WebTorrent is a streaming torrent client for Node.js and the web. WebTorrent provides the same API in both environments.
To use WebTorrent in the browser, WebRTC support is required (Chrome, Firefox, Opera, Safari).
npm install webtorrent
var client = new WebTorrent()
var torrentId = 'magnet:?xt=urn:btih:08ada5a7a6183aae1e09d831df6748d566095a10&dn=Sintel&tr=udp%3A%2F%2Fexplodie.org%3A6969&tr=udp%3A%2F%2Ftracker.coppersurfer.tk%3A6969&tr=udp%3A%2F%2Ftracker.empire-js.us%3A1337&tr=udp%3A%2F%2Ftracker.leechers-paradise.org%3A6969&tr=udp%3A%2F%2Ftracker.opentrackr.org%3A1337&tr=wss%3A%2F%2Ftracker.btorrent.xyz&tr=wss%3A%2F%2Ftracker.fastcast.nz&tr=wss%3A%2F%2Ftracker.openwebtorrent.com&ws=https%3A%2F%2Fwebtorrent.io%2Ftorrents%2F&xs=https%3A%2F%2Fwebtorrent.io%2Ftorrents%2Fsintel.torrent'
client.add(torrentId, function (torrent) {
// Torrents can contain many files. Let's use the .mp4 file
var file = torrent.files.find(function (file) {
return file.name.endsWith('.mp4')
})
// Display the file by adding it to the DOM. Supports video, audio, image, etc. files
file.appendTo('body')
})
Is WebRTC natively supported in the environment?
if (WebTorrent.WEBRTC_SUPPORT) {
// WebRTC is supported
} else {
// Use a fallback
}
Create a new WebTorrent
instance.
If opts
is specified, then the default options (shown below) will be overridden.
{
maxConns: Number, // Max number of connections per torrent (default=55)
nodeId: String|Buffer, // DHT protocol node ID (default=randomly generated)
peerId: String|Buffer, // Wire protocol peer ID (default=randomly generated)
tracker: Boolean|Object, // Enable trackers (default=true), or options object for Tracker
dht: Boolean|Object, // Enable DHT (default=true), or options object for DHT
webSeeds: Boolean // Enable BEP19 web seeds (default=true)
}
For possible values of opts.dht
see the
bittorrent-dht
documentation.
For possible values of opts.tracker
see the
bittorrent-tracker
documentation.
Start downloading a new torrent.
torrentId
can be one of:
- magnet uri (string)
- torrent file (buffer)
- info hash (hex string or buffer)
- parsed torrent (from parse-torrent)
- http/https url to a torrent file (string)
- filesystem path to a torrent file (string) (Node.js only)
If opts
is specified, then the default options (shown below) will be overridden.
{
announce: [String], // Torrent trackers to use (added to list in .torrent or magnet uri)
getAnnounceOpts: Function, // Custom callback to allow sending extra parameters to the tracker
maxWebConns: Number, // Max number of simultaneous connections per web seed [default=4]
path: String, // Folder to download files to (default=`/tmp/webtorrent/`)
store: Function // Custom chunk store (must follow [abstract-chunk-store](https://www.npmjs.com/package/abstract-chunk-store) API)
}
If ontorrent
is specified, then it will be called when this torrent is ready to be
used (i.e. metadata is available). Note: this is distinct from the 'torrent' event which
will fire for all torrents.
If you want access to the torrent object immediately in order to listen to events as the
metadata is fetched from the network, then use the return value of client.add
. If you
just want the file data, then use ontorrent
or the 'torrent' event.
If you provide opts.store
, it will be called as
opts.store(chunkLength, storeOpts)
with:
storeOpts.length
- size of all the files in the torrentstoreOpts.files
- an array of torrent file objectsstoreOpts.torrent
- the torrent instance being stored
Start seeding a new torrent.
input
can be any of the following:
- filesystem path to file or folder (string) (Node.js only)
- W3C File object (from an
<input>
or drag and drop) (browser only) - W3C FileList object (basically an array of
File
objects) (browser only) - Node Buffer object
- Node Readable stream object
Or, an array of string
, File
, Buffer
, or stream.Readable
objects.
