Gnutella Forums  

Go Back   Gnutella Forums > Current Gnutella Client Forums > LimeWire+WireShare (Cross-platform) > New Feature Requests
Register FAQ The Twelve Commandments Members List Calendar Arcade Find the Best VPN Today's Posts

New Feature Requests Your idea for a cool new feature. Or, a LimeWire annoyance that has to get changed.


Welcome To Gnutella Forums

You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload content, fun aspects such as the image caption contest and play in the arcade, and access many other special features after your registration and email confirmation. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today! (click here) (Note: we use Yandex mail server so make sure yandex is not on your email filter or blocklist.)

If you have any problems with the Gnutella Forum registration process or your Gnutella Forum account login, please contact us (this is not for program use questions.) Your email address must be legitimate and verified before becoming a full member of the forums. Please be sure to disable any spam filters you may have for our website, so that email messages can reach you.
Note: Any other issue with registration, etc., send a Personal Message (PM) to one of the active Administrators: Lord of the Rings or Birdy.

Once registered but before posting, members MUST READ the FORUM RULES (click here) and members should include System details - help us to help you (click on blue link) in their posts if their problem relates to using the program. Whilst forum helpers are happy to help where they can, without these system details your post might be ignored. And wise to read How to create a New Thread

Thank you

If you are a Spammer click here.
This is not a business advertising forum, all member profiles with business advertising will be banned, all their posts removed. Spamming is illegal in many countries of the world. Guests and search engines cannot view member profiles.



           Deutsch?              Español?                  Français?                   Nederlands?
   Hilfe in Deutsch,   Ayuda en español,   Aide en français et LimeWire en françaisHulp in het Nederlands

Forum Rules

Support Forums

Before you post to one of the specific Client Help and Support Conferences in Gnutella Client Forums please look through other threads and Stickies that may answer your questions. Most problems are not new. The Search function is most useful. Also the red Stickies have answers to the most commonly asked questions. (over 90 percent).
If your problem is not resolved by a search of the forums, please take the next step and post in the appropriate forum. There are many members who will be glad to help.
If you are new to the world of file sharing please do not be shy! Everyone was ‘new’ when they first started.

When posting, please include details for:
Your Operating System ....... Your version of your Gnutella Client (* this is important for helping solve problems) ....... Your Internet connection (56K, Cable, DSL) ....... The exact error message, if one pops up
Any other relevant information that you think may help ....... Try to make your post descriptive, specific, and clear so members can quickly and efficiently help you. To aid helpers in solving download/upload problems, LimeWire and Frostwire users must specify whether they are downloading a torrent file or a file from the Gnutella network.
Members need to supply these details >>> System details - help us to help you (click on blue link)


Moderators

There are senior members on the forums who serve as Moderators. These volunteers keep the board organized and moving.
Moderators are authorized to: (in order of increasing severity)
Move posts to the correct forums. Many times, members post in the wrong forum. These off-topic posts may impede the normal operation of the forum.
Edit posts. Moderators will edit posts that are offensive or break any of the House Rules.
Delete posts. Posts that cannot be edited to comply with the House Rules will be deleted.
Restrict members. This is one of the last punishments before a member is banned. Restrictions may include placing all new posts in a moderation queue or temporarily banning the offender.
Ban members. The most severe punishment. Three or more moderators or administrators must agree to the ban for this action to occur. Banning is reserved for very severe offenses and members who, after many warnings, fail to comply with the House Rules. Banning is permanent. Bans cannot be removed by the moderators and probably won't be removed by the administration.


The Rules

1. Warez, copyright violation, or any other illegal activity may NOT be linked or expressed in any form. Topics discussing techniques for violating these laws and messages containing locations of web sites or other servers hosting illegal content will be silently removed. Multiple offenses will result in consequences. File names are not required to discuss your issues. If filenames are copyright then do not belong on these forums & will be edited out or post removed. Picture sample attachments in posts must not include copyright infringement.

2. Spamming and excessive advertising will not be tolerated. Commercial advertising is not allowed in any form, including using in signatures.

3. There will be no excessive use of profanity in any forum.

4. There will be no racial, ethnic, or gender based insults, or any other personal attacks.

5. Pictures may be attached to posts and signatures if they are not sexually explicit or offensive. Picture sample attachments in posts must not include copyright infringement.

