Ttorrent is a pure-Java implementation of the BitTorrent protocol, providing a BitTorrent tracker, a BitTorrent client and the related Torrent metainfo files creation and parsing capabilities. It is designed to be embedded into larger applications, but its components can also be used as standalone programs.
Ttorrent supports the following BEPs (BitTorrent enhancement proposals):
BEP#0003
: The BitTorrent protocol specification
This is the base official protocol specification, which Ttorrent implements fully.BEP#0012
: Multi-tracker metadata extension
Full support for theannounce-list
meta-info key providing a tiered tracker list.BEP#0015
: UDP Tracker Protocol for BitTorrent
The UDP tracker protocol is fully supported in the BitTorrent client to make announce requests to UDP trackers. UDP tracker support itself is planned.BEP#0020
: Peer ID conventions
Ttorrent usesTO
as the client identification string, and currently uses the-T00042-
client ID prefix.BEP#0023
: Tracker Returns Compact Peer Lists
Compact peer lists are supported in both the client and the tracker. Currently the tracker only supports sending back compact peer lists to an announce request.
This tool suite was implemented as part of Turn's (http://www.turn.com) release distribution and deployment system and is used to distribute new build tarballs to a large number of machines inside a datacenter as efficiently as possible. At the time this project was started, few Java implementations of the BitTorrent protocol existed and unfortunately none of them fit our needs:
- Vuze's, which is very hard to extract from their codebase, and thus complex to re-integrate into another application;
- torrent4j, which is largely incomplete and not usable;
- Snark's, which is old, and unfortunately unstable;
- bitext, which was also unfortunately unstable, and extremely slow.
This implementation aims at providing a down-to-earth, simple to use library. No fancy protocol extensions are implemented here: just the basics that allows for the exchange and distribution of files through the BitTorrent protocol.
Although the write performance of the BitTorrent client is currently quite poor (~10MB/sec/connected peer), it has been measured that the distribution of a 150MB file to thousands of machines across several datacenters took no more than 30 seconds, with very little network overhead for the initial seeder (only 125% of the original file size uploaded by the initial seeder).
The client, tracker and torrent file manipulation utilities will all present a
usage message on the console when invoked with the -h
command-line flag.
To use ttorrent
is a library in your project, all you need is to
declare the dependency on the latest version of ttorrent
. For
example, if you use Maven, add the following in your POM's dependencies
section:
<dependencies>
...
<dependency>
<groupId>com.turn</groupId>
<artifactId>ttorrent-core</artifactId>
<version>1.5</version>
</dependency>
</dependencies>
Thanks to Anatoli Vladev for the code examples in #16.
// First, instantiate the Client object.
Client client = new Client(
// This is the interface the client will listen on (you might need something
// else than localhost here).
InetAddress.getLocalHost(),
// Load the torrent from the torrent file and use the given
// output directory. Partials downloads are automatically recovered.
SharedTorrent.fromFile(
new File("/path/to/your.torrent"),
new File("/path/to/output/directory")));
// You can optionally set download/upload rate limits
// in kB/second. Setting a limit to 0.0 disables rate
// limits.
client.setMaxDownloadRate(50.0);
client.setMaxUploadRate(50.0);
// At this point, can you either call download() to download the torrent and
// stop immediately after...
client.download();
// Or call client.share(...) with a seed time in seconds:
// client.share(3600);
// Which would seed the torrent for an hour after the download is complete.
// Downloading and seeding is done in background threads.
// To wait for this process to finish, call:
client.waitForCompletion();
// At any time you can call client.stop() to interrupt the download.
// First, instantiate a Tracker object with the port you want it to listen on.
// The default tracker port recommended by the BitTorrent protocol is 6969.
Tracker tracker = new Tracker(new InetSocketAddress(6969));
// Then, for each torrent you wish to announce on this tracker, simply created
// a TrackedTorrent object and pass it to the tracker.announce() method:
FilenameFilter filter = new FilenameFilter() {
@Override
public boolean accept(File dir, String name) {
return name.endsWith(".torrent");
}
};
for (File f : new File("/path/to/torrent/files").listFiles(filter)) {
tracker.announce(TrackedTorrent.load(f));
}
// Once done, you just have to start the tracker's main operation loop:
tracker.start();
// You can stop the tracker when you're done with:
tracker.stop();
You can track the progress of the download and the state of the torrent
by registering an Observer
on your Client
instance. The observer is
updated every time a piece of the download completes:
client.addObserver(new Observer() {
@Override
public void update(Observable observable, Object data) {
Client client = (Client) observable;
float progress = client.getTorrent().getCompletion();
// Do something with progress.
}
});
This BitTorrent library is distributed under the terms of the Apache Software License version 2.0. See COPYING file for more details.
- Maxime Petazzoni <[email protected]> (Software Engineer at SignalFuse, Inc)
Original author, main developer and maintainer - David Giffin <[email protected]>
Contributed parallel hashing and multi-file torrent support. - Thomas Zink <[email protected]>
Fixed a piece length computation issue when the total torrent size is an exact multiple of the piece size. - Johan Parent <<[email protected]>>
Fixed a bug in unfresh peer collection and issues on download completion on Windows platforms. - Dmitriy Dumanskiy
Contributed the switch from Ant to Maven. - Alexey Ptashniy
Fixed an integer overflow in the calculation of a torrent's full size.
And many other helpful contributors on GitHub! Thanks to all of you.
- Client write performance is a bit poor, mainly due to a (too?) simple piece caching algorithm.
Contributions are welcome in all areas, even more so for these few points above!