User’s Manual

This chapter provides an overview of all the command line tools and their everyday use, focussing on rtcontrol as the most powerful of them. The following chapters then go into more advanced use-cases and features.

Command Line Tools

Overview of CLI Tools

rtcontrol is the work-horse for rTorrent automation, it takes filter conditions of the form ‹field›=‹value› and selects a set of download items according to them. That result can then be printed to the console according to a specified format, or put into any rTorrent view for further inspection. You can also take some bulk action on the selected items, e.g. starting, stopping, or deleting them.

rtxmlrpc sends single XMLRPC commands to rTorrent, and rtmv allows you to move around the data of download items in the file system, while continuing to seed that data.

The following commands help you with managing metafiles:

  • lstor safely lists their contents in various formats.
  • mktor creates them, with support for painless cross-seeding.
  • chtor changes existing metafiles, e.g. to add fast-resume information.
  • hashcheck simply checks data against a given metafile’s piece hashes.

pyrotorque is a companion daemon process to rTorrent that handles automation tasks like queue management, instant metafile loading from a directory tree via file system notifications, and other background tasks.

pyroadmin is a helper for administrative tasks (mostly configuration handling). and rtevent is experimental and incomplete.

Bash Completion

If you don’t know what bash completion is, or want to handle this later, you can skip to Common Options.

Using completion

In case you don’t know what bash completion looks like, watch this…

_images/bash-completion.gif

Every time you’re unsure what options you have, you can press TAB twice to get a menu of choices, and if you already know roughly what you want, you can start typing and save keystrokes by pressing TAB once, to complete whatever you provided so far.

So for example, enter a partial command name like rtco and then TAB to get “rtcontrol”, then type -- followed by 2 times TAB to get a list of possible command line options.

Activating completion

To add pyrocore‘s completion definitions to your shell, call these commands:

pyroadmin --create-config
touch ~/.bash_completion
grep /\.pyroscope/ ~/.bash_completion >/dev/null || \
    echo >>.bash_completion ". ~/.pyroscope/bash-completion.default"
. /etc/bash_completion

After that, completion should work, see the above section for things to try out.

Note

On Ubuntu, you need to have the bash-completion package installed on your machine. Other Linux systems will have a similar pre-condition.

Common Options

All commands share some common options:

--version          show program's version number and exit
-h, --help         show this help message and exit
-q, --quiet        omit informational logging
-v, --verbose      increase informational logging
--debug            always show stack-traces for errors
--config-dir=DIR   configuration directory [~/.pyroscope]

Also see the PyroScope CLI Tools Usage section for an automatically generated and thus comprehensive listing of all the current options.

mktor

mktor creates *.torrent files (metafiles), given the path to the data in a file, directory, or named pipe (more on that below) and a tracker URL or alias name (see Setting values in ‘config.ini’ on how to define aliases). Optionally, you can also set an additional comment and a different name for the resulting torrent file. Peer exchange and DHT can be disabled by using the --private option.

If you want to create metafiles in bulk, use one of the many options a Linux shell offers you, among them:

  • Anything in the current directory:

    ls -1 | xargs -d$'\n' -I{} mktor -p -o /tmp "{}" "$ANNOUNCE_URL"
    
  • Just for directories:

    find . -mindepth 1 -maxdepth 1 -type d \! -name ".*" -print0 | sort -z \
        | xargs -0I{} mktor -p "{}" "$ANNOUNCE_URL"
    

If you create torrents for different trackers, they’re automatically enabled for cross-seeding, i.e. you can load several torrents for exactly the same data into your client. For the technically inclined, this is done by adding a unique key so that the info hash is always different. Use the --no-cross-seed option to disable this. You can also set the ‘source’ field many trackers use for unique info hashes, use -s info.source=LABEL for that.

To exclude files stored on disk from the resulting torrent, use the --exclude option to extend the list of standard glob patterns that are ignored. These standard patterns are: core, CVS, .*, *~, *.swp, *.tmp, *.bak, [Tt]humbs.db, [Dd]esktop.ini, and ehthumbs_vista.db.

The --fast-resume option creates a second metafile *-resume.torrent that contains special entries which, when loaded into rTorrent, makes it skip the redundant hashing phase (after all, you hashed the files just now). It is very important to upload the other file without resume in its name to your tracker, else you cause leechers using rTorrent problems with starting their download.

As a unique feature, if you want to change the root directory of the torrent to something different than the basename of the data directory, you can do so with the --root-name option. This is especially useful if you have hierarchical paths like documents/2009/myproject/specs - normally, all the context information but specs would be lost on the receiving side. Just don’t forget to provide a symlink in your download directory with the chosen name that points to the actual data directory.