6. Remember to post in the correct forum. Take your time to look at other threads and see where your post will go. If your post is placed in the wrong forum it will be moved by a moderator. There are specific Gnutella Client sections for LimeWire, Phex, FrostWire, BearShare, Gnucleus, Morpheus, and many more. Please choose the correct section for your problem.

7. If you see a post in the wrong forum or in violation of the House Rules, please contact a moderator via Private Message or the "Report this post to a moderator" link at the bottom of every post. Please do not respond directly to the member - a moderator will do what is required.

8. Any impersonation of a forum member in any mode of communication is strictly prohibited and will result in banning.

9. Multiple copies of the same post will not be tolerated. Post your question, comment, or complaint only once. There is no need to express yourself more than once. Duplicate posts will be deleted with little or no warning. Keep in mind a forum censor may temporarily automatically hold up your post, if you do not see your post, do not post again, it will be dealt with by a moderator within a reasonable time. Authors of multiple copies of same post may be dealt with by moderators within their discrete judgment at the time which may result in warning or infraction points, depending on severity as adjudged by the moderators online.

10. Posts should have descriptive topics. Vague titles such as "Help!", "Why?", and the like may not get enough attention to the contents.

11. Do not divulge anyone's personal information in the forum, not even your own. This includes e-mail addresses, IP addresses, age, house address, and any other distinguishing information. Don´t use eMail addresses in your nick. Reiterating, do not post your email address in posts. This is for your own protection.

12. Signatures may be used as long as they are not offensive or sexually explicit or used for commercial advertising. Commercial weblinks cannot be used under any circumstances and will result in an immediate ban.

13. Dual accounts are not allowed. Cannot explain this more simply. Attempts to set up dual accounts will most likely result in a banning of all forum accounts.

14. Video links may only be posted after you have a tally of two forum posts. Video link posting with less than a 2 post tally are considered as spam. Video link posting with less than a 2 post tally are considered as spam.

15. Failure to show that you have read the forum rules may result in forum rules breach infraction points or warnings awarded against you which may later total up to an automatic temporary or permanent ban. Supplying system details is a prerequisite in most cases, particularly with connection or installation issues.

Violation of any of these rules will bring consequences, determined on a case-by-case basis.


Thank You! Thanks for taking the time to read these forum guidelines. We hope your visit is helpful and mutually beneficial to the entire community.


Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1 (permalink)  
Old April 26th, 2004
arne_bab's Avatar
Draketo, small dragon.
 
Join Date: May 31st, 2002
Location: Heidelberg, Germany
Posts: 1,881
arne_bab is a great assister to others; your light through the dark tunnel
Default 3 Queues for different file sizes

Hi,

Today I saw again someone trying to download a 27kB file stuck in my queue behind 4 >200MB downloads.

That's why I think, you should implement the proposed 3 different queue-sizes:

One reserved slot for files whoose size is below or exactly 1MB

One reserved slot for files, whoose size is between 1MB and 15MB and

One Slot for Files, whoose size is 15MB or larger.

That would mean: every LimeWire would grant at lest 3 upload slots. All slots above that should be unspecified (not size-limited).
__________________

-> put this banner into your own signature! <-
--
Erst im Spiel lebt der Mensch.
Nur ludantaj homoj vivas.
GnuFU.net - Gnutella For Users
Draketo.de - Shortstories, Poems, Music and strange Ideas.
Reply With Quote
  #2 (permalink)  
Old May 3rd, 2004
Enthusiast
 
Join Date: May 3rd, 2004
Location: Charlotte, NC
Posts: 37
ThePowerTool is flying high
Default

I propose an alternative. I really don't want 3 queues (although my example looks a lot like 3 queues).

Add an option for "File Size Management" to the Option menu:
< > Check here to enable File Size Management
1. For files greater than "a" and less than "b" allow "x" uploads
2. For files greater than "c" and less than "d" allow "y" uploads
3. For files greater than "e" and less than "f" allow "z" uploads
(x+y+z cannot exceed max upload slots)

The uploads queue would still display in the same manner with user-selectable sorts.

The advantage is that advanced users are given the greatest control over managing their bandwidth to the shared file sizes in their library. All users will benefit from the individuals that manage these settings appropriately.

