Pulsar is an torrent finding and streaming engine. It doesn't go on torrent websites for legal reasons. However, it calls specially crafted addons (called providers) that are installed separately. They are normal XBMC addons, and thus can be installed/updated/distributed just like any other addon.
- Windows
- Linux 32/64 bits (starting Ubuntu 12.04)
- Linux ARM (Raspberry Pi, Cubox i4pro etc...)
- OS X 64 bits
- Android ARM (4.x)
See the Releases page.
- Install Pulsar like any other addon
- Go in Settings > Services > Remote Control and enable both options
- Restart XBMC
Follow @pulsarhq on Twitter
Pulsar is an torrent finding and streaming engine. It doesn't go on torrent websites for legal reasons. It calls specially crafted addons (called providers) that are installed separately. They are normal XBMC addons, and thus can be installed/updated/distributed just like any other addon.
Pulsar is centred around media: it browses media from TheMovieDB and TheTVDB. And so, when you decide you want to watch a media (i.e. given an IMDB or TVDB Id), here's what Pulsar does:
- Enumerate the installed providers
- Call each provider to find the media you want to watch (in parallel)
- Each provider returns a list of BT links they found
- Collects and de-duplicates all the links
- Goes on the BitTorrent network to find out the number of seeds and peers in real time (i.e. not provided by the provider)
- Finds out of which quality are the different links (thanks to their name)
- Ranks the links by quality and availability (Pulsar privileges quality over availability, but it's not dumb. However, you can get a full list to choose from manually it you want)
- Sends the chosen link to the BitTorrent streaming engine (brand new, and completely rewritten)
All of this is done in less than 1s. Pulsar is around 95% Go, and thus, it's fast. Very fast, actually.
The BitTorrent streaming engine is brand new and very resilient (or at least it's designed to be). It's built on top of the brand new libtorrent 1.0 (which had special patches for the streaming case). So it's very optimised, especially for low CPU machines. I have yet to find a media that doesn't play with the engine.
As said before, Pulsar relies on providers to find streams. Providers are easy to write, and average ~20 lines of Python. As they are normal XBMC addons, which can have their own configuration (although it is not recommended because it complicates things).
Sample Pulsar provider: https://github.com/steeve/script.pulsar.dummy
Providers are given a max amount of time to run before Pulsar considers them to be too slow. The timeouts are as follow:
- 4 seconds on Intel CPUs
- 20 seconds on multicore ARM CPUs
- 30 seconds on single core ARM CPUs (Raspberry Pi)
Please note that for legal reasons, I won't discuss, develop nor distribute any providers connecting to illegal sources. So there is no need to ask me. While I can partake in general discussions regarding provider development, I won't do so for illegal sources specific problems.
Spread the word. Talk about it with your friends, show them, make videos, tutorials. Talk about it on social networks, blogs etc...
Put your xbmc.log on pastebin. If you don't know how to do that, just follow the guide at: http://kodi.wiki/view/Log_file/Easy
Yes, but it can fail.
When watching a torrent, you will be seeding while you watch the stream.
Yes, yes and yes.
Yes, change it in the addon settings.
Yes, but you need to mount your NAS via the OS, not via XBMC.
Sorry, I won't comment of specific providers.
Yes. I have a working version right now, but it's not stable enough for release. Don't blame me, the Android ecosystem is pretty bad for that sort of thing.