Very few people will ever need that, but another advanced feature is concurrent hashing — if the first argument is a named pipe (see the mkfifo man page), the filenames to be hashed are read from that pipe. These names must be relative to the directory the named pipe resides in, or put another way, the named pipe has to be created in the same directory as the files to be hashed. For example, this makes it possible to hash files as they arrive via FTP or are transcoded from one audio format to another, reducing overall latency. See the fifotest script for a demonstration of the concept.

lstor

lstor lists the contents of bittorrent metafiles. The resulting output looks like this:

NAME pavement.torrent
SIZE 3.6 KiB (0 * 32.0 KiB + 3.6 KiB)
HASH 2D1A7E443D23907E5118FA4A1065CCA191D62C0B
URL  http://example.com/
PRV  NO (DHT/PEX enabled)
TIME 2009-06-06 00:49:52
BY   PyroScope 0.1.1

FILE LISTING
pavement.py                                                             3.6 KiB

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
NAME tests.torrent
SIZE 2.6 KiB (0 * 32.0 KiB + 2.6 KiB)
HASH 8E37EB6F4D3807EB26F267D3A9D31C4262530AB2
URL  http://example.com/
PRV  YES (DHT/PEX disabled)
TIME 2009-06-06 00:49:52
BY   PyroScope 0.1.1

FILE LISTING
pyroscope tests/
    test_bencode.py                                                     2.6 KiB

lstor has these options:

--reveal       show full announce URL including keys
--raw          print the metafile's raw content in all detail
-V, --skip-validation
               show broken metafiles with an invalid structure
--output=KEY,KEY1.KEY2,...
               select fields to print, output is separated by TABs;
               note that __file__ is the path to the metafile,
               __hash__ is the info hash, and __size__ is the data
               size in byte

Starting with v0.3.6, you can select to output specific fields from the metafile, like this:

$ lstor -qo __hash__,info.piece\ length,info.name *.torrent
00319ED92914E30C9104DA30BF39AF862513C4C8    262144  Execute My Liberty - The Cursed Way -- Jamendo - OGG Vorbis q7 - 2010.07.29 [www.jamendo.com]

This can also be used to rename ‹infohash›.torrent metafiles from a session directory to a human readable name, using parts of the hash to ensure unique names:

ls -1 *.torrent | egrep '^[0-9a-fA-F]{40}\.torrent' | while read i; do
    humanized="$(lstor -qo info.name,__hash__ "$i" | awk -F$'\t' '{print $1"-"substr($2,1,7)}')"
    mv "$i" "$humanized.torrent"
done

And to see a metafile with all the guts hanging out, use the --raw option:

{'announce': 'http://tracker.example.com/announce',
 'created by': 'PyroScope 0.3.2dev-r410',
 'creation date': 1268581272,
 'info': {'length': 10,
          'name': 'lab-rats',
          'piece length': 32768,
          'pieces': '<1 piece hashes>',
          'x_cross_seed': '142e0ae6d40bd9d3bcccdc8a9683e2fb'},
 'libtorrent_resume': {'bitfield': 0,
                       'files': [{'completed': 0,
                                  'mtime': 1283007315,
                                  'priority': 1}],
                       'peers': [],
                       'trackers': {'http://tracker.example.com/announce': {'enabled': 1}}},
 'rtorrent': {'chunks_done': 0,
              'complete': 0,
              'connection_leech': 'leech',
              'connection_seed': 'seed',
              'custom': {'activations': 'R1283007474P1283007494R1283007529P1283007537',
                         'kind': '100%_',
                         'tm_loaded': '1283007442',
                         'tm_started': '1283007474'},
              'custom1': '',
              'custom2': '',
              'custom3': '',
              'custom4': '',
              'custom5': '',
              'directory': '~/rtorrent/work',
              'hashing': 0,
              'ignore_commands': 1,
              'key': 357633323,
              'loaded_file': '~/rtorrent/.session/38DE398D332AE856B509EF375C875FACFA1C939F.torrent',
              'priority': 2,
              'state': 0,
              'state_changed': 1283017194,
              'state_counter': 4,
              'throttle_name': '',
              'tied_to_file': '~/rtorrent/watch/lab-rats.torrent',
              'total_uploaded': 0,
              'views': []}}

chtor

chtor is able to change common attributes of a metafile, or clean any non-standard data from them (namely, rTorrent session information).

Note that chtor automatically changes only those metafiles whose existing announce URL starts with the scheme and location of the new URL when using --reannounce. To change all given metafiles unconditionally, use the --reannounce-all option and be very sure you provide only those files you actually want to be changed.

chtor only rewrites metafiles that were actually changed, and those changes are first written to a temporary file, which is then renamed.

rtcontrol

Purpose

rtcontrol allows you to select torrents loaded into rTorrent using various filter conditions. You can then either display the matches found in any rTorrent view for further inspection, list them to the console using flexible output formatting, or perform some management action like starting and stopping torrents. Using ‘rtxmlrpc’ shows examples for sending commands that don’t target a specific item.

For example, the command rtcontrol up=+0 up=-10k will list all torrents that are currently uploading any data, but at a rate of below 10 KiB/s. See the ‘rtcontrol’ Examples for more real-world examples, and the following section on basics regarding the filter conditions.

