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https://github.com/YunoHost-Apps/opentracker_ynh.git
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106 lines
3.9 KiB
Text
106 lines
3.9 KiB
Text
# opentracker config file
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#
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# I) Address opentracker will listen on, using both, tcp AND udp family
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# (note, that port 6969 is implicite if ommitted).
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#
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# If no listen option is given (here or on the command line), opentracker
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# listens on 0.0.0.0:6969 tcp and udp.
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#
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# The next variable determines if udp sockets are handled in the event
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# loop (set it to 0, the default) or are handled in blocking reads in
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# dedicated worker threads. You have to set this value before the
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# listen.tcp_udp or listen.udp statements before it takes effect, but you
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# can re-set it for each listen statement. Normally you should keep it at
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# the top of the config file.
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#
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# listen.udp.workers 4
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#
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# listen.tcp_udp 0.0.0.0
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# listen.tcp_udp 192.168.0.1:80
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# listen.tcp_udp 10.0.0.5:6969
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#
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# To only listen on tcp or udp family ports, list them this way:
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#
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# listen.tcp 0.0.0.0
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# listen.udp 192.168.0.1:6969
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#
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# Note, that using 0.0.0.0 for udp sockets may yield surprising results.
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# An answer packet sent on that socket will not necessarily have the
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# source address that the requesting client may expect, but any address
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# on that interface.
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#
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# II) If opentracker runs in a non-open mode, point it to files containing
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# all torrent hashes that it will serve (shell option -w)
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#
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# access.whitelist /path/to/whitelist
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#
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# or, if opentracker was compiled to allow blacklisting (shell option -b)
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#
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# access.blacklist ./blacklist
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#
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# It is pointless and hence not possible to compile black AND white
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# listing, so choose one of those options at compile time. File format
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# is straight forward: "<hex info hash>\n<hex info hash>\n..."
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#
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# If you do not want to grant anyone access to your stats, enable the
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# WANT_RESTRICT_STATS option in Makefile and bless the ip addresses
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# allowed to fetch stats here.
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#
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# access.stats 192.168.0.23
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#
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# There is another way of hiding your stats. You can obfuscate the path
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# to them. Normally it is located at /stats but you can configure it to
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# appear anywhere on your tracker.
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#
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# access.stats_path stats
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# III) Live sync uses udp multicast packets to keep a cluster of opentrackers
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# synchronized. This option tells opentracker which port to listen for
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# incoming live sync packets. The ip address tells opentracker, on which
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# interface to join the multicast group, those packets will arrive.
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# (shell option -i 192.168.0.1 -s 9696), port 9696 is default.
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#
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# livesync.cluster.listen 192.168.0.1:9696
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#
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# Note that two udp sockets will be opened. One on ip address 0.0.0.0
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# port 9696, that will join the multicast group 224.0.42.23 for incoming
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# udp packets and one on ip address 192.168.0.1 port 9696 for outgoing
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# udp packets.
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#
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# As of now one and only one ip address must be given, if opentracker
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# was built with the WANT_SYNC_LIVE feature.
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#
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# IV) Sync between trackers running in a cluster is restricted to packets
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# coming from trusted ip addresses. While source ip verification is far
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# from perfect, the authors of opentracker trust in the correct
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# application of tunnels, filters and LAN setups (shell option -A).
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#
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# livesync.cluster.node_ip 192.168.0.4
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# livesync.cluster.node_ip 192.168.0.5
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# livesync.cluster.node_ip 192.168.0.6
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#
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# This is the admin ip address for old style (HTTP based) asynchronus
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# tracker syncing.
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#
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# batchsync.cluster.admin_ip 10.1.1.1
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#
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# V) Control privilege drop behaviour.
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# Put in the directory opentracker will chroot/chdir to. All black/white
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# list files must be put in that directory (shell option -d).
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#
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#
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# tracker.rootdir /usr/local/etc/opentracker
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#
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# Tell opentracker which user to setuid to.
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#
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# tracker.user nobody
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#
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# VI) opentracker can be told to answer to a "GET / HTTP"-request with a
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# redirect to another location (shell option -r).
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#
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# tracker.redirect_url https://your.tracker.local/
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