On 06/19/10 02:02, ABS Doug wrote: > I still don't have an answer. It would seem for the 1st time in my > life, I've reached a point were I can't figure something out. Here is > what I've tried: > > -Lowered upload speed below 50% of total upload capacity (fail). > -Lowered the number of peers, both overall & per torrent, even "6" (fail). > -Confirmed /etc/resolv.conf is pointing to my ISP, not the router. > -Tried different bit torrent clients > -Debian stable (fail) UNE 10.04 (fail) UNR 9.10 (works) MS XP (works) > -Updated firmware > -Downloading only > -Uploading only > > Equipment: WRT54G, Acer Aspire One
If torrents were acting all weird in my case, I would do the following, in the given order. 1. Try a "safe" torrent, e.g. of a Linux distribution (Ubuntu is a good example). The idea is to exclude the possibility of using bad or intentionally malformed torrents (see klistvud's reply). If this "safe" torrent works without problems, then you know what is wrong. If it doesn't, then go to next step. 2. Try to isolate the problem. I know that torrent clients works quite well in Ubuntu and Debian. I use rtorrent, you can try any of the other choices (ktorrent,azureus,vuze,bittornado, what have you). So I don't think the client is the problem. Also my machine is behind a firewall router (also running Debian). All I had to do was to forward the port (used by my torrent client) from WAN to my LAN machine. This means that if your Debian or Ubuntu machine is not running any firewall of its own, it most likely is not the problem (since torrent clients are good too). The problem probably is with your firewall. Try excluding that by connecting your computer directly to your modem and connecting from the computer directly (modem will work in bridge mode). Since your computer does not have a firewall, neither does the modem, your torrents should work. If this works, disconnect the computer from the modem and fix your router, since that is the problem. 3. If the above step also does not work, then the problem is most likely in your modem, probably in its parameters. I am not too familiar with this though. As an example, I forward the port (on which my rtorrent listens for traffic) from my firewall to my computer on my LAN. I run rtorrent on my computer which has worked with, and also without, a firewall of its own in the last few years. In almost all cases, torrents have worked extremely well. The only bad cases were when I inadvertently tried a "rogue" torrent file in the days when I was new to all this stuff and was not aware of how to find and use only trusted or safe torrents. Good luck. -- Please reply to this list only. I read this list on its corresponding newsgroup on gmane.org. Replies sent to my email address are just filtered to a folder in my mailbox and get periodically deleted without ever having been read. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/hvl93c$1i...@dough.gmane.org