Filter Conditions

Filter conditions take the form ‹field›=‹value›, and by default all given conditions must be met (AND). If a field name is omitted, name is assumed. Multiple values separated by a comma indicate several possible choices (OR). ! in front of a filter value negates it (NOT). Use uppercase OR to combine multiple alternative sets of conditions. And finally brackets can be used to group conditions and alter the default “AND before OR” behaviour; be sure to separate both the opening and closing bracket by white space from surrounding text. NOT at the start of a bracket pair inverts the contained condition.

For string fields, the value is a glob pattern which you are used to from shell filename patterns (*, ?, [a-z], [!a-z]); glob patterns must match the whole field value, i.e. use *...* for ‘contains’ type searches. To use regex matches instead of globbing, enclose the pattern in slashes (/regex/). Since regex can express anchoring the match at the head (^) or tail ($), they’re by default of the ‘contains’ type. All string comparisons are case-ignoring.

For numeric fields, a leading + means greater than, a leading - means less than (just like with the standard find command).

Selection on fields that are lists of tags or names (e.g. tagged and views) works by just providing the tags you want to search for. The difference to the glob patterns for string fields is that tagged search respects word boundaries (whitespace), and to get a match the given tag just has to appear anywhere in the list (bar matches on foo bar baz).

In time filtering conditions (e.g. for the completed and loaded fields), you have three possible options to specify the value:

  1. time deltas in the form “<number><unit>...”, where unit is a single upper- or lower-case letter and one of Year, Month, Week, Day, Hour, mInute, or Second. The order is important (y before m), and a + before the delta means older than, while - means younger than.

    Example: -1m2w3d

  2. a certain date and time in human readable form, where the date can be given in ISO (Y-M-D), American (M/D/Y), or European (D.M.Y) format. A date can be followed by a time, with minutes and seconds optional and separated by :. Put either a space or a T between the date and the time.

    Example: +2010-08-15t14:50

  3. absolute numerical UNIX timestamp, i.e. what ls -l --time-style '+%s' returns.

    Example: +1281876597

See Useful Filter Conditions for some concrete examples with an explanation of what they do.

Annealing Results

Using the --anneal option, you can add some pre-defined post-processing steps that modify the current result set. You can use this option several times to combine processing steps in the order given on the command line. Sorting is done first, and if anything changes, the modified result is sorted again before applying the next step. Note that any --select restrictions are applied after annealing.

The available processing methods are these:

dupes+
Adds any loaded item that shares the same base directory with any existing result item, or points to the same file. Note that symlinks are followed, but hardlinks are always considered independent (which they are when deleted). This is especially useful in combination with --cull to avoid leaving items with some or all of their files gone.
dupes-
Removes items from the result that share the same path with any other loaded item, as described for dupes+, that is not also part of the result. Again, combination with --cull is a typical use-case, to avoid deleting data of items that still need to be seeded, when only some of a set of duplicated items meet the deletion criteria.
dupes=
Removes any items from the result that are not dupes, as defined above, leaving only the dupes. Combine with invert to only get singular items.
invert
Invert the current selection, i.e. select any item in the original result (before any annealing happened) that is not in the current selection.
unique
Ensures that only the first item in the result set having the same name as other items in the result set is kept. The others are removed. Note that unlike with ‘dupes’, the scope here is only the current result set, not all loaded items.

Warning

If you use options that cause rtcontrol to request only a subset of all loaded items, then all dupes* methods will produce results that might be unexpected, since they look at all available items, not just the selected ones. And ‘all’ is different if you change the view, or use the -Q option – for that reason, you’ll get a warning if you mix -A with these.

rtxmlrpc

rtxmlrpc allows you to call raw XMLRPC methods on the rTorrent instance that you have specified in your configuration. See the usage information for available options.

The method name and optional arguments are provided using standard shell rules, i.e. where you would use ^X throttle_down=slow,120 in rTorrent you just list the arguments in the usual shell way (rtxmlrpc throttle_down slow 120). The rTorrent format is also recognized though, but without any escaping rules (i.e. you cannot have a , in your arguments then).

Remember that almost all commands require a ‘target’ as the first parameter in newer rTorrent versions, and you have to provide that explicitly. Thus, it must be rtxmlrpc view.size '' main, with an extra empty argument – otherwise you’ll get a Unsupported target type found fault.

There are some special ways to write arguments of certain types: +‹number› and -‹number› send an integer value, @‹filename› or @- (for stdin) reads the file’s content into a XMLRPC binary, and finally [‹item1›〈,‹item2›,…〉 produces an array of strings. These typed arguments only cover some common use-cases, at some point you have to write Python code to build up more intricate data structures.

