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🌊 Simple, robust, BitTorrent tracker (client & server) implementation
bittorrentbittorrent-trackerbrowserclienthacktoberfestjavascriptnodejsservertorrenttrackertracker-serverwebrtcwebtorrent
ac2c3d06d8
Use a socket pool, so tracker clients share WebSocket objects for the same server. In practice, WebSockets are pretty slow to establish, so this gives a nice performance boost, and saves browser resources. |
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server.js |
bittorrent-tracker
Simple, robust, BitTorrent tracker (client & server) implementation
Node.js implementation of a BitTorrent tracker, client and server.
A BitTorrent tracker is an HTTP service which responds to GET requests from BitTorrent clients. The requests include metrics from clients that help the tracker keep overall statistics about the torrent. The response includes a peer list that helps the client participate in the torrent.
This module is used by WebTorrent.
features
- includes client & server implementations
- supports HTTP & UDP trackers (BEP 15)
- supports tracker "scrape" extension
- robust and well-tested (comprehensive test suite, and used by WebTorrent and peerflix)
- supports ipv4 & ipv6
Also see bittorrent-dht.
install
npm install bittorrent-tracker
usage
client
To connect to a tracker, just do this:
var Client = require('bittorrent-tracker')
var parseTorrent = require('parse-torrent')
var fs = require('fs')
var torrent = fs.readFileSync(__dirname + '/torrents/bitlove-intro.torrent')
var parsedTorrent = parseTorrent(torrent) // { infoHash: 'xxx', length: xx, announce: ['xx', 'xx'] }
var peerId = new Buffer('01234567890123456789')
var port = 6881
var client = new Client(peerId, port, parsedTorrent)
client.on('error', function (err) {
// fatal client error!
console.log(err.message)
})
client.on('warning', function (err) {
// a tracker was unavailable or sent bad data to the client. you can probably ignore it
console.log(err.message)
})
// start getting peers from the tracker
client.start()
client.on('update', function (data) {
console.log('got an announce response from tracker: ' + data.announce)
console.log('number of seeders in the swarm: ' + data.complete)
console.log('number of leechers in the swarm: ' + data.incomplete)
})
client.once('peer', function (addr) {
console.log('found a peer: ' + addr) // 85.10.239.191:48623
})
// announce that download has completed (and you are now a seeder)
client.complete()
// force a tracker announce. will trigger more 'update' events and maybe more 'peer' events
client.update()
// stop getting peers from the tracker, gracefully leave the swarm
client.stop()
// ungracefully leave the swarm (without sending final 'stop' message)
client.destroy()
// scrape
client.scrape()
client.on('scrape', function (data) {
console.log('got a scrape response from tracker: ' + data.announce)
console.log('number of seeders in the swarm: ' + data.complete)
console.log('number of leechers in the swarm: ' + data.incomplete)
console.log('number of total downloads of this torrent: ' + data.incomplete)
})
server
To start a BitTorrent tracker server to track swarms of peers:
var Server = require('bittorrent-tracker').Server
var server = new Server({
udp: true, // enable udp server? [default=true]
http: true, // enable http server? [default=true]
ws: true, // enable websocket server? [default=false]
filter: function (infoHash, params) {
// black/whitelist for disallowing/allowing torrents [default=allow all]
// this example only allows this one torrent
return infoHash === 'aaa67059ed6bd08362da625b3ae77f6f4a075aaa'
// you can also block by peer id (whitelisting torrent clients) or by
// secret key, as you get full access to the original http GET
// request parameters in `params`
})
})
// Internal http, udp, and websocket servers exposed as public properties.
server.http
server.udp
server.ws
server.on('error', function (err) {
// fatal server error!
console.log(err.message)
})
server.on('warning', function (err) {
// client sent bad data. probably not a problem, just a buggy client.
console.log(err.message)
})
server.on('listening', function () {
// fired when all requested servers are listening
console.log('listening on http port:' + server.http.address().port)
console.log('listening on udp port:' + server.udp.address().port)
})
// start tracker server listening! Use 0 to listen on a random free port.
server.listen(port, hostname, onlistening)
// listen for individual tracker messages from peers:
server.on('start', function (addr) {
console.log('got start message from ' + addr)
})
server.on('complete', function (addr) {})
server.on('update', function (addr) {})
server.on('stop', function (addr) {})
// get info hashes for all torrents in the tracker server
Object.keys(server.torrents)
// get the number of seeders for a particular torrent
server.torrents[infoHash].complete
// get the number of leechers for a particular torrent
server.torrents[infoHash].incomplete
// get the peers who are in a particular torrent swarm
server.torrents[infoHash].peers
The http server will handle requests for the following paths: /announce
, /scrape
. Requests for other paths will not be handled.
command line
Easily start a tracker server:
$ bittorrent-tracker
http server listening on 8000
udp server listening on 8000
ws server listening on 8000
Lots of options:
$ bittorrent-tracker --help
bittorrent-tracker - Start a bittorrent tracker server
Usage:
bittorrent-tracker
Options:
-p, --port [number] change the port [default: 8000]
--trust-proxy trust 'x-forwarded-for' header from reverse proxy
--interval tell clients to announce on this interval (ms)
--http enable http server [default: true]
--udp enable udp server [default: true]
--ws enable ws server [default: false]
-q, --quiet only show error output
-s, --silent show no output
-v, --version print the current version
Please report bugs! https://github.com/feross/bittorrent-tracker/issues
license
MIT. Copyright (c) Feross Aboukhadijeh.