If opts
is specified, it should contain the following types of options:
- options for create-torrent (to allow configuration of the .torrent file that is created)
- options for
client.add
(see above)
If onseed
is specified, it will be called when the client has begun seeding the file.
Note: Every torrent is required to have a name. If one is not explicitly provided
through opts.name
, one will be determined automatically using the following logic:
- If all files share a common path prefix, that will be used. For example, if all file
paths start with
/imgs/
the torrent name will beimgs
. - Otherwise, the first file that has a name will determine the torrent name. For example,
if the first file is
/foo/bar/baz.txt
, the torrent name will bebaz.txt
. - If no files have names (say that all files are Buffer or Stream objects), then a name like "Unnamed Torrent " will be generated.
Note: Every file is required to have a name. For filesystem paths or W3C File objects,
the name is included in the object. For Buffer or Readable stream types, a name
property
can be set on the object, like this:
var buf = new Buffer('Some file content')
buf.name = 'Some file name'
client.seed(buf, cb)
Emitted when a torrent is ready to be used (i.e. metadata is available and store is
ready). See the torrent section for more info on what methods a torrent
has.
Emitted when the client encounters a fatal error. The client is automatically destroyed and all torrents are removed and cleaned up when this occurs.
Always listen for the 'error' event.
Remove a torrent from the client. Destroy all connections to peers and delete all saved
file data. If callback
is specified, it will be called when file data is removed.
*Note: This method does not currently delete torrent data (in e.g. /tmp/webtorrent/...
, see the path
option to client.add
). Until this is fixed, please implement it yourself (consider using the rimraf
npm package).
Destroy the client, including all torrents and connections to peers. If callback
is specified, it will be called when the client has gracefully closed.
An array of all torrents in the client.
Returns the torrent with the given torrentId
. Convenience method. Easier than searching
through the client.torrents
array. Returns null
if no matching torrent found.
Total download speed for all torrents, in bytes/sec.
Total upload speed for all torrents, in bytes/sec.
Total download progress for all active torrents, from 0 to 1.
Aggregate "seed ratio" for all torrents (uploaded / downloaded).
Name of the torrent (string).
Info hash of the torrent (string).
Magnet URI of the torrent (string).
.torrent
file of the torrent (Buffer).
.torrent
file of the torrent (Blob URL).
Array of all files in the torrent. See documentation for File
below to learn what
methods/properties files have.
Time remaining for download to complete (in milliseconds).
Total bytes received from peers (including invalid data).
Total verified bytes received from peers.
Total bytes uploaded to peers.
Torrent download speed, in bytes/sec.
Torrent upload speed, in bytes/sec.
Torrent download progress, from 0 to 1.
Torrent "seed ratio" (uploaded / downloaded).
Number of peers in the torrent swarm.
Torrent download location.
Alias for client.remove(torrent)
. If callback
is provided, it will be called when
the torrent is fully destroyed, i.e. all open sockets are closed, and the storage is
closed.
Add a peer to the torrent swarm. This is advanced functionality. Normally, you should not
need to call torrent.addPeer()
manually. WebTorrent will automatically find peers using
the tracker servers or DHT. This is just for manually adding a peer to the client.
This method should not be called until the infoHash
event has been emitted.
Returns true
if peer was added, false
if peer was blocked by the loaded blocklist.
The peer
argument must be an address string in the format 12.34.56.78:4444
(for
normal TCP/uTP peers), or a simple-peer
instance (for WebRTC peers).
Add a web seed to the torrent swarm. For more information on BitTorrent web seeds, see BEP19.
In the browser, web seed servers must have proper CORS (Cross-origin resource sharing) headers so that data can be fetched across domain.
The url
argument is the web seed URL.
Remove a peer from the torrent swarm. This is advanced functionality. Normally, you should
not need to call torrent.removePeer()
manually. WebTorrent will automatically remove
peers from the torrent swarm when they're slow or don't have pieces that are needed.
The peer
argument should be an address (i.e. "ip:port" string), a peer id (hex string),
or simple-peer
instance.
Selects a range of pieces to prioritize starting with start
and ending with end
(both
inclusive) at the given priority
. notify
is an optional callback to be called when the
selection is updated with new data.
Deprioritizes a range of previously selected pieces.