To get a list of available methods, just call rtxmlrpc system.listMethods. The Using ‘rtxmlrpc’ section shows some typical examples for querying global information and controlling rTorrent behaviour.

rtmv

With rtmv, you can move actively seeded data around at will. Currently, it only knows one mode of operation, namely moving the data directory or file and leave a symlink behind in its place (or fixing the symlink if you move data around a second time). Watch this example that shows what’s going on internally:

~/bt/rtorrent/work$ rtmv lab-rats /tmp/ -v
DEBUG    Found "lab-rats" for 'lab-rats'
INFO     Moving to "/tmp/lab-rats"...
DEBUG    Symlinking "~/bt/rtorrent/work/lab-rats"
DEBUG    rename("~/bt/rtorrent/work/lab-rats", "/tmp/lab-rats")
DEBUG    symlink("/tmp/lab-rats", "~/bt/rtorrent/work/lab-rats")
INFO     Moved 1 path (skipped 0)

$ rtmv /tmp/lab-rats /tmp/lab-mice -v
DEBUG    Item path "~/bt/rtorrent/work/lab-rats" resolved to "/tmp/lab-rats"
DEBUG    Found "lab-rats" for '/tmp/lab-rats'
INFO     Moving to "/tmp/lab-mice"...
DEBUG    Re-linking "~/bt/rtorrent/work/lab-rats"
DEBUG    rename("/tmp/lab-rats", "/tmp/lab-mice")
DEBUG    remove("~/bt/rtorrent/work/lab-rats")
DEBUG    symlink("/tmp/lab-mice", "~/bt/rtorrent/work/lab-rats")

From the second example you can see that you can rename actively seeding downloads in mid-flight, i.e. to fix a bad root directory name.

You can use rtmv in combination with rtcontrol --call for very flexible completion moving. To facilitate this, if there is a double slash // in the target path, it is always interpreted as a directory (i.e. you cannot rename the source file in that case), and the partial path after the // is automatically created. This can be used in completion moving, to create hierarchies for dynamic paths built from rtcontrol fields. Since the part before the // has to exist beforehand, this won’t go haywire and create directory structures just anywhere.

Note

Future modes of operation will include copying instead of moving, moving and fixing the download directory in rTorrent (like classical rtorrent completion event handling), and moving across devices (i.e. copying and then deleting).

rtevent

Not yet implemented

rtevent handles rTorrent events and provides common implementations for them, like completion moving. See EventHandling for details on using it.

‘rtcontrol’ Examples

Useful Filter Conditions

The following rtcontrol Filter Conditions give you a hint on what you can do, and some building blocks for more complex conditions.

*HDTV*
Anything with “HDTV” in its name
/s\d+e\d+/
Anything with typical TV episode numbering in its name (regex match)
ratio=+1
All downloads seeded to at least 1:1
xfer=+0
All active torrents (transferring data)
up=+0
All seeding torrents (uploading data)
down=+0 down=-5k
Slow torrents (downloading, but with < 5 KiB/s)
down=0 is_complete=no is_open=yes
Stuck torrents
size=+4g
Big stuff (DVD size or larger)
is_complete=no
Incomplete downloads
is_open=y is_active=n
Paused items
is_ghost=yes
Torrents that have no data (were never started or lost their data; since v0.3.3)
alias=obt
Torrents tracked by openbittorrent.com (see Configuration Guide on how to add aliases for trackers)
'path=!'
Has a non-empty path
ratio=+1 realpath=\!/mnt/*
1:1 seeds not on a mounted path (i.e. likely on localhost)
completed=+2w
Completed more than 2 weeks ago (since v0.3.4)
tagged=
Not tagged at all (since v0.3.5)
tagged=\!
Has at least one tag (since v0.3.5)
tagged=foo,bar
Tagged with “foo” or “bar” (since v0.3.5) — tags are white-space separated lists of names in the field custom_tags
tagged==highlander
Only tagged with “highlander” and nothing else (since v0.3.6)
kind=flac,mp3
Music downloads (since v0.3.6)
files=sample/*
Items with a top-level sample folder (since v0.3.6)
ratio=+2.5 OR seedtime=+1w
Items seeded to 5:2 or for more than a week (since v0.3.6)
alias=foo [ ratio=+2.5 OR seedtime=+7d ]
The same as above, but for one tracker only (since v0.3.7)
traits=avi traits=tv,movies
TV or movies in AVI containers (since v0.3.7)

Note that the ! character has to be escaped in shell commands. For a current full list of all the field names and their meaning, see the output of the --help-fields option of rtcontrol which gives you a complete list for your installation.

Integrating ‘rtcontrol’ into the Curses UI

Anyone who ever dreamt about a search box in their rtorrent UI, dream no more...

Search in the curses UI

Note

You already have the following configuration commands, if you followed the Configuration Guide.

Just add this to your .rtorrent.rc:

# VIEW: Use rtcontrol filter (^X s=KEYWORD, ^X t=TRACKER, ^X f="FILTER")
method.insert = s,simple|private,"execute.nothrow=rtcontrol,--detach,-qV,\"$cat=*,$argument.0=,*\""
method.insert = t,simple|private,"execute.nothrow=rtcontrol,--detach,-qV,\"$cat=\\\"alias=\\\",$argument.0=\""
method.insert = f,simple|private,"execute.nothrow=rtcontrol,--detach,-qV,$argument.0="

You can of course add as many commands as you like, and include sorting options and whatever else rtcontrol offers.

