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Content Downloading | This resource article walks through the step-by-step process of downloading a piece of content from the LBRY network. |
This resource outlines the step-by-step process of using the LBRY protocol to download something.
Getting Started
Downloading spans the three core components of LBRY (blockchain, DHT, blob exchange) and explains the structure of the claim metadata and the blobs that make up a stream.
You will need:
- a running lbrycrd node, or another way to access blockchain data (perhaps lbryumx or chainquery)
- a running DHT node
- the claim ID of the content you wish to download
For this example, we will use claim ID d9317ac7842f88ba442fee749c4f834353c24206
.
Overview
- start with claim ID
- blockchain gets you metadata for your claim ID
- parsing metadata gets you stream hash and fee info
- if there is a fee, pay it using the blockchain
- dht gets you peers for the stream hash
- blob exchange gets manifest blob from peers
- manifest is parsed to get content blob hashes
- dht and then blob exchange get you the content blobs
- blobs are decrypted and assembled to create the file
Parse the Metadata
Perform a getclaimbyid
call to lbrycrd using the claim ID for the claim you want to look up. You should get a response with some parameters. The value
parameter contains the claim contents as a protobuf-encoded binary string. Decode the value using the protobuf definitions in lbryio/types. You will get a Claim object.
Get the Stream Hash
Confirm that Claim.type
is 1
(a stream claim).
Claim.Stream.hash contains the stream hash, which is the hash of the manifest blob in the stream.
Pay the Fee
Check the Claim.Stream.Fee
field. If it exists, then a payment is required to download this content. Get the address, amount, and currency from the Fee, convert the amount to LBC if its not already in LBC, and perform a sendtoaddress
call to lbrycrd to send the fee amount to the fee address.
Our example claim does not have a fee. If you want to see a claim with a fee, look up claim ID fbdcd44a97810522d23d5f1335b8ca04be9d776c
.
Find Hosts for the Manifest Blob
Look up the stream hash in the DHT. Internally this will perform an iterativeFindValue call, starting with the nodes already in the routing table and proceeding to nodes that are closest to the stream hash. The DHT should return a list of hosts that have advertised that they have this hash.
Download Manifest Blob
Use the blob exchange protocol to request the manifest blob from the hosts found in the previous step.
Read Manifest Blob
The manifest is JSON-formatted text. It contains a dictionary with the following structure:
{
"blobs": [
{
"blobHash": "b7e43c102781f978c24bc2bc...",
"iv": "63a6befc3c8d01f662ffad2f2381b357",
"length": 2097152,
},
...
],
"filename": "574c707655476a766d58632e6d7034",
"key": "ee768c4e642012bb5b2e20cf9b1f997b",
"version":1
}
All string fields are hex-encoded.
To download the content blobs, repeat the steps we took for the stream hash, but instead use the blobHash
value for each blob. Look up the blob hash in the DHT to find hosts, then download the blob from those hosts.
Decrypt and Assemble Blobs
Now that all the blobs have been downloaded, they can be decrypted and assembled into the original file. Decrypt each blob using the key and IVs in the manifest, and concatenate the decrypted bytes in order. Write the finished file to disk.
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