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Flood is a monitoring service for various torrent clients. It's a Node.js service that communicates with your favorite torrent client and serves a decent web UI for administration. Flood-UI organization hosts related projects.

Supported Clients

ClientSupport
rTorrent:white_check_mark: (tested)
qBittorrent v4.1+:white_check_mark: (tested)
Transmission:white_check_mark: (tested)
Deluge v2+:alembic: Experimental

Integrating with Flood

APIs are officially documented inline by the comments and types.

You can also check out:

Flood conforms to Semantic Versioning conventions.

Feedback

If you have a specific issue or bug, please file a GitHub issue. Please join the Flood Discord server to discuss feature requests and implementation details.

More Information

Check out the Wiki for more information.

Getting started

Pre-Requisites

Install Node.js runtime. Flood tracks Current and provides support to Active LTS as well.

Alternatively, download a single-executable build from Releases (or rolling build from Actions). It bundles Node.js and supports Linux, macOS and Windows.

Installation

(sudo) npm install --global flood or npx flood

Or use @jesec/flood for cutting-edge builds.

Or build from source.

Run

flood or npx flood if you installed Flood via npm.

npm run start if you compiled Flood from source.

Check Wiki for how to install Flood as a service.

Configuration

Flood uses a command line configuration interface.

Run flood --help, npx flood --help or npm run start -- --help to get help about command line arguments.

If you want to know more about configurations, check shared/schema/Config.ts.

When Flood's builtin user management is enabled (default), you will be prompted to configure the connection to torrent client when loading the web interface.

What to configure

  1. If you are proxying requests to Flood from your own web server, configure Flood's path from the host at the --baseuri (or baseURI) property. All requests will be prefixed with this value.
    • For example, if serving Flood from https://foo.bar/apps/flood, you would set baseURI to /apps/flood. If serving flood from https://foo.bar, you do not need to configure baseURI.
    • Read more about proxying requests to Flood in the Wiki.
  2. Check Wiki, especially Security sections.

Upgrade

Run the installation command again.

Troubleshooting

Docker

docker run -it jesec/flood --help

Or jesec/flood:master for cutting-edge builds.

To upgrade, docker pull jesec/flood.

Note that you have to let Docker know which port should be exposed (e.g. -p 3000:3000) and folder mapping (e.g. -v /data:/data).

Don't forget to pay attention to flood's arguments like --port and --allowedpath.

Alternatively, you can pass in environment variables instead (e.g. -e FLOOD_OPTION_port=3000).

Checkout Run Flood (and torrent clients) in containers discussion.

Filesystem parts in Troubleshooting are especially important for containers.

Building Flood

Clone from repository

git clone https://github.com/jesec/flood.git

Compiling assets and starting the server

From the root of the Flood directory...

  1. Run npm install.
  2. Run npm run build.
  3. Run npm start.

Access the UI in your browser. With default settings, go to http://localhost:3000. You can configure the port via --port argument.

Notes

Updating

  1. To update, run git pull in this repository's directory.
  2. Kill the currently running Flood server.
  3. Run npm install to update dependencies.
  4. Run npm run build to transpile and bundle static assets.
  5. Start the Flood server with npm start.

Local Development

  1. Run npm install.
  2. Run npm run start:development:server and npm run start:development:client in separate terminal instances.
    • npm run start:development:server uses ts-node-dev to watch for changes to the server-side source. Or open the folder with VS code and then Run -> Start Debugging. You may use a Javascript IDE to debug server codes.
    • npm run start:development:client watches for changes in the client-side source. Access the UI in your browser. Defaults to localhost:4200. You may use browser's DevTools to debug client codes.

--help --show-hidden shows advanced arguments.

--proxy proxies requests from a development client to a URL of your choice (usually URL to a Flood server). It is useful when you wish to do development on the frontend but not the backend. Or when the frontend and backend are being developed on different hosts.

Environment Variables

  1. DEV_SERVER_PORT: webpackDevServer's port, used when developing Flood. Defaults to 4200.
  2. DEV_SERVER_HOST: webpackDevServer's host, used when developing Flood. Defaults to 0.0.0.0.
  3. DEV_SERVER_HTTPS: webpackDevServer's protocol, used when developing Flood. Defaults to http.

Building Docker

  1. docker build --pull --rm -f Dockerfile -t flood:latest .
  2. docker run -it flood --help