The ‘trick’ here is the -V (--view-only) option, which shows the selection result in a rTorrent view instead of on the console. You can add this to any query you execute on the command line, and then interactively work with the result. The above commands are just shortcuts for common use-cases, directly callable from the curses UI.

Reports

Using bash Aliases for Common Reports

You might want to add the following alias definitions to your ~/.bashrc:

alias rt2days="rtcontrol -scompleted -ocompleted,is_open,up.sz,ratio,alias,name completed=-2d"
alias rtls="rtcontrol -qo '{{chr(10).join([d.directory+chr(47)+x.path for x in d.files])|h.subst(chr(47)+chr(43),chr(47))}}'"

rt2days gives the completion history of the last 48 hours, and rtls lets you create lists of files just like ls:

$ rtls /a.boy/ | xargs -d'\n' ls -lgGh
-rw-r----- 1 702M Mar  7 17:42 /var/torrent/work/A_Boy_and_His_Dog.avi

If you feed the list of paths into normal ls as shown, you have all the usual options available to you.

Note

See the rt-alias.sh file of the pimp-my-box project for these and some more aliases.

Defining and Using Custom Output Formats

Before describing the possible options for output formatting in more details below, here’s a short overview of the possible methods, each with an example:

  • size.sz,name — simple field lists, possibly with format specifiers; in the output, fields are separated by a TAB character.
  • %(size.sz)s %(name)s — string interpolation, i.e. like the above lists, but interspersed with literal text instead of TABs.
  • {{d.size|sz}} {{d.name}} — Tempita templates, see Using Output Templates for more details.
  • file:template.tmpl — File URLs that point to a template file, which is especially useful for more complicated templates. The filenames can be absolute (starting with a /), relative to your home (starting with a ~), or relative to templates in the configuration directory (anything else).
  • «formatname» — A name of a custom format from the [FORMATS] configuration section, see ~/.pyroscope/config.ini.default for the predefined ones (including the special default format).

Starting with version 0.3.5, you can define custom output formats and print column headers, the rt2days example from the previous section becomes this:

alias rt2days="rtcontrol --column-headers -scompleted -ocompletion completed=-2d"

You need to define the custom output format used there, so also add this to your ~/.pyroscope/config.ini:

[FORMATS]
# Custom output formats
completion = $(completed.raw.delta)13.13s $(leechtime)9.9s $(is_open)4.4s $(up.sz)10s/s $(ratio.pc)5d$(pc)s $(alias)-8s $(kind_50)-4.4s  $(name)s

See PyFormat for a description how the formatting options work, and notice that $ is used instead of % here, because % has a special meaning in INI files. For the same reason, a single % in the final output becomes $(pc)s in the configuration (pc is a system field that is simply a percent sign).

You can also append one or more format specifiers to a field name, separated by a .. These take the current value and transform it — in the above example .raw.delta means “take an unformatted time value and then convert it into a time delta relative to just now.” The option --help-fields lists the available format specifiers.

Then, calling rt2days -q will print something like this:

 COMPLETED LEECHTIME IS_O         UP/s RATIO% ALIAS    KIND  NAME
1d 21h ago   10m  2s  OPN    0 bytes/s   100% SeedBox  rar   lab-rats

And with version 0.3.6 installed, you can create a full listing of all the files you have loaded into rTorrent using the predefined format “files”:

$ rtcontrol \* -ofiles | less
STP    1970-01-01 01:00:00   25.6 MiB Execute My Liberty - The Cursed Way -- Jamendo - OGG Vorbis q7 - 2010.07.29 [www.jamendo.com] {Jamendo}
       2010-08-21 01:25:27    2.0 MiB | 01 - Midnight (Intro).ogg
       ...
       2010-08-21 01:25:27   48.7 KiB | [cover] Execute My Liberty - The Cursed Way.jpg
                                      = 9 file(s) [ogg txt]
...

And finally, from version 0.4.1 onwards, you can use a full templating language instead of the simple field lists or string interpolation described above, more on that in Using Output Templates.

Statistics

Printing Some Statistics to the Terminal

Create a list of all your trackers and how many torrents are loaded for each:

rtcontrol -q -o alias -s alias \* | uniq -c

You can easily modify this by using conditions other than *, e.g. show the count of fully seeded downloads using ratio=+1. Or try the same command with traits instead of alias (version 0.3.7 only).

The total amount of data you have loaded in GiB:

rtcontrol -qosize \* | awk '{ SUM += $1} END { print SUM/1024/1024/1024 }'

The amount uploaded per tracker:

rtcontrol -qo alias,uploaded // \
    | awk '{arr[$1]+=$2} END {for (i in arr) {printf "%20s %7.1f GiB\n",i,arr[i]/1024^3}}' \
    | sort -bnk2

Starting with version 0.4.1, you can also request a statistical summary of your numerical output columns, like this:

$ rtcontrol -qo size.sz,uploaded.sz,ratio.pc --summary "a*"
      SIZE    UPLOADED      RATIO
  14.5 GiB     9.3 GiB      2592.0 [SUM of 32 item(s)]
 462.4 MiB   298.9 MiB      81.0 [AVG of 32 item(s)]

Normalized Histogram of Ratio Distribution

The following will create a normalized histogram of ratio distribution of your loaded torrents. Each bar indicates the percentage of items in a ratio class (i.e. the first bar shows ratios up to 1).

rtcontrol alias=* -qo ratio -s ratio >/tmp/data \
    && octave -q --persist --eval \
              "load /tmp/data; hist(data, $(tail -n1 /tmp/data), 100); print -dpng /tmp/ratio.png"
Normalized histogram of ratio distribution

You need to have Octave installed, on Debian/Ubuntu all you need is sudo aptitude install octave3.0.

