rqbit is a bittorrent client written in Rust. Has HTTP API and Web UI, and can be used as a library.
Also has a desktop app built with Tauri.
Assuming you are downloading to ~/Downloads.
rqbit server start ~/Downloads
Assuming you are downloading to ~/Downloads. By default it'll download to current directory.
rqbit download [-o ~/Downloads] 'magnet:?....' [https?://url/to/.torrent] [/path/to/local/file.torrent]
Access with http://localhost:3030/web/. It looks similar to the Desktop app, see screenshot below.
The desktop app is a thin wrapper on top of the Web UI frontend.
Download it in Releases for OSX and Windows. For Linux, build manually with
cargo tauri build

rqbit can stream torrent files and smartly block the stream until the pieces are available. The pieces getting streamed are prioritized. All of this allows you to seek and live stream videos for example.
You can also stream to e.g. VLC or other players with HTTP URLs. Supports seeking too (through various range headers). The streaming URLs look like http://IP:3030/torrents/<torrent_id>/stream/<file_id>
rqbit can advertise managed torrents to LAN, e.g. your TVs and stream torrents there (without transcoding). Seeking to arbitrary points in the videos is supported too.
Usage from CLI
rqbit --enable-upnp-server server start ...
rqbit supports IPv6. By default it listens on all interfaces in dualstack mode. It can work even if there's no IPv6 enabled.
Assuming bash, add this to your ~/.bashrc
. Modify for your shell of choice.
eval "$(rqbit completion bash)"
rqbit --socks-url socks5://[username:password]@host:port ...
rqbit server start --watch-folder [path] /download/path
Anecdotally from a few reports, rqbit is faster than other clients they've tried, at least with their default settings.
Memory usage for the server is usually within a few tens of megabytes, which makes it great for e.g. RaspberryPI.
I've got a report that rqbit can saturate a 20Gbps link, although I don't have the hardware to confirm.
There are pre-built binaries in Releases. If someone wants to put rqbit into e.g. homebrew, PRs welcome :)
If you have rust toolchain installed, this should work:
cargo install rqbit
Docker images are published at ikatson/rqbit
Just a regular Rust binary build process.
cargo build --release
The "webui" feature requires npm installed.
Run rqbit --help
to see all available CLI options.
Increase verbosity. Possible values: trace, debug, info, warn, error.
Will print the contents of the torrent file or the magnet link.
If you want to resume downloading a file that already exists, you'll need to add this option.
Use a regex here to select files by their names.
- BEP-3: The BitTorrent Protocol Specification
- BEP-5: DHT Protocol
- BEP-7: IPv6 Tracker Extension
- BEP-9: Extension for Peers to Send Metadata Files
- BEP-10: Extension Protocol
- BEP-11: Peer Exchange (PEX)
- BEP-12: Multitracker Metadata Extension
- BEP-14: Local service discovery
- BEP-15: UDP Tracker Protocol
- BEP-20: Peer ID Conventions
- BEP-23: Tracker Returns Compact Peer Lists
- BEP-27: Private Torrents
- BEP-29: uTorrent Transport Protocol
- BEP-32: IPv6 extension for DHT
- BEP-47: Padding files and extended file attributes
- BEP-53: Magnet URI extension - Select specific file indices for download
- Sequential downloading (the default and only option)
- Resume downloading file(s) if they already exist on disk
- Selective downloading using a regular expression for filename
- DHT support. Allows magnet links to work, and makes more peers available.
- HTTP API
- Pausing / unpausing / deleting (with files or not) APIs
- Stateful server
- Web UI
- Streaming, with seeking
- UPNP port forwarding to your router
- UPNP Media Server
- Fastresume (no rehashing)
- Download / upload rate limiting
- Prometheus metrics at
/metrics
and/torrents/<id_or_infohash>/peer_stats/prometheus
By default it listens on http://127.0.0.1:3030.
