# A command line BitTorrent client.
-I started writing a BitTorrent client because it seemed like fun and I am learning Haskell and wanted to see if I can write something real with Haskell than just heat the room. It is turning out to be a lot of fun.
+I started writing a BitTorrent client because it seemed like fun
+and I am learning Haskell and wanted to see if I can write something
+real with Haskell than just heat the room. It is turning out to be a
+lot of fun.
-[![Join the chat at https://gitter.im/vu3rdd/functorrent](https://badges.gitter.im/Join%20Chat.svg)](https://gitter.im/vu3rdd/functorrent?utm_source=badge&utm_medium=badge&utm_campaign=pr-badge&utm_content=badge)
-
-## Building
-
-Functorrent can be build with [Stack](https://github.com/commercialhaskell/stack) or
-[Nix](https://nixos.org/nix/). I personally test the build with Debian GNU/Linux and
-OS X using FP Complete's stack.
-
-### Stack
-
-Sandboxes give you per project independent containers, just like Python's
-virtualenv.
+### Building
+You need to install [Stack](https://github.com/commercialhaskell/stack), either via
+the OS package manager or via `cabal` (`cabal install stack`).
$ git clone https://github.com/vu3rdd/functorrent && cd functorrent
$ cabal install stack # or install stack by other means
$ stack build # binaries in $(pwd)/.stack-work/install/x86..../lts-2.16/7.8.4/bin/functorrent
-### Building with Nix
-
-``$ nix-shell``` at the root of the source code repo should drop you into a
-shell which has all the package dependencies installed.
-
-
- $ nix-shell --pure
- [...]
- [nix-shell] $ cabal configure && cabal build
-
### Usage
If you invoke functorrent without any options, it expects the contents of a torrent file
to be given in stdin. So
- $ cat ubuntu-14.10-desktop-amd64.iso.torrent | functorrent
- [....]
+ $ cat ubuntu-14.10-desktop-amd64.iso.torrent | functorrent
+ [....]
Or one can explicitly specify the torrent file as input.
- $ functorrent ubuntu-14.10-desktop-amd64.iso.torrent
- [...]
+ $ functorrent ubuntu-14.10-desktop-amd64.iso.torrent
+ [...]
-## Goals
+### Goals
- [Optimized for Fun](http://www.slideshare.net/autang/ofun-optimizing-for-fun).
(should have called it "funtorrent")
- doctest and quickcheck tests.
- Follow Haskell Style Guide - https://github.com/tibbe/haskell-style-guide/blob/master/haskell-style.md
-## Current Status
+### WARNING
+
+This client is not usable as your daily BitTorrent client yet. You may get
+corrupted files and end up wasting a lot of bandwidth. So, until we achieve
+some robustness, consider this as a programmer-friendly project to learn
+about a bunch of stuff.
+
+### Current Status
- most of the peer wire protocol works.
-- talks only to one peer at the moment. Single threaded.
+- talks only to one peer at the moment.
- can download files. But needs every piece to be served by the peer it connected to.
+- can talk to http/udp trackers.
-## WARNING
+### TODO
-- this client is not usable as your daily BitTorrent client yet. You may get corrupted files and end up wasting a lot of bandwidth. So, until we achieve some robustness, consider this as a programmer-friendly project to learn about a bunch of stuff.
+- Test suite.
+- Talk to multiple peers concurrently.
+- Piece download algorithms.
+- Multifile torrent support.
+- Magnet link support.
+- other advanced features of BitTorrent (like DHT).
-## TODO
+### Misc
-* Test suite.
-* Talk to multiple peers.
-* Piece download algorithms.
-* Concurrency (threads per peer)
-* Multifile torrent support.
-* other advanced features of BitTorrent (like DHT).
+The Bangalore Haskell group forked an early version of this code and started to develop it as a group. My code has diverged a lot from it. Both are calling it functorrent. Perhaps that needs to be fixed.