Marks a range of pieces as critical priority to be downloaded ASAP. From start
to end
(both inclusive).
Create an http server to serve the contents of this torrent, dynamically fetching the needed torrent pieces to satisfy http requests. Range requests are supported.
Returns an http.Server
instance (got from calling http.createServer
). If
opts
is specified, it can have the following properties:
{
origin: String // Allow requests from specific origin. `false` for same-origin. [default: '*']
hostname: String // If specified, only allow requests whose `Host` header matches this hostname. Note that you should not specify the port since this is automatically determined by the server. Ex: `localhost` [default: `undefined`]
}
Visiting the root of the server /
will show a list of links to individual files. Access
individual files at /<index>
where <index>
is the index in the torrent.files
array
(e.g. /0
, /1
, etc.)
Here is a usage example:
var client = new WebTorrent()
var magnetURI = 'magnet: ...'
client.add(magnetURI, function (torrent) {
// create HTTP server for this torrent
var server = torrent.createServer()
server.listen(port) // start the server listening to a port
// visit http://localhost:<port>/ to see a list of files
// access individual files at http://localhost:<port>/<index> where index is the index
// in the torrent.files array
// later, cleanup...
server.close()
client.destroy()
})
Temporarily stop connecting to new peers. Note that this does not pause new incoming connections, nor does it pause the streams of existing connections or their wires.
Resume connecting to new peers.
Verify the hashes of all pieces in the store and update the bitfield for any new valid
pieces. Useful if data has been added to the store outside WebTorrent, e.g. if another
process puts a valid file in the right place. Once the scan is complete,
callback(null)
will be called (if provided), unless the torrent was destroyed during
the scan, in which case callback
will be called with an error.
Emitted when the info hash of the torrent has been determined.
Emitted when the metadata of the torrent has been determined. This includes the full contents of the .torrent file, including list of files, torrent length, piece hashes, piece length, etc.
Emitted when the torrent is ready to be used (i.e. metadata is available and store is ready).
Emitted when there is a warning. This is purely informational and it is not necessary to listen to this event, but it may aid in debugging.
Emitted when the torrent encounters a fatal error. The torrent is automatically destroyed and removed from the client when this occurs.
Note: Torrent errors are emitted at torrent.on('error')
. If there are no
'error' event handlers on the torrent instance, then the error will be emitted at
client.on('error')
. This prevents throwing an uncaught exception (unhandled
'error' event), but it makes it impossible to distinguish client errors versus
torrent errors. Torrent errors are not fatal, and the client is still usable
afterwards. Therefore, always listen for errors in both places
(client.on('error')
and torrent.on('error')
).
Emitted when all the torrent files have been downloaded.
Here is a usage example:
torrent.on('done', function(){
console.log('torrent finished downloading')
torrent.files.forEach(function(file){
// do something with file
})
})
Emitted whenever data is downloaded. Useful for reporting the current torrent status, for instance:
torrent.on('download', function (bytes) {
console.log('just downloaded: ' + bytes)
console.log('total downloaded: ' + torrent.downloaded)
console.log('download speed: ' + torrent.downloadSpeed)
console.log('progress: ' + torrent.progress)
})
Emitted whenever data is uploaded. Useful for reporting the current torrent status.
Emitted whenever a new peer is connected for this torrent. wire
is an instance of
bittorrent-protocol
, which is a
node.js-style duplex stream to the remote peer. This event can be used to specify
custom BitTorrent protocol extensions.
Here is a usage example:
var MyExtension = require('./my-extension')
torrent1.on('wire', function (wire, addr) {
console.log('connected to peer with address ' + addr)
wire.use(MyExtension)
})
See the bittorrent-protocol
extension api docs for more
information on how to define a protocol extension.
Emitted whenever a DHT or tracker announce occurs, but no peers have been found. announceType
is either 'tracker'
or 'dht'
depending on which announce occurred to trigger this event. Note that if you're attempting to discover peers from both a tracker and a DHT, you'll see this event separately for each.
File name, as specified by the torrent. Example: 'some-filename.txt'
File path, as specified by the torrent. Example: 'some-folder/some-filename.txt'
File length (in bytes), as specified by the torrent. Example: 12345
Total verified bytes received from peers, for this file.
