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-   -   Incoming vs Outgoing Connection Queston (https://www.gnutellaforums.com/connection-problems/11950-incoming-vs-outgoing-connection-queston.html)

Theala Sildorian May 31st, 2002 10:39 AM

Incoming vs Outgoing Connection Queston
 
The other day when I was connected, I looked at my connections and found several that were listed as "Incoming." Every other time I had used Limedwire, all the connections had been outgoing so I was surprised. I looked at the FAQ, and the explaination stuff on the Limewire site, but found no answer.

Sorry if this seems a dumb question, but what's the difference in terms of how Limewire works? The difference I noted was that Limewire for the only time put in the title bar how many hosts I was connected to (several hundred) and howmany TB of files was available. I also seemed to have more success downloading files.

Can someone explain this to me?

Treatid May 31st, 2002 11:36 AM

When you first connect to the network - LimeWire will look for hosts to connect to - it will ask them if it can connect - if yes, it will form a connection - this is an outgoing connection.

If you have been on for a while then other clients may ask if they can connect to you. This is an incoming connection.

There's no real difference between the two types of connection - it is for information rather than anything else - as such, the difference between incoming and outgoing, by itself, should not make a difference to the quality of your searches.

The difference probably lies in your ultrapeer status. As a leaf - you will not have any incoming connections. As an ultrapeer you become a popular/desirable/necessary connection for all those leaves out there and play a more significant role with other ultrapeers.

As an ultrapeer you probably do have a better search horizon and consequently a better/faster download rate. The downside is that around 15KB of your upload and download bandwidth is given over to message routing.

You can force yourself to be a Leaf with:

Options|Speed|Disable Ultrapeer

You cannot force yourself to be an ultrapeer - although there is a reasonable chance that LimeWire will elect to be an ultrapeer if you have a reasonably large bandwidth.

Mark

Theala Sildorian May 31st, 2002 12:46 PM

Ah. That explains it. Thanks! :)


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