curl -s 'http://127.0.0.1:3030/'
{
"apis": {
"GET /": "list all available APIs",
"GET /dht/stats": "DHT stats",
"GET /dht/table": "DHT routing table",
"GET /metrics": "Prometheus metrics",
"GET /stats": "Global session stats",
"GET /stream_logs": "Continuously stream logs",
"GET /torrents": "List torrents",
"GET /torrents/playlist": "Playlist for supported players",
"GET /torrents/{id_or_infohash}": "Torrent details",
"GET /torrents/{id_or_infohash}/haves": "The bitfield of have pieces",
"GET /torrents/{id_or_infohash}/metadata": "Download the corresponding torrent file",
"GET /torrents/{id_or_infohash}/peer_stats": "Per peer stats",
"GET /torrents/{id_or_infohash}/peer_stats/prometheus": "Per peer stats in prometheus format",
"GET /torrents/{id_or_infohash}/playlist": "Playlist for supported players",
"GET /torrents/{id_or_infohash}/stats/v1": "Torrent stats",
"GET /torrents/{id_or_infohash}/stream/{file_idx}": "Stream a file. Accepts Range header to seek.",
"GET /web/": "Web UI",
"POST /rust_log": "Set RUST_LOG to this post launch (for debugging)",
"POST /torrents": "Add a torrent here. magnet: or http:// or a local file.",
"POST /torrents/create": "Create a torrent and start seeding. Body should be a local folder",
"POST /torrents/resolve_magnet": "Resolve a magnet to torrent file bytes",
"POST /torrents/{id_or_infohash}/add_peers": "Add peers (newline-delimited)",
"POST /torrents/{id_or_infohash}/delete": "Forget about the torrent, remove the files",
"POST /torrents/{id_or_infohash}/forget": "Forget about the torrent, keep the files",
"POST /torrents/{id_or_infohash}/pause": "Pause torrent",
"POST /torrents/{id_or_infohash}/start": "Resume torrent",
"POST /torrents/{id_or_infohash}/update_only_files": "Change the selection of files to download. You need to POST json of the following form {\"only_files\": [0, 1, 2]}"
},
"server": "rqbit",
"version": "9.0.0-beta.1"
}
For HTTP API basic authentication set RQBIT_HTTP_BASIC_AUTH_USERPASS environment variable.
RQBIT_HTTP_BASIC_AUTH_USERPASS=username:password rqbit server start ...
curl -d 'magnet:?...' http://127.0.0.1:3030/torrents
OR
curl -d 'http://.../file.torrent' http://127.0.0.1:3030/torrents
OR
curl --data-binary @/tmp/xubuntu-23.04-minimal-amd64.iso.torrent http://127.0.0.1:3030/torrents
Supported query parameters, all optional:
- overwrite=true|false
- only_files_regex - the regular expression string to match filenames
- output_folder - the folder to download to. If not specified, defaults to the one that rqbit server started with
- list_only=true|false - if you want to just list the files in the torrent instead of downloading
- crates/rqbit - main binary
- crates/librqbit - main library
- crates/librqbit-core - torrent utils
- crates/bencode - bencode serializing/deserializing
- crates/buffers - wrappers around binary buffers
- crates/clone_to_owned - a trait to make something owned
- crates/sha1w - wrappers around sha1 libraries
- crates/peer_binary_protocol - the protocol to talk to peers
- crates/dht - Distributed Hash Table implementation
- crates/upnp - upnp port forwarding
- crates/upnp_serve - upnp MediaServer
- desktop - desktop app built with Tauri
- librqbit-utp - uTP protocol
- librqbit-dualstack-sockets - cross-platform IPv6+IPv4 listeners with canonical IPs
This project began purely out of my enjoyment of writing code in Rust. I wasn’t satisfied with my regular BitTorrent client and wanted to see how much effort it would take to build one from scratch. Starting with the bencode protocol, then the peer protocol, it gradually evolved into what it is today.
If you love rqbit, please consider donating through one of these methods. With enough support, I might be able to make this my full-time job one day — which would be amazing!
- Github Sponsors
- Crypto
- ETH (Ethereum) 0x68c54b26b5372d5f091b6c08cc62883686c63527
- XMR (Monero) 49LcgFreJuedrP8FgnUVB8GkAyoPX7A9PjWfKZA1hNYz5vPCEcYQ9HzKr3pccGR6Lc3V3hn52bukwZShLDhZsk57V41c2ea
- XNO (Nano) nano_1ghid3z6x41x8cuoffb6bbrt4e14wsqdbyqwp5d8rk166meo3h77q7mkjusr