Post by Scorminerd » Thu Sep 12, pm. Post by DonP » Sat Sep 14, am. Post by Scorminerd » Wed Sep 18, pm. Privacy Terms. Quick links. TIP: Speeding up deluge - Global bandwidth usage Post by Scorminerd » Thu Sep 12, pm Hi All, I'm hoping that this isn't a duplicate post, but some Googling didn't find this information -- I'm hoping that by posting here, now it will.
For optimistic unchoking, at any one time there is a single peer which is unchoked regardless of it's upload rate if interested, it counts as one of the four allowed downloaders.
Which peer is optimistically unchoked rotates every 30 seconds. To give them a decent chance of getting a complete piece to upload, new connections are three times as likely to start as the current optimistic unchoke as anywhere else in the rotation.
If you don't set up your uploading setting properly, you will be forever choked on your downloads. It's best to do this with all other applications, including Deluge, closed. You also should run the test a few times, hours or days apart, to make sure your initial results were accurate. Everyone got all excited when it was noticed that Microsoft had initially limited half-open connections in XP and Vista to small numbers. As a plethora of hacks came out to remove this limit, somehow "half-open connections" became the scape-goat for slow download speeds.
Do not patch your tcpip. The reality is that half-open connections should--rapidly--resolve to fully-opened connections or be timed-out, so you really don't need that many of them hanging around, anyway. While a basic premise of bit-torrenting is a big-ol' "swarm" of peers, you, as a single client, can spread yourself too thin.
You're more helpful to the swarm by feeding a limited number of peers with a steady, thick stream of data, than you are by spraying out droplets of data to a huge number of peers.
So, you should limit your upload slots based on your upload speeds to make sure that each connected peer is getting a reasonable amount of bandwidth. You should limit your number of connections because it take resources to keep track of each connection, and why track connections that are giving you a trickle if any data?
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Deluge download speed issues. Thread starter walk Start date Dec 6, Joined Feb 8, Messages Hey all. I've had this issue for a while and have tried figuring out what is causing it and haven't been successful in getting to the bottom of it.
This is what is going on: When I download torrents in Deluge, my download is getting maxed out around 50MBps mbps. My entire network is at gb speeds. I have checked my settings in deluge, and as far as I can tell, there isn't anything restricting my speeds. Any ideas? Hoping someone has experienced something like this before. Joined Feb 4, Messages Have you tried transmission? This could narrow your issue down to deluge or FreeNAS downloading torrents.
Click to expand Joined Dec 24, Messages
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