Performing Management Tasks

Fixing Items With an Empty “Base Path”

Sometimes rTorrent loses track of where it stores the data for an item, leading to an empty Base path in the Info panel. You can try to fix this by selectively rehashing those, with these commands:

rtcontrol path= is_complete=y -V
rtcontrol path= is_complete=y --hash -i

The first command selects the broken items into a rTorrent view, so that you can watch the progress of hashing and the results afterwards. If all of them are finished, you can then start those that were successfully restored like so:

rtcontrol path=\! done=100 --from-view rtcontrol --start``

(note that the --from-view option needs version 0.3.7)

Deleting Download Items and Their Data

Using the option --cull of version 0.3.10, an item can be deleted including its data. You can do this either manually, or automatically as a part of ratio management (see the section further below on that topic).

Called from the shell, you will first be presented with the number of items found and then asked for each of them whether you want to delete it (interactive mode is on by default). Therefor, for automatic uses in cron, you should also specify the --yes option.

If you define the following command shortcut, you can also delete the current item directly from ncurses (needs version 0.4.1 to work):

method.insert = cull,simple|private,"execute.nothrow=rtcontrol,-q,--detach,--cull,--yes,\"$cat=hash=,$d.hash=\""

Just select the item you want to annihilate and enter cull= into the command prompt (Ctrl-X). Note that you already have that command added if you followed the Configuration Guide.

Pruning Partial Downloads

Starting with version 0.3.10, the --purge option (a/k/a --delete-partial) allows you to not only delete the selected items from the client, but at the same time delete any incomplete files contained in them (i.e. files that are part of an incomplete chunk).

For technical reasons, rTorrent has to create files that you have deselected from download to save data of chunks that border selected files, and this option can be a great time saver, especially on large torrents containing hundreds of files. So, unless you have filtered out incomplete items by the appropriate conditions, using --purge instead of --delete is always the better option.

As with --cull, a shortcut command to call this from the curses UI is useful:

system.method.insert = purge,simple,"execute_nothrow=rtcontrol,-q,--detach,--purge,--yes,\"$cat=hash=,$d.get_hash=\""

Note that you already have that command added if you followed the Configuration Guide.

Performing Periodic Tasks

Simple Queue Management

This is a queue management one-liner (well, logically one line). Before you run it automatically, add a trailing “-n” to test it out, e.g. play with the queue size parameter and check out what would be started. Then put it into a script, crontab that and run it every (few) minute(s).

export rt_max_start=6; rtcontrol -q --start --yes hash=$(echo $( \
    rtcontrol -qrs is_active -o is_open,hash is_complete=no is_ignored=no \
    | head -n $rt_max_start | grep ^CLS | cut -f2 ) | tr " " ,)

It works by listing all incomplete downloads that heed commands and sorting the already active ones to the top. Then it looks at the first rt_max_start entries and starts any closed ones.

Note that this means you can exempt items from queue management easily by using the I key in the curses interface. See rTorrent Queue Manager for a much better solution.

Move on Completion

The following moves completed downloads still physically residing in a work directory (change the realpath filter when you named your download directory differently), to another directory (note that you can restrict this further, e.g. to a specific tracker by using “alias=NAME”). You don’t need any multiple watch folders or other prerequisites for this.

rtcontrol --from-view complete 'realpath=*/work/*' -qo '~/bin/rtmv "$(path)s" ~/rtorrent/done --cron' | bash

Test it first without the | bash part at the end, to make sure it’ll in fact do what you intended.

Another advantage is that in case you ever wanted to switch clients, or exchange the drive you host the data on, you can do so easily since all the active downloads still reside at one place in your download directory (in form of a bunch of symlinks) — even if their data is scattered all over the place in reality.

You can also extend it to create more organized completion structures, e.g. creating a directory tree organized by month and item type, as follows:

RT_SOCKET=/home/bt/rtorrent/.scgi_local

# Move completed torrents to "done", organized by month and item type (e.g. "2010-09/tv/avi")
*/15    * * * *         test -S $RT_SOCKET && ~/bin/rtcontrol --from-view complete 'realpath=*/work/*' -qo '~/bin/rtmv "$(path)s" ~/rtorrent/done//$(now.iso).7s/$(traits)s --cron' | bash

The above is a fully working crontab example, you just have to adapt the paths to your system. If you want to create other organizational hierarchies, like “by tracker”, just replace the $(now.iso).7s/$(traits)s part by $(alias)s. And if you don’t want the file type in there (i.e. just “tv”), use $(traits.pathdir)s to have it removed.