File download progress, from 0 to 1.
Selects the file to be downloaded, but at a lower priority than files with streams. Useful if you know you need the file at a later stage.
Deselects the file, which means it won't be downloaded unless someone creates a stream for it.
*Note: This method is currently not working as expected, see dcposch answer on #164 for a nice work around solution.
Create a readable stream to the file. Pieces needed by the stream will be prioritized highly and fetched from the swarm first.
You can pass opts
to stream only a slice of a file.
{
start: startByte,
end: endByte
}
Both start
and end
are inclusive.
Get the file contents as a Buffer
.
The file will be fetched from the network with highest priority, and callback
will be
called once the file is ready. callback
must be specified, and will be called with a an
Error
(or null
) and the file contents as a Buffer
.
file.getBuffer(function (err, buffer) {
if (err) throw err
console.log(buffer) // <Buffer 00 98 00 01 ...>
})
Show the file in a the browser by appending it to the DOM. This is a powerful function that handles many file types like video (.mp4, .webm, .m4v, etc.), audio (.m4a, .mp3, .wav, etc.), images (.jpg, .gif, .png, etc.), and other file formats (.pdf, .md, .txt, etc.).
The file will be fetched from the network with highest priority and streamed into the page (if it's video or audio). In some cases, video or audio files will not be streamable because they're not in a format that the browser can stream so the file will be fully downloaded before being played. For other non-streamable file types like images and PDFs, the file will be downloaded then displayed.
rootElem
is a container element (CSS selector or reference to DOM node) that the content
will be shown in. A new DOM node will be created for the content and appended to
rootElem
.
If provided, opts
can contain the following options:
autoplay
: Autoplay video/audio files (default:false
)muted
: Mute video/audio files (default:false
)controls
: Show video/audio player controls (default:true
)maxBlobLength
: Files above this size will skip the "blob" strategy and fail (default:200 * 1000 * 1000
bytes)
Note: Modern browsers tend to block media that autoplays with audio (here's the
Chrome policy
for instance) so if you set autoplay
to true
, it's a good idea to also set
muted
to true
.
If provided, callback
will be called once the file is visible to the user.
callback
is called with an Error
(or null
) and the new DOM node that is
displaying the content.
file.appendTo('#containerElement', function (err, elem) {
if (err) throw err // file failed to download or display in the DOM
console.log('New DOM node with the content', elem)
})
Streaming support depends on support for MediaSource
API in the browser. All
modern browsers have MediaSource
support.
For video and audio, webtorrent tries multiple methods of playing the file:
videostream
-- best option, supports streaming with seeking, but only works with MP4-based files for now (usesMediaSource
API)mediasource
-- supports more formats, supports streaming without seeking (usesMediaSource
API)- Blob URL -- supports the most formats of all (anything the
<video>
tag supports from an http url), with seeking, but does not support streaming (entire file must be downloaded first)
The Blob URL strategy will not be attempted if the file is over
opts.maxBlobLength
(200 MB by default) since it requires the entire file to be
downloaded before playback can start which gives the appearance of the <video>
tag being stalled. If you increase the size, be sure to indicate loading progress
to the user in the UI somehow.
For other media formats, like images, the file is just added to the DOM.
For text-based formats, like html files, pdfs, etc., the file is added to the DOM
via a sandboxed <iframe>
tag.
Like file.appendTo
but renders directly into given element (or CSS selector). For
example, to render a video, provide a <video>
element like
file.renderTo('video#player')
.
Get a W3C Blob
object which contains the file data.
The file will be fetched from the network with highest priority, and callback
will be
called once the file is ready. callback
must be specified, and will be called with a an
Error
(or null
) and the Blob
object.
Get a url which can be used in the browser to refer to the file.
The file will be fetched from the network with highest priority, and callback
will be
called once the file is ready. callback
must be specified, and will be called with a an
Error
(or null
) and the Blob URL (String
).
This method is useful for creating a file download link, like this:
file.getBlobURL(function (err, url) {
if (err) throw err
var a = document.createElement('a')
a.download = file.name
a.href = url
a.textContent = 'Download ' + file.name
document.body.appendChild(a)
})