This module bundles bittorrent-dht and bittorrent-tracker clients and exposes a single API for discovering BitTorrent peers via both discovery methods.
- simple API
- find peers from trackers and the DHT
- automatically announces, so other peers can discover us
- can start finding peers with just an info hash, before full metadata is available
This module also works in the browser with browserify. In that context, it discovers WebTorrent (WebRTC) peers.
npm install torrent-discovery
Create a new peer discovery instance. Required options are:
{
peerId: '', // as utf8 string or Buffer
port: 0 // torrent client port (only required in node)
}
Optional options are:
{
announce: [], // force list of announce urls to use (from magnet uri)
dht: true, // use dht? also, can optionally pass in global DHT instance to use
tracker: true, // use trackers?
rtcConfig: {}, // RTCPeerConnection config object (only used in browser)
wrtc: {} // custom webrtc implementation, mainly useful in node to specify in the [wrtc](https://npmjs.com/package/wrtc) package
}
This module automatically handles announcing to the DHT, for maximum peer discovery.
When you learn the infoHash (hex string) of the torrent, call this method to begin searching for peers.
Later, when you get the full torrent metadata (parsed via parse-torrent), call this method again to ensure more accurate tracker stats (because we now know the torrent length).
When the port that the torrent client is listening on changes, call this method to reannounce to the tracker and DHT with the new port.
Destroy and cleanup the DHT and tracker instances.
Emitted whenever a new peer is discovered.
In node, peer
is a string in the form 12:34:56:78:4000
.
In the browser, peer
is an instance of
simple-peer
, a small wrapper around a WebRTC
peer connection.
Emitted whenever an announce
message has been sent to the DHT.
Emitted when there is a non-fatal DHT or tracker error, like an inaccessible tracker server. Useful for logging. This is non-fatal.
Emitted when there is a fatal, unrecoverable DHT or tracker error.
MIT. Copyright (c) Feross Aboukhadijeh.