By default, Enet sends (reliable) ping packets every 500ms, if no other reliable traffic was sent in that interval. If you're sending reliable packets 30 times per second instead of 2 times, it's possible Enet is deriving a more accurate average round trip time.
- Blair On Wed, Jul 14, 2010 at 2:45 PM, Philip Bennefall <[email protected] > wrote: > Hi Lee and others, > > I am having some minor issues with ENet. > > First, I'm trying to get the average up and downstream for each peer by > using the appropriate data fields in the peer structure but it always > returns 0 for some reason. The same seems to be true with the host structure > as well. > > Second, when I look at the average round trip time for a peer, this value > is only correct if I send out a few reliable packets. on localhost, for > instance, I ran a test where I sent 30 unreliable packets every second. I > poll the network every 5 milliseconds, but got an average round trip of 44 > milliseconds. When I changed it to reliable packets, however, I got an > average of 12 which seems much more reasonable. Is this intended behavior? > > Thanks in advance for any help. > > Kind regards, > > Philip Bennefall > > _______________________________________________ > ENet-discuss mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.cubik.org/mailman/listinfo/enet-discuss > >
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