type() function.
+The print() function is there for debug purposes only.
+If you want to create an entry you give it the type you want it to have in its +constructor, and then use one of the non-const accessors to get a reference which you then +can assign the value you want it to have.
+The typical code to get info from a torrent file will then look like this:
++entry torrent_file; +// ... + +const entry::dictionary_type& dict = torrent_file.dict(); +entry::dictionary_type::const_iterator i; +i = dict.find("announce"); +if (i != dict.end()) +{ + std::string tracker_url= i->second.string(); + std::cout << tracker_url << "\n"; +} ++
To make it easier to extract information from a torren file, the class torrent_info +exists.
+The torrent_info has the following synopsis:
++class torrent_info +{ +public: + + torrent_info(); + torrent_info(sha1_hash const& info_hash); + torrent_info(entry const& torrent_file); + + entry create_torrent() const; + void set_comment(char const* str); + void set_piece_size(int size); + void set_creator(char const* str); + void set_hash(int index, const sha1_hash& h); + void add_tracker(std::string const& url, int tier = 0); + void add_file(boost::filesystem::path file, size_type size); + + typedef std::vector<file_entry>::const_iterator file_iterator; + typedef std::vector<file_entry>::const_reverse_iterator reverse_file_iterator; + + file_iterator begin_files() const; + file_iterator end_files() const; + reverse_file_iterator rbegin_files() const; + reverse_file_iterator rend_files() const; + + int num_files() const; + file_entry const& file_at(int index) const; + + std::vector<announce_entry> const& trackers() const; + + size_type total_size() const; + size_type piece_length() const; + int num_pieces() const; + const sha1_hash& info_hash() const; + const std::stirng& name() const; + const std::string& comment() const; + + boost::optional<boost::posix_time::ptime> + creation_date() const; + + + void print(std::ostream& os) const; + + size_type piece_size(unsigned int index) const; + const sha1_hash& hash_for_piece(unsigned int index) const; +}; ++
+++file_iterator begin_files() const; +file_iterator end_files() const; +reverse_file_iterator rbegin_files() const; +reverse_file_iterator rend_files() const; ++
This class will need some explanation. First of all, to get a list of all files +in the torrent, you can use begin_files(), end_files(), +rbegin_files() and rend_files(). These will give you standard vector +iterators with the type file_entry.
++struct file_entry +{ + boost::filesystem::path path; + size_type size; +}; ++
+++int num_files() const; +const file_entry& file_at(int index) const; ++
If you need index-access to files you can use the num_files() and file_at() +to access files using indices.
++++void print(std::ostream& os) const; ++
The print() function is there for debug purposes only. It will print the info from +the torrent file to the given outstream.
++++const std::vector<announce_entry>& 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 tier; +}; ++
+++size_type total_size() const; +size_type piece_length() const; +size_type 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.
++++size_type piece_size(unsigned int index) const; +const sha1_hash& hash_for_piece(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.
++++const std::stirng& name() const; +const std::string& comment() const; +boost::optional<boost::posix_time::ptime> 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 a boost::posix_time::ptime +object, representing the time when this torrent file was created. If there's no timestamp +in the torrent file, this will return a date of january 1:st 1970.
+You will usually have to store your torrent handles somewhere, since it's the +object through which you retrieve infromation about the torrent and aborts the torrent. +Its declaration looks like this:
++struct torrent_handle +{ + torrent_handle(); + + torrent_status status(); + void get_download_queue(std::vector<partial_piece_info>& queue); + void get_peer_info(std::vector<peer_info>& v); + torrent_info const& get_torrent_info(); + bool is_valid(); + + entry write_resume_data(); + std::vector<char> const& metadata() const; + void force_reannounce(); + void connect_peer(address const& adr) const; + + void set_tracker_login(std::string const& username, std::string const& password); + + std::vector<announce_entry> const& trackers() const; + void replace_trackers(std::vector<announce_entry> const&); + + void set_ratio(float ratio); + void set_max_uploads(int max_uploads); + void set_max_connections(int max_connections); + void set_upload_limit(int limit); + void set_download_limit(int limit); + void use_interface(char const* net_interface); + + void pause(); + void resume(); + bool is_paused() const; + bool is_seed() const; + + int num_complete() const; + int num_incomplete() const; + int num_downloaded() const; + + bool has_metadata() const; + + boost::filsystem::path save_path() const; + bool move_storage(boost::filesystem::path const& save_path); + + sha1_hash info_hash() const; + + bool operator==(const torrent_handle&) const; + bool operator!=(const torrent_handle&) const; + bool operator<(const torrent_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.
