4.6 KiB
aquatic
Blazingly fast, multi-threaded BitTorrent tracker written in Rust.
Consists of separate executables:
aquatic_udp: UDP BitTorrent trackeraquatic_ws: WebTorrent tracker (experimental)
These are described in detail below, after the general information.
Copyright and license
Copyright (c) 2020 Joakim Frostegård
Distributed under Apache 2.0 license (details in LICENSE file.)
Installation prerequisites
- Install Rust with rustup (stable is recommended)
- Install cmake with your package manager (e.g.,
apt-get install cmake) - For
aquatic_wson GNU/Linux, also install the OpenSSL components necessary for dynamic linking (e.g.,apt-get install libssl-dev) - Clone the git repository and refer to the next section.
Run
The command line interfaces for aquatic_udp and aquatic_ws are identical.
To run the respective tracker, just run its binary. You can also run any of
the helper scripts, which will compile the binary for you and pass on any
command line parameters.
To run with default settings:
./scripts/run-aquatic-udp.sh
./scripts/run-aquatic-ws.sh
To print default settings to standard output, pass the "-p" flag to the binary:
./scripts/run-aquatic-udp.sh -p
./scripts/run-aquatic-ws.sh -p
To adjust the settings, save the output of the previous command to a file and
make your changes. The values you will most likely want to adjust are
socket_workers (number of threads reading from and writing to sockets) and
address under the network section (listening address). This goes for both
aquatic_udp and aquatic_ws. Some documentation of the various options is
available in source code files aquatic_udp/src/lib/config.rs and
aquatic_ws/src/lib/config.rs.
Then run the binaries with a "-c" argument pointing to the file, e.g.:
./scripts/run-aquatic-udp.sh -c "/path/to/aquatic-udp-config.toml"
./scripts/run-aquatic-ws.sh -c "/path/to/aquatic-ws-config.toml"
aquatic_udp: UDP BitTorrent tracker
Aims to implements the UDP BitTorrent protocol, except that it:
- Doesn't care about IP addresses sent in announce requests. The packet source IP is always used.
- Doesn't track of the number of torrent downloads (0 is always sent).
Supports IPv4 and IPv6.
Default configuration:
socket_workers = 1
request_workers = 1
[network]
address = '127.0.0.1:3000'
max_scrape_torrents = 255
max_response_peers = 255
peer_announce_interval = 900
socket_recv_buffer_size = 524288
poll_event_capacity = 4096
[handlers]
max_requests_per_iter = 10000
channel_recv_timeout_microseconds = 200
[statistics]
interval = 5
[cleaning]
interval = 30
max_peer_age = 1200
max_connection_age = 300
[privileges]
drop_privileges = false
chroot_path = '.'
user = 'nobody'
Benchmarks
Performance was compared to
opentracker using
aquatic_udp_load_test.
Server responses per second, best result in bold:
| workers | aquatic | opentracker |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | n/a | 177k |
| 2 | 168k | 98k |
| 3 | 187k | 118k |
| 4 | 216k | 127k |
| 6 | 309k | 109k |
| 8 | 408k | 96k |
(See documents/aquatic-load-test-2020-04-19.pdf for details.)
aquatic_ws: WebTorrent tracker
Experimental WebTorrent tracker.
Default configuration:
socket_workers = 1
[network]
address = '127.0.0.1:3000'
use_tls = false
tls_pkcs12_path = ''
tls_pkcs12_password = ''
max_scrape_torrents = 255
max_offers = 10
peer_announce_interval = 120
poll_event_capacity = 4096
poll_timeout_milliseconds = 50
[handlers]
max_requests_per_iter = 10000
channel_recv_timeout_microseconds = 200
[cleaning]
interval = 30
max_peer_age = 180
max_connection_age = 180
[privileges]
drop_privileges = false
chroot_path = '.'
user = 'nobody'
TLS
To run over TLS (wss protocol), a pkcs12 file (.pkx) is needed. It can be
generated from Let's Encrypt certificates as follows, assuming you are in the
directory where they are stored:
openssl pkcs12 -export -out identity.pfx -inkey privkey.pem -in cert.pem -certfile fullchain.pem
Enter a password when prompted. Then move the file somewhere suitable, and
enter the path into the tracker configuration field tls_pkcs12_path. Set the
password in the field tls_pkcs12_password and set use_tls to true.
Trivia
The tracker is called aquatic because it thrives under a torrent of bits ;-)