I know it's the ISP. Forums full of similar problems with game 
servers. they've admitted Stops dead at 7pm comes back at 10 pm. 
Nothing else changes. If I try to load any p2p stuff [as a test] it 
stops and starts at exactly same time. Apart from port 5050 can you 
think of any other parameter that might be looked at? the ISP has 
admitted to 'traffic shaping' at these times.

cheers
David

--- In [email protected], Joel Uckelman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
wrote:
>
> Thus spake "schoie88":
> > A while ago I noticed I could connect to server but got no 
feedback, 
> > e.g. couldn't see anyone [including me] in rooms, even though the 
> > server status showed them to be busy. My opponents could see me 
in 
> > there. Quite clearly the server couldn't 'upload' to me. Other 
> > connections are fine. A few plyers on the VASL forum had the same 
> > problem.
> > 
> > After several tests I now realise this is because the ISP blocks 
all 
> > connection to P2P sites at peak times. The VASSAL server comes 
back 
> > when P"P software is unblocked. More and more ISP's are blocking 
this 
> > traffic at peak times. So more and more players will be kept out 
of 
> > VASSAL in the evenings. Is VASSAL server seen as P2P by the 
ISP's? Can 
> > this be altered?
> > 
> > cheers
> > David
> 
> If you're showing up for others on the server, then clearly you 
have no
> problem getting packets through to the server. Your problem is 
receiving
> packets coming back to you from the server. 
> 
> VASSAL uses port 5050, last I checked. Are you sure the problem is 
that
> your ISP is blocking port 5050? (I'm dubious about this, since Yahoo
> Messenger also uses 5050; I have a hard time believing that they'd 
block
> Yahoo Messenger.) Another explanation is that your firewall is 
blocking
> those packets, but that's also weird since (I think) the incoming 
packets
> from the VASSAL server should be interpreted by your firewall as 
related
> to a connection you initiated, and so let in.
> 
> Hmm. It might be worth calling your ISP about to get more 
information.
> If it turns out that they are blocking 5050, what I would do, in 
order
> of severity, is 1) ask them not to block that port, 2) point out 
that
> it prevents you from getting what you pay for, 3) threaten to 
switch to
> another ISP (even if you don't really mean it), and 4) switch to 
another
> ISP and write them a letter explaining why.
> 
> -- 
> J.
>


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