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Azureus

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Azureus is a Java based BitTorrent client, with support for I2P and Tor anonymous communication protocols. It currently supports Windows, Mac OS X, Linux and Unix. Azureus was first released in June 2003 at Sourceforge.net, mostly to experiment with the Standard Widget Toolkit from Eclipse. It is one of the most popular BitTorrent clients. [Sourceforge Top Projects]

GUI

Azureus allows users to download multiple files in a single graphical user interface (GUI). The program also features detailed statistics and a large number of user-configurable settings. While downloading a file, the user can view many different statistics including:

Features

Azureus allows users to specify maximum upload and download speeds and is configurable like the many other clients. Azureus also allows users to open some files that have been completed before the entire torrent from within the program. Additionally, Azureus can serve as its own tracker, allowing users to share their own files with others without uploading it to any site. Azureus supports Message stream encryption, an anti-throttling method. Peer exchange and the [[magnet: URI scheme]] are supported. Azureus' functionality can be expanded via various plugins, one of the more popular being [Country Locator]. An integration with the Nodezilla Grid Network is implemented as a plugin, enabling the anonymous storage, sharing and publication of torrent files.

Logo

Azureus logo
Enlarge
Azureus logo

The program's logo is the Blue Poison Dart Frog (Dendrobates azureus), shown on the Azureus webpage, as well as within the program's start-up splash screen, which no doubt lent its name to the project. The name was given to the project by co-creator Tyler Pitchford, who uses the Latin names of Poison Dart Frogs as codenames for his development projects.

DHT

Azureus version 2.3.0.0 introduced the Distributed Database function (a form of DHT, namely Kademlia), which is an expansion of the BitTorrent protocol, making it more independent from trackers. This allows for a torrent where the original tracker is down or very slow to get peer data (and eventually download the files) from other peers that are using Azureus 2.3.0.0 or newer. The downside to this is private trackers, where membership is required, that do not want non-members downloading their torrents are required to alter their torrents so the Azureus client knows not to share peer information about that swarm. Some critics also say that this is simply 'reinventing the wheel,' referring to earlier peer-to-peer protocols and programs the weaknesses of which BitTorrent was praised for overcoming. Others see it as an evolution of the BitTorrent protocols. Azureus uses its own form of DHT incompatible with Bram Cohen's BitTorrent client.

Azureus was modified to create the Localhost Program, which uses the Distributed Database to maintain a virtual file system.

Criticism

Azureus has been criticized by some for its use of CPU and memory resources. This may in part be due to the program's reliance on the Java virtual machine.

As of the 2.4.0.0, it is possible to run Azureus using GCJ (version 4.1.0 and greater), allowing Azureus to run as native code and to be considered fully free software as it no longer depends on a proprietary virtual machine.

See also

Notes

External links

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