mirror of
https://github.com/logos-storage/bittorrent-codex-docs.git
synced 2026-01-02 13:03:08 +00:00
1.7 KiB
1.7 KiB
See also: Using Python on macOS.
We will use a very simple Python script to validate encodings. You can find the script here: https://gist.github.com/marcinczenko/a87baf506bb0fd4bdff752cda4c685a1
Our input will be the following data1M.bin.torrent.json file:
{
"info": {
"length": 1048576,
"name": "data1M.bin",
"piece length": 262144,
"pieces": [
"111421FEBA308CD51E9ACF88417193A9EA60F0F84646",
"11143D4A8279853DA2DA355A574740217D446506E8EB",
"11141AD686B48B9560B15B8843FD00E7EC1B59624B09",
"11145015E7DA0C40350624C6B5A1FED1DB39720B726C"
]
}
}
To b-encode we run:
python bencoder.py --info-only data1M.bin.torrent.json
Using values from file: data1M.bin.torrent.json
Info only: True
{
"length": 1048576,
"name": "data1M.bin",
"piece length": 262144,
"pieces": [
"21FEBA308CD51E9ACF88417193A9EA60F0F84646",
"3D4A8279853DA2DA355A574740217D446506E8EB",
"1AD686B48B9560B15B8843FD00E7EC1B59624B09",
"5015E7DA0C40350624C6B5A1FED1DB39720B726C"
]
}
infohash f335440998515770adf47e8a4626889e59d91dde
The --info-only option instructs the script to only b-encode the info dictionary and do not include other attributes like announce.
We get as an output the data1M.bin.torrent file with the following content:
d4:infod6:lengthi1048576e4:name10:data1M.bin12:piece lengthi262144e6:pieces80:!<21><>0<EFBFBD><30><1E>ψAq<41><71><EFBFBD>`<EFBFBD><EFBFBD>FF=J<EFBFBD>y<EFBFBD>=<EFBFBD><EFBFBD>5ZWG@!}De<06><>ֆ<><D686><EFBFBD>`<EFBFBD>[<EFBFBD>C<EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>YbK P<15><>@5$Ƶ<><C6B5><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>9rrlee
It is not very readable, because pieces has been converted to hex strings to a flattened byte array - in the end this is supposed to be machine readable code.