i'm confused as to what exactly your trying to do. when you open the gateway,
you should see two percentages, load and outbound message overhead. generally
speaking, you want these to be low. not necessarily as low as possible but you
definitely do not want them reaching 100%. they are not
>At 11:25 a.m. 10/01/2006, Bruce wrote:
>Hi,
>
>I'm using freenet build 5106 on a Windows XP pc.
>
>I use to connect over dial up modem and used dynamic dns for my address and
>had my listen port set to 13222.
>I now have a fixed ip address (still using dynamic dns) but pc is behind a
>router
Hi,
I'm using freenet build 5106 on a Windows XP pc.
I use to connect over dial up modem and used dynamic dns for my address and had
my listen port set to 13222.
I now have a fixed ip address (still using dynamic dns) but pc is behind a
router with only a few incoming ports open that I can't
At 11:25 a.m. 10/01/2006, Bruce wrote:
Hi,
I'm using freenet build 5106 on a Windows XP pc.
I use to connect over dial up modem and used dynamic dns for my address and
had my listen port set to 13222.
I now have a fixed ip address (still using dynamic dns) but pc is behind a
router with only
i'm confused as to what exactly your trying to do. when you open the gateway,
you should see two percentages, load and outbound message overhead. generally
speaking, you want these to be low. not necessarily as low as possible but you
definitely do not want them reaching 100%. they are not
Hi,
I'm using freenet build 5106 on a Windows XP pc.
I use to connect over dial up modem and used dynamic dns for my address and
had
my listen port set to 13222.
I now have a fixed ip address (still using dynamic dns) but pc is behind a
router with only a few incoming ports open
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
-- big snip --
But I don't get incoming connections? Netstat doesn't show anything
listening on port 443. Is this normal for freenet?
No. It sounds like freenet is failing to bind the listenport, probably because
it's already in use, or manages to do so but