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Re: Bittorrent On VM
I tried bittorrent for the first time a few days ago to drag down a 3.5Gb file (not it wasn't warez, but instead Centos5.2DVD. Didn;t have a problem on etheir my routed connection or my direct connections and the 10Mb got maxed out on both
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I can assure it doesnt run bittorando on *nix the program is based off it but it is not a front end well not on *nix never got it up and running properly on windows so cant comment on that |
Re: Bittorrent On VM
andrew and anyone else thats interested have a read of this
http://www.linux.com/feature/129448 to get upto speed with . " TorrentFlux: A BitTorrent client on a server By Kurt Edelbrock on March 20, 2008 (6:00:00 PM) [img]Download Failed (1)[/img] Share [img]Download Failed (1)[/img] Print [img]Download Failed (1)[/img] Comments TorrentFlux is a BitTorrent client that runs on top of a server running Apache, MySQL, and PHP. It extends the functionality of traditional clients by operating almost entirely through a Web browser interface. It uses the BitTornado client in the background to manage the queuing, downloading, and seeding of torrent files. You can run TorrentFlux on your home machine and access it through a folder on a Web server. You can also install it on an external host to increase bandwidth and transfer speeds. .. " |
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http://www.torrentflux.com/ "TorrentFlux is an web-based system for managing bit torrent file transfers. It is an open source package (GPL) and developed for Linux, Unix & BSD platforms on the ubiquitous LAMP stack. " "The transfer themselves are performed on top of the Bit Tornado package, TorrentFlux provides a web interface for these scripts and the ability to manage multiple transfers, users and even protocols (receive completed files via http) all from the web gui. Read more... " |
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look at it's PHP code and you will find its passing all its web http GUI input/output to and from Bit Tornado
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Three sub-directories of TF_BitTornado in the tarball, /BitTornado, /BitTornado/BT1 and /original_src |
Re: Bittorrent On VM
there you go andrew i found the answer for you and any other interested readers for that matter.
http://forums.degreez.net/viewtopic....highlight=flux ... the only modified part of the bit tornado that torrentflux uses is a modifed btdownloadheadless.py script that uses the BitTornado 0.3.8 client. |
Re: Bittorrent On VM
torrent flux is just a front end for BitTornado, simple as !
I am unsure weather this issue is really a dodgy underhand VM DPI style tactic of weather it is a real technical issue. I use windows vista and i have patched the limited half open TCP Ports option which dosnt solve the issue. It would be interesting to know how far these HTTP requests are getting into VM's network before they start getting lost. I wonder if its at UBR level or at the CMTS. DPI stuff is most likely to happen nearer the CMTS as far as i can imagine with the practicalities of installing the kit in the UBR's and all. Anyone care to enligten me ? i would run some tests but im at work at the moment on a crappy BT 6meg ADSL line :( Impz |
Re: Bittorrent On VM
CMTS = Cable Modem Termination System = uBR just to mention :)
No idea what's going on to be honest. Will see what I can find out on a website I own. Will monitor connection end to end. |
Re: Bittorrent On VM
impz you should setup a ssl to your VM master machine and tunnel in...
of all places this came up the other day ,go ElReg ;) http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/09...mer/page2.html VPN security - if you want it, come and get it |
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But i have yet to find any istance of the bit torando running on my achine. Anyway back to the original poster if it a stechincal support are claiming it because of hte connection running the torrents on another machines and makign sure the bandiwdth isnt 100% used will then says the problem isnt with the client machine. As the linux box use far less power in terms of cpu, memory and networking that windows box does |
Re: Bittorrent On VM
Andrew, it's not an issue with CPU, memory or bandwidth I have checked them all on the XP machine and it was fine. This machine has 2GB of RAM and a dual core CPU, easily capable of running uTorrent.
Checking the half-open connections I've proven that there were no issues with the XP TCP/IP stack with the trace I took and likewise proved out my router. I'll do some more detailed analysis later tonight I think to a test node that I control taking traces from both sides simultaneously. |
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