To get themed trackers specially treated, you can add hints to the [TRAITS_BY_ALIAS] section of the config (see config.ini.default for examples).

Afterwards, you can always move and rename stuff at will and still continue seeding, by using the rtmv tool in version 0.3.7 ­— this will rename the data file or directory at its current location and automatically fix the symlink in the download directory to point at the new path. Example:

cd ~/rtorrent/done/2010-09/tv/avi
rtmv foo.avi bar.avi

Ratio Management

While rTorrent has a built-in form of ratio management since a few versions, it’s hard to use after-the-fact and also hard to understand — you need to have different watch directories and complex settings in your .rtorrent.rc to use that.

It can be much simpler — a basic form of ratio management using rtcontrol looks like this:

rtcontrol is_complete=yes is_open=yes ratio=+1.1 alias=sometracker,othertracker --stop

You will always want to have the is_complete=yes is_open=yes ratio=+1.1 part, which excludes all torrents that are still downloading, closed or not having the necessary ratio. Another basic filter is is_ignored=no, which excludes items that have their ignore commands flag set (via the I key) from ratio management.

To that you can add anything you think fits your needs, and also use several commands with different minimum ratios for different trackers by selecting them using alias or tracker, like in the example above. Assuming you have your original seeds in a directory named seed and don’t want to ratio-limit them, one thing you might add is 'datapath=!*/seed/*' to prevent them from being stopped. Only your imagination (and the available fields) are the limit here.

If you then put these commands into a script that runs every few minutes via cron, you have a very flexible form of ratio management that can be changed on a whim.

Note

For cron use, you’ll want to add the --cron --yes options to any rtcontrol commands. The first one redirects logging to a special logfile ~/.pyroscope/log/cron.log, and the second positively answers any prompts that would appear when using --delete or --cull.

To complete your command line, you add the action you want to take on the torrents found, in the above example --stop; --delete is another possibility, which removes the item from the client, but leaves the data intact. Starting with version 0.3.10, you can also delete the downloaded data by using the --cull option.

Bandwidth Management

Say you want to have torrents that are already seeded back take a back-seat when other torrents with a ratio less than 100% are active — but when they’re not, all torrents should take full advantage of the available bandwidth. The last part is not possible with the built-in throttle groups, but here’s a fix that works by setting the maximum rate on the seed throttle dynamically.

Put this into your .rtorrent.rc:

throttle_up=seed,900

Then save the dynamic seed throttle script into ~/bin/rt_cron_throttle_seed.

Finally, extend your crontab with these lines (crontab -e):

RT_SOCKET=/home/bt/rtorrent/.scgi_local
BW_SEED_MAX=900
BW_SEED_SLOW=200

# Throttle torrents that are seeded 1:1 when there are other active ones
*   * * * *         test -S $RT_SOCKET && ~/bin/rt_cron_throttle_seed seed $BW_SEED_MAX $BW_SEED_SLOW --cron

# Put torrents seeded above 1:1 into the seed throttle
*/10        * * * *         test -S $RT_SOCKET && rtcontrol ratio=+1.05 is_complete=1 is_ignored=0 throttle=none -q -T seed --yes --cron

The 900 and 200 in the above examples are the bandwidth limits in KiB/s, you need to adapt them to your connection of course, and all paths need to be changed to fit your system. Each time the throttle rate is changed, a line like the following will be appended to the file ~/.pyroscope/log/cron.log:

2010-08-30 14:16:01 INFO     THROTTLE 'seed' up=200.0 KiB/s [2 prioritized] [__main__.SeedThrottle]

Automatic Stop of Items Having Problems

This job takes away a lot of manual monitoring work you had to do previously:

HOME=/home/rtorrent
RT_SOCKET=/var/torrent/.scgi_local

# Stops any torrent that isn't known by the tracker anymore,
# or has other authorization problems, or lost its data
* * * * *   test -S $RT_SOCKET && sleep 21 && nice ~/bin/_cron_rt_invalid_items --stop --cron

Just call crontab -e as the rtorrent user and add the above lines. You also need to install the _cron_rt_invalid_items script into ~/bin.

The prio=-3 in the script’s list of conditions enables you to keep items running in case of errors, by setting their priority to high, e.g. when only some trackers in a longer list return errors. The is_complete=yes is_ghost=yes part means you can simply stop torrents by removing their data, it won’t take more than a minute for the related item to be force-stopped.

Using Output Templates

Introduction

One of the output formatting options described in the ‘rtcontrol’ Examples section are Tempita templates. Compared to the other options, they offer more versatile formatting because you can use conditionals and loops, e.g. coloring the output based on some value thresholds (see the example below). A full description of the Tempita language can be found in its documentation.

Note that in order for them to be recognized as such, Tempita templates MUST start with two braces {{, use {{#}} (an empty template comment) if you want to start the output with some literal text.

Using Tempita to format single items

The most common form of using Tempita for formatting a single output item of a rtcontrol result is probably by defining it in the configuration as a custom format, so it can be simply used by its name.

