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Comparison of BitTorrent clients
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The following is a general comparison of BitTorrent clients, which are computer programs designed for peer-to-peer file sharing using the BitTorrent protocol.[1]
The BitTorrent protocol coordinates segmented file transfer among peers connected in a swarm. A BitTorrent client enables a user to exchange data as a peer in one or more swarms. Because BitTorrent is a peer-to-peer communications protocol that does not need a server, the BitTorrent definition of client differs from the conventional meaning expressed in the client–server model.[1]
Bram Cohen, author of the BitTorrent protocol, made the first BitTorrent client, which he also called BitTorrent, and published it in July 2001.[2]
Many BitTorrent programs are open-source software; others are freeware, adware or shareware. Some download managers, such as FlashGet and GetRight, are BitTorrent-ready. Opera 12, a web browser, can also transfer files via BitTorrent.
In 2013 Thunder Networking Technologies publicly revealed that some of their employees surreptitiously distributed a Trojan horse with certain releases of Xunlei, the company's BitTorrent-ready download manager.[3][4] Xunlei is included in the comparison tables.
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Applications
General
Operating system support
Interface and programming
Features I
Features II
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Libraries
- General
- Operating system support and programming language
- Supported features 1
- Supported features 2
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See also
Notes
- The option to disable ads is included in the settings.[26]
- Fully distributed keyword search; integrated anti-spam measures.[36]
- Including eComStation and ArcaOS.
- Through Cydia.
- Only has options for launching the GUI[50]
- μTorrent's DHT implementation Archived 18 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine is the same as Mainline and BitComet's, but unfortunately this is incompatible with Azureus's implementation.
- Since Shareaza v2.6.0.0, Shareaza includes Mainline DHT support. Also, Shareaza can use the Gnutella2 network to find other Gnutella2 clients sharing the same torrent. This also includes clients who do not actively seed the torrent in question anymore, as long as file hashes (such as sha1 for example) are known.
- Since Shareaza v2.5.5.1 r9064.
- Uses P2P onion routing to provide anonymity.
- Called "preview mode" Archived 4 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine
- Does not support HTTP redirection (status codes: 301, 302, 303, 307).
- Does not support HTTPS.
- Windows and Mac OS X only; via PMS on Linux.
- Hard-coded as disabled in newer versions.
- Since Shareaza v2.4.0.2 r7924.
- Since Shareaza v2.5.3.1.
- Shareaza also uses G2 to transmit download metadata, such as BitTorrent trackers to other G2 clients.
- Adds HTTP referer header in request on HTTP redirection (useful behavior).
- DHT permits use of trackerless torrents (with supporting clients) to resume normal torrents when their tracker is down. However, some trackers that register their users for keeping tabs on fair usage (such as a ratio of bytes downloaded to uploaded) may not reliably measure and update usage for users employing DHT.
- Recently implemented (unofficial) web seeding feature, see HTTP-Based Seeding Specification Archived 28 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine
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References
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