A tracker for the LBRY protocol.
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2014-07-16 20:08:23 -04:00
config Purge peers that have not announced for twice the announce interval 2014-07-16 19:38:51 -04:00
drivers Use <= over < for time comparison to allow for sub-second tests 2014-07-16 20:08:23 -04:00
http Add peer purging test, and ensure the purging routine runs whenever a tracker is created 2014-07-16 20:08:03 -04:00
models Only prune torrents if they have no peers 2014-07-16 14:11:01 -04:00
.travis.yml update travis to go1.3 & rm redis dependency 2014-06-19 12:35:24 -04:00
AUTHORS Reflect change in sorting in the descriptions 2014-07-06 23:58:34 -04:00
CONTRIBUTORS Reflect change in sorting in the descriptions 2014-07-06 23:58:34 -04:00
example.json repurpose drivers from mock to no-op and memory 2014-07-15 00:22:04 -04:00
LICENSE Happy uber-belated new year! 2014-07-06 17:56:54 -04:00
main.go Add instructions for how to import custom drivers 2014-07-16 19:46:50 -04:00
README.md Add instructions for how to import custom drivers 2014-07-16 19:46:50 -04:00

Chihaya Build Status

Chihaya is a high-performance BitTorrent tracker written in the Go programming language. It is still heavily under development and the current master branch should not be used in production.

Planned features include:

  • Light resource consumption
  • Fast request processing using connection pools to spare the network from exorbitant connections
  • Maximum compatibility with what exists of the BitTorrent spec
  • Correct IPv6 support gasp
  • Generic storage interfaces that are easily adapted to work with any database.

Technical Details

See the wiki for a discussion of the design behind Chihaya.

Using Chihaya

Chihaya can be ran as a public or private tracker and is intended to work with existing torrent-indexing web frameworks, such as Gazelle, Batter and any others that spring up. Following the Unix way, it is built to perform one specific task: handling announces and scrapes. By cleanly separating the concerns between tracker and database, we can provide an interface that can be used by system that needs its functionality. See below for more info.

Installing

Chihaya requires Go 1.3+ to build.

$ go get github.com/chihaya/chihaya

Make sure you have your $GOPATH set up correctly, and have $GOPATH/bin in your $PATH. If you're new to Go, an overview of the directory structure can be found here.

Configuring

Configuration is done in a JSON formatted file specified with the -config flag. An example configuration file can be found here.

Running the tests

$ cd $GOPATH/src/github.com/chihaya/chihaya
$ go test -v ./...

Drivers

Chihaya is designed to remain agnostic about the choice of data store for an application, and it is straightforward to implement a new driver. However, there are a number of drivers that will be directly supported "out of the box":

Tracker:

Backend:

To use an external driver, make your own package and call it something like github.com/yourusername/chihaya. Then, import Chihaya like so:

package chihaya // This is your own chihaya package.

import (
	c "github.com/chihaya/chihaya" // Use an alternate name to avoid the conflict.

	_ "github.com/yourusername/chihaya-custom-backend" // Import any of your own drivers.
)

func main() {
	c.Boot() // Start Chihaya normally.
}

Then, when you do go install github.com/yourusername/chihaya, your own drivers will be included in the binary.

Contributing

If you're interested in contributing, please contact us via IRC in #chihaya on freenode or post to the GitHub issue tracker. Please don't write massive patches with no prior communication, as it will most likely lead to confusion and time wasted for everyone. However, small unannounced fixes are always welcome!

And remember: good gophers always use gofmt!