The colored predefined format is a typical example:

[FORMATS]

colored     = {{default ESC = '\x1B'}}{{d.size|sz}} {{d.uploaded|sz}} {{#
    }}{{if d.seedtime < 8*7*86400}}{{ESC}}[36m{{d.seedtime|duration}}{{ESC}}[0m{{else}}{{d.seedtime|duration}}{{endif}}{{#
    }}{{if d.ratio < 0.8}}{{ESC}}[1m{{ESC}}[31m{{elif d.ratio < 1.0}}{{ESC}}[36m{{elif type(d.ratio) is float}}{{ESC}}[32m{{endif}}{{#
    }} {{str(pc(d.ratio)).rjust(8)}}{{chr(37)}}{{if type(d.ratio) is float}}{{ESC}}[0m{{endif}}{{#
    }} {{(d.alias or '').ljust(8)}} {{d.name or ''}}

The main reason to use Tempita here are the if conditions that color the output depending on threshold values, for the ratio and seed time columns. Additionally to what Tempita provides, the global namespace of the template contains the usual format specifiers (see the output of the --help-fields option), and the current result item as d (think download item).

If you look at some of the if conditions, you might find them peculiar, especially the {{if type(d.ratio) is float}} one. This is so that the column headers, which are obviously not the usual float values but strings, are exempt from any special coloring. Similarly, the {{d.name or ''}} caters for the fact that when you use the rtcontrol --summary option, fields that could normally never be None suddenly are — because what’s the average of a string, really?

Notable here is also the use of a named default value ESC, and using template comments {{#}} to escape the line endings we don’t want to have in the final output, which looks like this:

rtcontrol coloured output example

Using Tempita for full output control

If you use the --output-template option of rtcontrol, flow control of presenting the query result is passed fully to a Tempita template. That means that in addition to iterating over the query result, you can also show any value available via the rTorrent XMLRPC connection, since the proxy object that allows access to the client is passed to the template.

This example shows the output of such a template that resembles the rtorstat output:

_images/rtorstat.png

To generate a similar result with your installation, follow these steps after updating it:

  1. Call pyroadmin --create-config to copy the builtin rtorstat.html template to your configuration.
  2. Call rtcontrol -qO rtorstat.html done=-100 OR xfer=+0 -sdone >/var/www/cron/rtorrent.html to create a HTML page.
  3. Open that page in your browser.

You can add the command from step #2 as a cronjob and always have a current status display; instead of copying to the local web server space, you could also put the output into your Dropbox folder to have a status display on your mobile gear.

The namespace of these templates is populated with the following objects:

  • version = the version of PyroScope
  • proxy = the client proxy (you can call any XMLRPC method on that)
  • view = the view that was queried
  • query = the query conditions
  • matches = the query result (a list of RtorrentItem objects)

Running a rtorstat-like template as a cgi-bin

To get the output of the above example template on-demand, which likely puts less stress on the system and also gives you current information, you can add a cgi-bin wrapper to your webserver. We assume a Debian or Ubuntu Apache standard installation here, and put the cgi-bin into the file /usr/lib/cgi-bin/rtorstat with the following content:

#! /bin/bash
echo "Content-Type: text/html; charset=UTF-8"
echo

export HOME=/home/bt
$HOME/bin/rtcontrol -qO rtorstat.html done=-100 OR xfer=+0 -sdone

This will only work if permissions are given to the webserver user (normally www-data) to access the configuration files belonging to the bt user. In case you use a scgi_local connection (i.e. a UNIX domain socket), this also applies the the XMLRPC socket file.

That can be done by making all things group-readable, and add www-data to the bt group. Also, the socket file must be group-writeable when you use one (TCP sockets are available to all users on the machine anyway).

Finally, you can put a <meta http-equiv="refresh" content="60"> into the template to automatically refresh the page every minute.

Adding a rTorrent status display to conky

You can add a status display to the well-known conky system monitor tool by using the conky rtorstat template together with a matching conkyrc:

_images/conky-rtorstat.png

To display the example, run these commands, assuming you have conky already installed:

  1. pyroadmin --create-config
  2. conky -c ~/.pyroscope/templates/conky/conkyrc

If you change the execpi in the conky configuration to call a remotely installed rtcontrol via ssh, you can also beam the status of a remote rTorrent instance onto your desktop. It is advisable to increase the poll intervall to at least 15 seconds in that case. Note that this setup means you have the .conkyrc on your local host, but the template used is on the remote host!

...
${execp ssh -o ConnectTimeout=15 -o SetupTimeOut=15 -T REMOTEHOST "~/bin/rtcontrol -qO conky/rtorstat.txt --from-view incomplete is_open=yes is_ignored=no"}

Change REMOTEHOST to the name of the remote host, and make sure you have public key login enabled.

Listing all orphans in your download directory

This example shows how easily you can use templates to extract some information out of the client that is otherwise not directly available. The orphans.txt template lists all paths in the download directory not loaded into the client, and can be called like this:

rtcontrol -qO orphans.txt \*