+TODO: document trackers() and replace_trackers() +TODO: document how to create a .torrent
++++boost::filsystem::path save_path() const; ++
save_path() returns the path that was given to add_torrent() when this torrent +was started.
++++bool move_storage(boost::filsystem::path const& save_path); ++
Moves the file(s) that this torrent are currently seeding from or downloading to. This +operation will only have the desired effect if the given save_path is located on +the same drive as the original save path. If the move operation fails, this function +returns false, otherwise true. Post condition for successful operation is: +save_path() == save_path.
++++void force_reannounce(); ++
force_reannounce() will force this torrent to do another tracker request, to receive new +peers. If the torrent is invalid, queued or in checking mode, this functions will throw +invalid_handle.
++++void connect_peer(address const& adr) 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 invalid_handle.
++++void set_ratio(float ratio); ++
set_ratio() sets the desired download / upload ratio. If set to 0, it is considered being +infinite. i.e. the client will always upload as much as it can, no matter how much it gets back +in return. With this setting it will work much like the standard clients.
+Besides 0, the ratio can be set to any number greater than or equal to 1. It means how much to +attempt to upload in return for each download. e.g. if set to 2, the client will try to upload +2 bytes for every byte received. The default setting for this is 0, which will make it work +as a standard client.
++++void set_upload_limit(int limit); +void set_download_limit(int limit); ++
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::set_upload_rate_limit) +will not override the global rate limit. The torrent can never upload more than the global rate +limit.
++++void pause(); +void resume(); +bool is_paused() 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. You can use is_paused() to determine if a torrent +is currently paused. Torrents may be paused automatically if there is a file error (eg. disk full) +or something similar. See file_error_alert.
++++bool is_seed() const; ++
Returns true if the torrent is in seed mode (i.e. if it has finished downloading).
++++int num_complete() const; +int num_incomplete() const; +int num_downloaded() const; ++
These members returns the optional scrape data returned by the tracker in the announce response. +If the tracker did not return any scrape data the return value of these functions are -1. Note +that in some cases the tracker can return some scrape data, so there is no guarantee that all +functions returns -1 just because one of them do. num_complete() is the total number of +seeds in the swarm. num_incomplete() is the number of downloaders in the swarm and +num_downloaded() is the number of times this torrent has been downloaded.
++++bool has_metadata() const; ++
Returns 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 return false is when the torrent +was started torrent-less (i.e. with just an info-hash and tracker ip). Note that if the torrent +doesn't have metadata, the member get_torrent_info() will throw.
++++void set_tracker_login(std::string const& username, std::string const& password); ++
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.
++++void use_interface(char const* net_interface); ++
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 can be a string containing an ip-address or a hostname.
++++sha1_hash info_hash() const; ++
info_hash() returns the info-hash for the torrent.
++++void set_max_uploads(int max_uploads); +void set_max_connections(int max_connections); ++
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.
+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.
++++entry write_resume_data(); ++
write_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.
+There are three cases where this function will just return an empty entry:
++++
+- The torrent handle is invalid.
+- The torrent is checking (or is queued for checking) its storage, it will obviously +not be ready to write resume data.
+- The torrent hasn't received valid metadata and was started without metadata +(see libtorrent's metadata from peers extension)
+
Note that by the time this function returns, the resume data may already be invalid if the torrent +is still downloading! The recommended practice is to first pause the torrent, then generate the +fast resume data, and then close it down.
++++std::vector<char> const& metadata() const; ++
metadata() will return a reference to a buffer containing the exact info part of the +.torrent file. This buffer will be valid as long as the torrent is still running. When hashed, +it will produce the same hash as the info-hash.
++++torrent_status status(); ++
status() will return a structure with information about the status of this +torrent. If the torrent_handle is invalid, it will throw invalid_handle exception. +See torrent_status.
++++void get_download_queue(std::vector<partial_piece_info>& queue); ++
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 +{ + enum { max_blocks_per_piece }; + int piece_index; + int blocks_in_piece; + std::bitset<max_blocks_per_piece> requested_blocks; + std::bitset<max_blocks_per_piece> finished_blocks; + peer_id peer[max_blocks_per_piece]; + int num_downloads[max_blocks_per_piece]; +}; ++
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.
