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My uTorrent settings for my 100mbit connection.

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datora:
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--- Quote from: Pentium100 on July 21, 2011, 03:39:45 AM ---
--- Quote from: datora on July 19, 2011, 05:25:33 PM ---When I've initial-seeded an offer, I try to use the largest cache my RAM will handle in an effort to increase seeding response time.
--- End quote ---
The problem (maybe fixed now I don't know) is that once uTorrent process hits 2GB RAM usage (since it also uses RAM for things other than cache) it hangs. 2GB per process is 32bit Windows default limit. The programmer can get around it by either making a 64bit version of their app or using AWE in a 32bit app).
--- End quote ---

Yah ... I'd run across that somewhere once.  Didn't remember the exact limit; thought maybe 1 GB for a while now.  But, I'm a been All Good: almost always I've used 384 MB (old habit of 3x 128 MB when I don't have a better guess or am bored).

I monitor my memory use regularly, and utorrent rarely uses more than about 50 MB.  Right now I'm using 32 MB (peaked at 78 MB), and it's been running ~40 torrents for ~36 hours now.  I wish it had more data cached in RAM ... I'm seeding off an external HDD over USB 2.0 at the moment.  It's all fine, no bottlenecks, heat buildup or anything ... but it would give me a happy if I knew utorrent was seeding largely out of RAM instead of hitting the drive over my USB controller.

Meomix:

--- Quote from: Wintereise on July 21, 2011, 04:48:51 AM ---@Meo: Looks like a half duplex line. Under which wing of NTT are you under? Raw OCN? Or Hikari flets through NTT A/B?

OCN is full duplex, unsure about about the latter. Try capping the download at 6 or so MB/s and then try seeding.

I use raw OCN (200mbit/s, Tokyo) and have no issue hitting good speeds. Though, international peering isn't quite as good as Swedish internets.

--- End quote ---

Hmmm i think it's Hikari flets cause the name of the modem is hikari, Sorry don't know what A/B means, if by that you mean A or B network address support then it's B.

Egh i just remembered, we told NTT to disable nat translation on the modem and that we would use our own router to enter the internet, which would explain why the modem couldn't contact the dns i wonder if i can set up the win 7 built in firewall for nat translation.

I've capped the uTorrents and Bakatorrents DL / UPL but it didn't make much of a difference. Well releasing uTorrents upload cap of 1000 kB/s boosted the UPL speed from 5kB/s to 19/kBs, some 2 or 3 torrents randomly boost to an UPL of 100kB/s but thats only for 50 secs.

Pentium100:

--- Quote from: Meomix on July 21, 2011, 07:40:20 PM ---I've capped the uTorrents and Bakatorrents DL / UPL but it didn't make much of a difference. Well releasing uTorrents upload cap of 1000 kB/s boosted the UPL speed from 5kB/s to 19/kBs, some 2 or 3 torrents randomly boost to an UPL of 100kB/s but thats only for 50 secs.

--- End quote ---
Try disabling uTP.

kitamesume:
@meomix

get inside your router and find DHCP setup/configuration/settings whatever it is and find the DNS entries, most likely its blank and put your desired DNS server there, if that doesnt work its possible to do it on your computer instead.

to do this, properties your connection and right-click "internet protocol version 4(TCP/IPv4)" or "internet protocol version 6(TCP/IPv6)" and manually set the DNS there.

Meomix:

--- Quote from: Pentium100 on July 22, 2011, 12:14:05 AM ---
--- Quote from: Meomix on July 21, 2011, 07:40:20 PM ---I've capped the uTorrents and Bakatorrents DL / UPL but it didn't make much of a difference. Well releasing uTorrents upload cap of 1000 kB/s boosted the UPL speed from 5kB/s to 19/kBs, some 2 or 3 torrents randomly boost to an UPL of 100kB/s but thats only for 50 secs.

--- End quote ---
Try disabling uTP.

--- End quote ---

Wow thanks, once i did saw improvement, a bakatorrent went from a DL speed of 600kB/s to 1.7MB/s.... 2.1MB/s!!! At worst it remains at a constant speed of 1.0 MB/s!

Oh and the UPL has gone from 19 KB/s to 50 KB/s now, with some at 80 KB/s.


--- Quote from: kitamesume on July 22, 2011, 05:01:35 AM ---@meomix

get inside your router and find DHCP setup/configuration/settings whatever it is and find the DNS entries, most likely its blank and put your desired DNS server there, if that doesnt work its possible to do it on your computer instead.

to do this, properties your connection and right-click "internet protocol version 4(TCP/IPv4)" or "internet protocol version 6(TCP/IPv6)" and manually set the DNS there.

--- End quote ---

Meh did all of that didn't work, im going to go to the router soon and force the router to give my computer DMZ privileges, i saw some amazing port restrictions lifted when done to another computer, maybe it will work here.

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