Hit your Android device’s menu button and choose ‘Settings’. You will see a message that you need to set up a server configuration first.
Install the software from the Android Market and open up the application. There are too many routers and ADSL modems to make detailed explanations here, but you can use the website PortForward for in-depth help. Here you will need to set up a port forward from all external traffic on port number 8112 to you local computers’ IP address – the one that you just retrieved from the Ubuntu connection manager – on the same port. It will most likely have a NAT tab or settings screen. Now go to your the manager interface of your router or ADSL modem. Note it down or remember it: this is your computer local IP address. You need the number that says ‘IP Address’. If choose ‘Connection Information’ it will give you some statistics about your current computer’s network connection. Right-click on the connections icons in the top panel this is the NetworkManager Applet. First get your Ubuntu computer’s IP address. You will need to open up the port 8112 and redirect this to your home computer. The next step is very important if you want to use Transdroid to control Deluge from anywhere you go and not just your home Wi-Fi network. Remember that you always need to have both the deluged and deluge-web running and that the web UI is always connected to the deamon.
If you want to change the web UI password or the default port number 8112, click on ‘Preferences’ in the top bar and open the ‘Interface’ tab. Next you need to connect to the running deluged daemon. Open your browser and go to It will ask for a password, which is ‘deluge’ by default. I use the & at the end of the command to run the web UI disconnected from the terminal we are working in. You can now run the application by starting both the daemon and the web interface.
Now we can compile the code and install it on our system: Sudo apt-get install build-essential python-all-dev python-all python-support libboost-dev libboost-thread-dev libboost-date-time-dev libboost-filesystem-dev libboost-serialization-dev libboost-program-options-dev libboost-regex-dev zlib1g-dev libssl-dev The official list of dependencies can be found on the Deluge website. The following command should get them all, but depending on your machine’s installation you may need more.
If you need to update the installation later on your can use the ‘svn update’ command to get the latest version, before recompiling and installing the project.īefore compiling get all the dependencies for the project. Open a command line and check out the code: The first thing you need to do is get the latest Deluge code from their development SVN server. (Don’t like compiling yourself? These is also a Launchpad PPA repository that provides a. The instructions therefore are taken from the Deluge website. Unfortunately, this isn’t officially released yet so we need to compile and install it ourselves. The support for Deluge in Transdroid is limited to the new Deluge 1.2 version. Look for the Deluge auth file in the server computer.Here are the steps to install Transdroid when you use Deluge on Ubuntu: Compiling and installing Deluge.Connect to a NordVPN regular server on your smartphone.The remaining steps are for the NordVPN option. You can use an SSH tunnel or an additional VPN connection. Now, you’ll need to link your Deluge client with the server.The app was coded for iOS 12, but users report it working on iOS up to 14.0. It works with Deluge and all the other major BitTorrent software. It’s not available in the Google Play app store, but you can find it on F-Droid.
This app was made specially to work with Deluge. Download a thin-client app for Deluge on your smartphone.Here you have a tutorial for UNIX systems.
You may also need to open a port on your firewall.