+requested_blocks is a bitset with one bit per block in the piece. If a bit is set, it +means that that block has been requested, but not necessarily fully downloaded yet. To know +from whom the block has been requested, have a look in the peer array. The bit-index +in the requested_blocks and finished_blocks correspons to the array-index into +peers and num_downloads. The array of peers is contains the id of the +peer the piece was requested from. If a piece hasn't been requested (the bit in +requested_blocks is not set) the peer array entry will be undefined.
+The finished_blocks is a bitset where each bit says if the block is fully downloaded +or not. And the num_downloads array says how many times that block has been downloaded. +When a piece fails a hash verification, single blocks may be redownloaded to see if the hash teast +may pass then.
++++void get_peer_info(std::vector<peer_info>&); ++
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 invalid_handle exception. Each entry in +the vector contains information about that particular peer. See peer_info.
++++torrent_info const& get_torrent_info(); ++
Returns a const reference to the torrent_info object associated with this torrent. +This reference is valid as long as the torrent_handle is valid, no longer. If the +torrent_handle is invalid or if it doesn't have any metadata, invalid_handle +exception will be thrown. The torrent may be in a state without metadata only if +it was started without a .torrent file, i.e. by using the libtorrent extension of +just supplying a tracker and info-hash.
++++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.
+It contains the following fields:
++struct torrent_status +{ + enum state_t + { + queued_for_checking, + checking_files, + connecting_to_tracker, + downloading, + seeding + }; + + state_t state; + bool paused; + float progress; + 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; + + float download_rate; + float upload_rate; + + float download_payload_rate; + float upload_payload_rate; + + int num_peers; + + const std::vector<bool>* pieces; + size_type total_done; + + int num_seeds; + float distributed_copies; + + int block_size; +}; ++
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. The torrent's +current task is in the state member, it will be one of the following:
+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. | +
connecting_to_tracker | +The torrent has sent a request to the tracker and is +currently waiting for a response | +
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. | +
seeding | +In this state the torrent has finished downloading and +is a pure seeder. | +
paused is set to true if the torrent is paused and false otherwise.
+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.
+total_payload_download and total_payload_upload counts the amount of bytes +send and received this session, but only the actual oayload 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.
+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.
+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 noticable.
+num_peers is the number of peers this torrent currently is connected to.
+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_download_payload).
+num_seeds is the number of peers that are seeding that this client is +currently connected to.
+distributed_copies is the number of distributed copies of the torrent. +Note that one copy may be spread out among many peers. The integer part +tells how many copies there are currently of the rarest piece(s) among the +peers this client is connected to. The fractional part tells the share of +pieces that have more copies than the rarest piece(s). For example: 2.5 would +mean 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.
+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.
+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 + }; + unsigned int flags; + address ip; + float up_speed; + float down_speed; + size_type total_download; + size_type total_upload; + peer_id id; + std::vector<bool> pieces; + bool seed; + int upload_limit; + int upload_ceiling; + + size_type load_balancing; + + int download_queue_length; + int upload_queue_length; + + int downloading_piece_index; + int downloading_block_index; + int downloading_progress; + int downloading_total; +}; ++
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 +remote_choked | +means the same thing but that the peer is interested +in pieces from us and 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 is in the +address of this peer. If this flag is not set, this +peer connection was opened by this peer connecting to +us. | +
The ip field is the IP-address to this peer. Its type is a wrapper around the +actual address and the port number. See address class.
+up_speed and down_speed is the current upload and download speed +we have to and from this peer. These figures are updated aproximately 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.
+id 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 vector of booleans that has as many entries as there are pieces +in the torrent. Each boolean tells you if the peer has that piece (if it's set to true) +or if the peer miss that piece (set to false).
+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 limit. The upload limits of all peers +should sum up to the upload limit set by session::set_upload_limit.
+upload_ceiling is the current maximum allowed upload rate given the cownload +rate and share ratio. If the global upload rate is inlimited, the upload_limit +for every peer will be the same as their upload_ceiling.
+load_balancing is a measurment 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.
+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.
+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.
