- #Deluge client commands how to
- #Deluge client commands install
- #Deluge client commands software
- #Deluge client commands download
I just get a cross beside the 192,168.*.* server.Ĭan anyone help further? Hopefully if anyone else has the random error messages that I was getting earlier they'll find this thread and it'll help them. I've also tried using the desktop client - 1.2.3 - on my Ubuntu desktop of my laptop. It just shifts the command one line up and sits there. default port for web user interface : 8112.
#Deluge client commands download
Open deluge interface, go in preferences / downloads / folders and configure the download path in the jail -> /mnt/torrentsdatas. I've tried the following sorts of commands within the console. step 13 - configure deluge to store the data in that dataset. and while the two consoles seem perfectly happy to connect to their localhost - 127.0.0.1:58846, in other words - they do nothing when I try to connect from the laptop to the server box. However, I've tried enabling remote connections - via the instructions given here. I can now fire up the console on both my laptop and my local server via ssh. Deluge is a full-featured, multi-platform, multi-interface BitTorrent client using libtorrent-rasterbar. To get rid of the error messages, from the previous set-up outlined above in this thread, I copied the auth file in /var/lib/deluge to ~/.config/deluge and it did the trick. bittorrent client written in Python/PyGTK (console ui). I've at least managed to avoid all the error messages - but the console on my laptop shows absolutely no sign of connecting to the daemon on my local server.
#Deluge client commands software
I do have a feeling that this is the piece of software I need, but dang is it hard to set up. Incidentally, my daemon is running - I can see it via the web interface - but no ~/.config/deluge/auth file appears to exist.Īll suggestions welcome. So this is before I even try to connect to the deluge daemon from a local client (such as on my laptop). It's a remote machine - my home server - but I'm logged into it via ssh. Raise BadLoginError("Username does not exist") Ret = component.get("AuthManager").authorize(*args, **kwargs)įile "/usr/lib/pymodules/python2.6/deluge/core/authmanager.py", line 87, in authorize 10:56:53 client:375 RPCError Message Received!įile "/usr/lib/pymodules/python2.6/deluge/core/rpcserver.py", line 245, in dispatch
#Deluge client commands install
Then I apt-get install deluge-console, but when I type deluge-console at the command line I get the following. I install Deluge using the instructions given here. Did all apt-get upgrades, but installed no other software before doing the following. Okay, so I reinstalled Ubuntu to 9.10 64-bit.
("Failed to connect to %s:%s with reason: %s" % (host, port, _msg))Įxceptions.AttributeError: 'ConnectionRefusedError' object has no attribute 'exception_msg' Self.result = callback(self.result, *args, **kw)įile "/usr/lib/pymodules/python2.6/deluge/ui/client.py", line 385, in _on_connect_failįile "/usr/lib/python2.6/dist-packages/twisted/internet/defer.py", line 307, in errbackįile "/usr/lib/python2.6/dist-packages/twisted/internet/defer.py", line 354, in _startRunCallbacksįile "/usr/lib/pymodules/python2.6/deluge/ui/console/commands/connect.py", line 62, in on_connect_fail Now we need to add the actual init.d script to .ConnectionRefusedError: Connection was refused by other side: 111: Connection refused.įile "/usr/lib/python2.6/dist-packages/twisted/internet/defer.py", line 371, in _runCallbacks Sudo chmod 755 /etc/default/deluge-daemon Click to Copy Remove Deluge Development PPA.
Click to Copy Note that autoremove will also delete any unused packages from Deluge and any other.
#Deluge client commands how to
When you’re back at the terminal, enter the following commands to make the script executable and update the startup file to include it: How to Remove (Uninstall) Deluge Desktop Client APT Remove Method. After you’ve finished editing, press CTRL+X and save your changes. If you don’t put a the username you selected for the Deluge daemon in there, the script won’t run. Within nano, edit the third line of the script to include the username you set up in earlier part of the tutorial (as you’ll recall we set the Deluge user to “pi” so we’ll insert that here like so): The first script is the only one we will need to edit. This copies the script, renames it and places it in the appropriate directory, and opens it in the nano editor. From the terminal, enter the following commands: To save you the effort of cutting and pasting huge blocks of text, we’ve hosted the scripts on the How-To Geek servers so you can use the wget command to download them. The configuration scripts the Deluge developers provide for Ubuntu work just fine for Raspbian, so rather than re-invent the wheel, we’re going to use their scripts. We need to set up the Deluge daemon and WebUI to run automatically when our Raspberry Pi boots up. Code: Select all Configuring Deluge to Run on Startupīefore we leave the Deluge setup there is one final detail to attend to.