libtorrent python binding
Author: | Arvid Norberg, arvid@libtorrent.org |
---|---|
Version: | 1.2.12 |
Table of contents
building
Building the libtorrent python bindings will produce a shared library (DLL) which is a python module that can be imported in a python program.
building using boost build (windows)
Download and install Visual C++ 2015 Build Tools
Download Boost libraries Extract it to c:/Libraries/boost_1_73_0 and create these environmental vars:
- BOOST_BUILD_PATH: "c:/Libraries/boost_1_73_0/tools/build/"
- BOOST_ROOT: "c:/Libraries/boost_1_73_0/"
Navigate to BOOST_ROOT, execute "bootstrap.bat" and add to the path "c:/Libraries/boost_1_73_0/"
Create a file user-config.jam in tour home directory and add this:
using msvc : 14.0 : : <cxxflags>/std:c++11 ; using python : 3.5 : C:/Users/<UserName>/AppData/Local/Programs/Python/Python35 : C:/Users/<UserName>/AppData/Local/Programs/Python/Python35/include : C:/Users/<UserName>/AppData/Local/Programs/Python/Python35/libs ;
(change the python path for yours)
- Navigate to bindings/python and execute::
- python setup.py build --bjam
Note: If you are using 64 bits python you should edit setup.py and add this to the b2 command: address-model=64
This will create the file libtorrent.pyd inside build/lib/ that contains the binding.
building using boost build (others)
To set up your build environment, you need to add some settings to your user-config.jam (in your home directory).
Declare the version(s) of python you have installed or want to use. If you've installed python in a non-standard location, you have to add the prefix path used when you installed python as a second option. Like this:
using python : 2.6 : /usr/bin/python2.6 : /usr/include/python2.6 : /usr/lib/python2.6 ;
The bindings require at least python version 2.2.
For more information on how to install and set up boost-build, see the building libtorrent section.
Once you have boost-build set up, you cd to the bindings/python directory and invoke b2 with the appropriate settings. For the available build variants, see libtorrent build options.
For example:
$ b2 stage_module stage_dependencies
This will produce a libtorrent python module in the current directory (file name extension depends on operating system). The libraries the python module depends on will be copied into ./dependencies.
python version
If you have multiple versions of python installed, and configured in user-config.jam, you can specify which version to build the module against with the python feature.
e.g.:
b2 python=3.9
static linking
A python module is a shared library. Specifying link=static when building the binding won't work, as it would try to produce a static library.
Instead, control whether the libtorrent main library or boost is linked statically with libtorrent-link=static and boost-link=static respectively.
By default both are built and linked as shared libraries.
Building and linking boost as static library is only possibly by building it from source. Specify the BOOST_ROOT environment variable to point to the root directory of the boost source distribution.
For example, to build a self-contained python module:
b2 -j30 libtorrent-link=static boost-link=static stage_module
installing python module
To install the python module, build it with the following command:
b2 install_module
By default the module will be installed to the python user site. This can be changed with the python-install-scope feature. The valid values are user (default) and system. e.g.:
b2 install_module python-install-scope=system
The python interpreter and the python site used, depends on your python configuration in user-config.jam and which version of python the module is being built for.
To specify a custom installation path for the python module, specify the desired path with the python-install-path feature. e.g.:
b2 install_module python-install-path=/home/foobar/python-site/
using libtorrent in python
The python interface is nearly identical to the C++ interface. Please refer to the library reference. The main differences are:
- asio::tcp::endpoint
- The endpoint type is represented as a tuple of a string (as the address) and an int for the port number. E.g. ("127.0.0.1", 6881) represents the localhost port 6881.
- lt::time_duration
- The time duration is represented as a number of seconds in a regular integer.
The following functions takes a reference to a container that is filled with entries by the function. The python equivalent of these functions instead returns a list of entries.
- torrent_handle::get_peer_info
- torrent_handle::file_progress
- torrent_handle::get_download_queue
- torrent_handle::piece_availability
create_torrent::add_node() takes two arguments, one string and one integer, instead of a pair. The string is the address and the integer is the port.
session::apply_settings() accepts a dictionary with keys matching the names of settings in settings_pack. When calling apply_settings, the dictionary does not need to have every settings set, keys that are not present are not updated.
To get a python dictionary of the settings, call session::get_settings.
Retrieving session statistics in Python is more convenient than that in C++. The statistics are stored as an array in session_stats_alert, which will be posted after calling post_session_stats() in the session object. In order to interpret the statistics array, in C++ it is required to call session_stats_metrics() to get the indices of these metrics, while in Python it can be done using session_stats_alert.values["NAME_OF_METRIC"], where NAME_OF_METRIC is the name of a metric.
set_alert_notify
The set_alert_notify() function is not compatible with python. Since it requires locking the GIL from within the libtorrent thread, to call the callback, it can cause a deadlock with the main thread.
Instead, use the python-specific set_alert_fd() which takes a file descriptor that will have 1 byte written to it to notify the client that there are new alerts to be popped.
The file descriptor should be set to non-blocking mode. If writing to the file/sending to the socket blocks, libtorrent's internal thread will stall.
This can be used with socket.socketpair(), for example. The file descriptor is what fileno() returns on a socket.
Example
For an example python program, see client.py in the bindings/python directory.
A very simple example usage of the module would be something like this:
import libtorrent as lt import time import sys ses = lt.session({'listen_interfaces': '0.0.0.0:6881'}) info = lt.torrent_info(sys.argv[1]) h = ses.add_torrent({'ti': info, 'save_path': '.'}) s = h.status() print('starting', s.name) while (not s.is_seeding): s = h.status() print('\r%.2f%% complete (down: %.1f kB/s up: %.1f kB/s peers: %d) %s' % ( s.progress * 100, s.download_rate / 1000, s.upload_rate / 1000, s.num_peers, s.state), end=' ') alerts = ses.pop_alerts() for a in alerts: if a.category() & lt.alert.category_t.error_notification: print(a) sys.stdout.flush() time.sleep(1) print(h.status().name, 'complete')