+The address class represents a name of a network endpoint (usually referred to as +IP-address) and a port number. This is the same thing as a sockaddr_in would contain. +Its declaration looks like this:
++class address +{ +public: + address(); + address(unsigned char a + , unsigned char b + , unsigned char c + , unsigned char d + , unsigned short port); + address(unsigned int addr, unsigned short port); + address(const std::string& addr, unsigned short port); + address(const address& a); + ~address(); + + std::string as_string() const; + unsigned int ip() const; + unsigned short port() const; + + bool operator<(const address& a) const; + bool operator!=(const address& a) const; + bool operator==(const address& a) const; +}; ++
It is less-than comparable to make it possible to use it as a key in a map. as_string() may block +while it does the DNS lookup, it returns a string that points to the address represented by the object.
+ip() will return the 32-bit ip-address as an integer. port() returns the port number.
+You have some control over tracker requests through the http_settings object. You +create it and fill it with your settings and then use session::set_http_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 is a good way to identify your client.
++struct http_settings +{ + http_settings(); + std::string proxy_ip; + int proxy_port; + std::string proxy_login; + std::string proxy_password; + std::string user_agent; + int tracker_timeout; + int tracker_maximum_response_length; +}; ++
proxy_ip may be a hostname or ip to a http proxy to use. If this is +an empty string, no http proxy will be used.
+proxy_port is the port on which the http proxy listens. If proxy_ip +is empty, this will be ignored.
+proxy_login should be the login username for the http proxy, if this +empty, the http proxy will be trid to be used without authentication.
+proxy_password the password string for the http proxy.
+user_agent this is the client identification to the tracker. It will +be followed by the string "(libtorrent)" to identify that this library +is being used. This should be set to your client's name and version number.
+tracker_timeout is the number of seconds the tracker connection will +wait until it considers the tracker to have timed-out. Default value 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.
+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.
+This class creates sha1-hashes. Its declaration looks like this:
++class hasher +{ +public: + hasher(); + + void update(const char* 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.
+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.
+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 id[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 | +
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.
++++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.
++++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.
+The entry class is the internal representation of the bencoded data +and it can be used to retreive 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_insert_iterator<std::vector<char> >(buf), e); ++
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 invalid_encoding.
+The pop_alert() function on session is the interface for retrieving +alerts, warnings, messages and errors from libtorrent. If there hasn't +occured any errors (matching your severity level) pop_alert() will +return a zero pointer. If there has been some error, it will return a pointer +to an alert object describing it. You can then use the alert object and query +it for information about the error or message. To retrieve any alerts, you have +to select a severity level using session::set_severity_level(). It defaults to +alert::none, which means that you don't get any messages at all, ever. +You have the following levels to select among:
+none | +No alert will ever have this severity level, which +effectively filters all messages. | +
fatal | +Fatal errors will have this severity level. Examples can +be disk full or something else that will make it +impossible to continue normal execution. | +
critical | +Signals errors that requires user interaction or +messages that almost never should be ignored. For +example, a chat message received from another peer is +announced as severity critical. | +
warning | +Messages with the warning severity can be a tracker that +times out or responds with invalid data. It will be +retried automatically, and the possible next tracker in +a multitracker sequence will be tried. It does not +require any user interaction. | +
info | +Events that can be considered normal, but still deserves +an event. This could be a piece hash that fails. | +
debug | +This will include alot of debug events that can be used +both for debugging libtorrent but also when debugging +other clients that are connected to libtorrent. It will +report strange behaviors among the connected peers. | +
When setting a severity level, you will receive messages of that severity and all +messages that are more sever. If you set alert::none (the default) you will not recieve +any events at all.
+When you set a severuty level other than none, you have the responsibility to call +pop_alert() from time to time. If you don't do that, the alert queue will just grow.
+When you get an alert, you can use typeid() or dynamic_cast<> to get more detailed +information on exactly which type it is. i.e. what kind of error it is. You can also use a +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:
++class alert +{ +public: + + enum severity_t { debug, info, warning, critital, fatal, none }; + + alert(severity_t severity, const std::string& msg); + virtual ~alert(); + + std::string const& msg() const; + severity_t severity() const; + + virtual std::auto_ptr<alert> clone() const = 0; +}; ++
This means that all alerts have at least a string describing it. They also +have a severity level that can be used to sort them or present them to the +user in different ways.
