Yeah, I'd realised that if you could provide a list of all the
different ports that would be helpful (or is there just too many?). The
reason is, the actual port number identifies which applications are
communicating (or trying to communicate) with each other. For example,
email always
Latest stable, windows 2000, java 1.4.2:
After a restart and seeing that I have these peers:
Connections open (Inbound/Outbound/Limit) 13 (12/1/200)
Transfers active (Transmitting/Receiving) 1 (0/1)
Data waiting to be transferred None
Total amount of data
On Thu, Jun 24, 2004 at 10:31:41AM +0200, Jano wrote:
Latest stable, windows 2000, java 1.4.2:
After a restart and seeing that I have these peers:
Connections open (Inbound/Outbound/Limit) 13 (12/1/200)
OUCH! Have you reseeded recently? In any case if you leave it running
for a day
Toad schrieb:
OUCH! Have you reseeded recently? In any case if you leave it running
for a day or so it should accumulate more... a reasonable number is 100+
connections...
I found that around 30 connections or normal and 60 connections is a really
good number around 1 hour after restarting my
On Thu, Jun 24, 2004 at 03:49:46PM +0200, Someone wrote:
Toad schrieb:
OUCH! Have you reseeded recently? In any case if you leave it running
for a day or so it should accumulate more... a reasonable number is 100+
connections...
I found that around 30 connections or normal and 60
Toad schrieb:
SIX HOURS? Woah... my address gets changed at most once a month...
The longest time any of the major ISPs for DSL/Dialup allow you to
have an IP is 24 hours, after that you'll get disconnected, no matter
what comes, and get a new IP after reconnecting. There are some smaller
ISPs
Michael R. Stork schrieb:
It depends on when they do system maintenance. As long as their system
is up, and you stay connected, you should keep renewing the same IP.
No, it is not system maintenance here in germany. In fact it's part of the
contract with the ISPs that you will get forcefully
On Thu, 24 Jun 2004 17:21:19 +0200, Someone [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
To say it clear, a fixed IP (even when it is only fixed for a week) is
something
special you have to pay for in germany, and no ISP will give you
something for
free if he can actually charge a good ammount of extra money
Troed Sångberg schrieb:
I'm myself on 8/1 ADSL with a static IP, and I just got my VDSL modem
in the mail so in 1-2 weeks I should be up on ~13-20Mbit both ways ...
(depends on the distance to the station).
Cost?
¤43/month.
No traffic limits. Home servers allowed.
Woa, I wish something like
On Thu, Jun 24, 2004 at 05:21:19PM +0200, Someone wrote:
Michael R. Stork schrieb:
It depends on when they do system maintenance. As long as their system
is up, and you stay connected, you should keep renewing the same IP.
No, it is not system maintenance here in germany. In fact it's
On Thu, Jun 24, 2004 at 05:48:53PM +0200, Someone wrote:
Troed S?ngberg schrieb:
I'm myself on 8/1 ADSL with a static IP, and I just got my VDSL modem
in the mail so in 1-2 weeks I should be up on ~13-20Mbit both ways ...
(depends on the distance to the station).
Cost?
?43/month.
Okay, impact on Freenet:
- Every N hours (6, 12, 24), a German node will lose all its
connections. It will then reestablish them, as long as they are not
German nodes which are simultaneously broken. QUESTION: are they all
recycled at once? Surely not, for obvious reasons. So hopefully it'll
Will someone please post the new .conf file with min/max and defaults?
Apparently the .conf file is not updated when the version is updated.
Toad wrote:
No, it's 200. It used to be 512.
___
Support mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Will someone please post the new .conf file with min/max and defaults?
Apparently the .conf file is not updated when the version is updated.
Toad wrote:
No, it's 200. It used to be 512.
14 matches
Mail list logo