+The specific alerts, that all derives from alert, are:
+This alert is generated when none of the ports, given in the port range, to +session can be opened for listening. This alert is generated as severity +level fatal.
++struct listen_failed_alert: alert +{ + listen_failed_alert(const std::string& msg); + virtual std::auto_ptr<alert> clone() const; +}; ++
If the storage fails to read or write files that it needs access to, this alert is +generated and the torrent is paused. It is generated as severity level fatal.
++struct file_error_alert: alert +{ + file_error_alert( + const torrent_handle& h + , const std::string& msg); + + virtual std::auto_ptr<alert> clone() const; + + torrent_handle handle; +}; ++
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. This alert is generated as severity level warning.
+The times_in_row member says how many times in a row this tracker has failed.
++struct tracker_alert: alert +{ + tracker_alert(const torrent_handle& h, int times + , const std::string& msg); + virtual std::auto_ptr<alert> clone() const; + + torrent_handle handle; + int times_in_row; +}; ++
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. +This alert is generated as severity level info.
++struct hash_failed_alert: alert +{ + hash_failed_alert( + const torrent_handle& h + , int index + , const std::string& msg); + + virtual std::auto_ptr<alert> clone() const; + + torrent_handle handle; + int piece_index; +}; ++
This alert is generated when a peer is banned because it has sent too many corrupt pieces +to us. It is generated at severity level info. The handle member is a torrent_handle +to the torrent that this peer was a member of.
++struct peer_ban_alert: alert +{ + peer_ban_alert( + address const& pip + , torrent_handle h + , const std::string& msg); + + virtual std::auto_ptr<alert> clone() const; + + address ip; + torrent_handle handle; +}; ++
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. This alert +is generated as severity level debug.
++struct peer_error_alert: alert +{ + peer_error_alert( + address const& pip + , peer_id const& pid + , const std::string& msg); + + virtual std::auto_ptr<alert> clone() const; + + address ip; + peer_id id; +}; ++
This is a debug alert that is generated by an incoming invalid piece request. The handle +is a handle to the torrent the peer is a member of. Ïp is the address of the peer and the +request is the actual incoming request from the peer. The alert is generated as severity level +debug.
++struct invalid_request_alert: alert +{ + invalid_request_alert( + peer_request const& r + , torrent_handle const& h + , address const& send + , peer_id const& pid + , std::string const& msg); + + virtual std::auto_ptr<alert> clone() const; + + torrent_handle handle; + address ip; + peer_request request; + peer_id id; +}; + + +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.
+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. This alert is generated as severity level info.
++struct torrent_finished_alert: alert +{ + torrent_finished_alert( + const torrent_handle& h + , const std::string& msg); + + virtual std::auto_ptr<alert> clone() const; + + torrent_handle handle; +}; ++
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). +It is generated at severity level info.
++struct metadata_received_alert: alert +{ + metadata_received_alert( + const torrent_handle& h + , const std::string& msg); + + virtual std::auto_ptr<alert> clone() const; + + torrent_handle handle; +}; ++ +
TODO: describe the dispatcher mechanism
+There are a number of exceptions that can be thrown from different places in libtorrent, +here's a complete list with description.
+This exception is thrown when querying information from a torrent_handle that hasn't +been initialized or that has become invalid.
++struct invalid_handle: std::exception +{ + const char* what() const throw(); +}; ++
This is thrown by add_torrent() if the torrent already has been added to +the session.
++struct duplicate_torrent: std::exception +{ + const char* what() const throw(); +}; ++
This is thrown by bdecode() if the input data is not a valid bencoding.
++struct invalid_encoding: std::exception +{ + const char* what() const throw(); +}; ++
This is thrown from the accessors of entry if the data type of the entry doesn't +match the type you want to extract from it.
++struct type_error: std::runtime_error +{ + type_error(const char* error); +}; ++
This exception is thrown from the constructor of torrent_info if the given bencoded information +doesn't meet the requirements on what information has to be present in a torrent file.
++struct invalid_torrent_file: std::exception +{ + const char* what() const throw(); +}; ++
This is an example of a program that will take a torrent-file as a parameter and +print information about it to std out:
++#include <iostream> +#include <fstream> +#include <iterator> +#include <exception> +#include <iomanip> + +#include "libtorrent/entry.hpp" +#include "libtorrent/bencode.hpp" +#include "libtorrent/torrent_info.hpp" + + +int main(int argc, char* argv[]) +{ + using namespace libtorrent; + + if (argc != 2) + { + std::cerr << "usage: dump_torrent torrent-file\n"; + return 1; + } + + try + { + std::ifstream in(argv[1], std::ios_base::binary); + in.unsetf(std::ios_base::skipws); + entry e = bdecode(std::istream_iterator<char>(in), std::istream_iterator<char>()); + torrent_info t(e); + + // print info about torrent + std::cout << "\n\n----- torrent file info -----\n\n"; + std::cout << "trackers:\n"; + for (std::vector<announce_entry>::const_iterator i = t.trackers().begin(); + i != t.trackers().end(); + ++i) + { + std::cout << i->tier << ": " << i->url << "\n"; + } + + std::cout << "number of pieces: " << t.num_pieces() << "\n"; + std::cout << "piece length: " << t.piece_length() << "\n"; + std::cout << "files:\n"; + for (torrent_info::file_iterator i = t.begin_files(); + i != t.end_files(); + ++i) + { + std::cout << " " << std::setw(11) << i->size + << " " << i->path << " " << i->filename << "\n"; + } + + } + catch (std::exception& e) + { + std::cout << e.what() << "\n"; + } + + return 0; +} ++
This is a simple client. It doesn't have much output to keep it simple:
++#include <iostream> +#include <fstream> +#include <iterator> +#include <exception> + +#include <boost/format.hpp> +#include <boost/date_time/posix_time/posix_time.hpp> + +#include "libtorrent/entry.hpp" +#include "libtorrent/bencode.hpp" +#include "libtorrent/session.hpp" +#include "libtorrent/http_settings.hpp" + +int main(int argc, char* argv[]) +{ + using namespace libtorrent; + + if (argc != 2) + { + std::cerr << "usage: ./simple_cient torrent-file\n" + "to stop the client, press return.\n"; + return 1; + } + + try + { + session s; + s.listen_on(std::make_pair(6881, 6889)); + + std::ifstream in(argv[1], std::ios_base::binary); + in.unsetf(std::ios_base::skipws); + entry e = bdecode(std::istream_iterator<char>(in), std::istream_iterator<char>()); + s.add_torrent(e, ""); + + // wait for the user to end + char a; + std::cin.unsetf(std::ios_base::skipws); + std::cin >> a; + } + catch (std::exception& e) + { + std::cout << e.what() << "\n"; + } + return 0; +} ++
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 +torrent_handle::write_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 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.
+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. | +||||||
slots | +list of integers. The list mappes 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. + |
+||||||
peers | +list of dictionaries. Each dictionary has the following +layout: +
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: +
|
+
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).
+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.
+Extension name: "chat"
+The payload in the packet is a bencoded dictionary with any +combination of the following entries:
++++
++ + ++ + + "msg" +This is a string that contains a message that +should be displayed to the user. ++ + "ctrl" +This is a control string that can tell a client that +it is ignored (to make the user aware of that) and +it can also tell a client that it is no longer ignored. +These notifications are encoded as the strings: +"ignored" and "not ignored". +Any unrecognized strings should be ignored. +
Extension name: "metadata"
+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. +
The current implementation of this extension in libtorrent is experimental, +and not optimal in any way.
+Boost.Filesystem will by default check all its paths to make sure they conform +to filename requirements on many platforms. If you don't want this check, you can +set it to either only check for native filesystem requirements or turn it off +alltogether. You can use:
++boost::filesystem::path::default_name_check(boost::filesystem::native); ++
for example. For more information, see the Boost.Filesystem docs.
+Written by Arvid Norberg. Copyright (c) 2003
+Contributions by Magnus Jonsson and Daniel Wallin
+Thanks to Reimond Retz for bugfixes, suggestions and testing
+Thanks to University of Ume for providing development and +test hardware.
+Project is hosted by sourceforge.
+ +uint32_t | ip | Your ip address. Set to 0 if you want -the tracker to use the sender of +the tracker to use the sender of this udp packet. |
uint32_t | @@ -227,7 +227,7 @@ in the reply. Use -1 for default.
The rest of the server reply is a variable number of the following structure:
-The following structure is repeated num_info_hashes times:
-The rest of the packet contains the following structures once for each info-hash you asked in the scrape request.
-