Here are two examples to clarify the above criteria:
-High-bandwidth Setting Recommendation
Max Uploads set to 34
<x> Enable File Size Management
1. For files greater than 50M and less than 999M allow 4 uploads
2. For files greater than 9M and less than 50M allow 10 uploads
3. For files greater than 0 and less than 9M allow 20 uploads

-Low-bandwidth Setting Recommendation
Max Uploads set to 6
<x> Enable File Size Management
1. For files greater than 9M and less than 999M allow 0 uploads (yep, it's a filter)
2. For files greater than 120k and less than 9M allow 1 uploads
3. For files greater than 0 and less than 120k allow 5 uploads

Note: Files greater than 9M should not be returned in search results (in the 2nd example).
Reply With Quote
  #3 (permalink)  
Old May 4th, 2004
arne_bab's Avatar
Draketo, small dragon.
 
Join Date: May 31st, 2002
Location: Heidelberg, Germany
Posts: 1,881
arne_bab is a great assister to others; your light through the dark tunnel
Default

The filter for low bandwith would eliminate the advantage from Partial File Sharing for big files.
__________________

-> put this banner into your own signature! <-
--
Erst im Spiel lebt der Mensch.
Nur ludantaj homoj vivas.
GnuFU.net - Gnutella For Users
Draketo.de - Shortstories, Poems, Music and strange Ideas.
Reply With Quote
  #4 (permalink)  
Old May 4th, 2004
arne_bab's Avatar
Draketo, small dragon.
 
Join Date: May 31st, 2002
Location: Heidelberg, Germany
Posts: 1,881
arne_bab is a great assister to others; your light through the dark tunnel
Default

What would happen in your example, if 20 Users wanted to download big files?

Would then the small slots be still free, so that small downloads can pass by unhindered?

What would happen if teh slots for small files and large files are filled and a downloader of small files would get into the queue?

Would he/she then have to wait, till the downloaders in the Queue before him/her have begun downloading, that means till a slot in Big-Files is free?

If not, you'd either have no Queue for small files (your client simply answers "busy"), or a seperate one (to be able to get the download at once, when a slot is free for small files, feels a lot like a second queue).

For a page containing teh summary of a a discussion (and the discussion itself) about Queues generally (so we don't repeat everything here again), you can look here:

http://draketo.de/inhalt/krude-ideen...sscussion.html
__________________

-> put this banner into your own signature! <-
--
Erst im Spiel lebt der Mensch.
Nur ludantaj homoj vivas.
GnuFU.net - Gnutella For Users
Draketo.de - Shortstories, Poems, Music and strange Ideas.
Reply With Quote
  #5 (permalink)  
Old May 18th, 2004
verdyp's Avatar
LimeWire is International
 
Join Date: January 13th, 2002
Location: Nantes, FR; Rennes, FR
Posts: 306
verdyp is flying high
Default

Actually Limewire uploads files by fragments of max 100KB (with a 10 bytes overlay). This allows faster propagation of the download mesh with partial file sharing is enabled in the downloader, that performs successive requests on its connection to upload new fragments and advertize its locations, and to give feedback to the uploader that it now shares some fragments of the uploaded file.

If there's something that may be impoved is to allow interleaving of download requests: for example, after uploading 1MB to the downloader (10 fragments), its connection would be rescheduled (in the active queue), to allow concurrent uploads to perform their swarmed requests, allowing serving more clients.

I think that LimeWire could maintain a higher number of active queuing connections, while also maintaining a low number of active uploads. For example the soft maximum would be set to 5 for low low bandwidth connections, but there should be no problem to maintain a list of 64 active queues.

Even on "symetric" broadband connections, the upload stream is most often limited face to the download stream (most often the effective upload bandwidth is about a quarter of the download bandwidth). If you're not convinced, look at websites that compare the speed of various ISPs (ZDNet has such a online tool for US, in France we've got grenouille.com): you can have a symetric 2Mbit/s cable connection that delivers upstream only about 512kbit/s. (Cable providers do not indicate measures of this assymetry, I think it's a lie to their customers, which is more obvious on ADSL where advertized upstreams are much more accurate and effective).

Smarter management of upload queues would allow non-infinite delay for transfers from hosts with limited upstream bandwidth, so that very large files will still continue to be uploaded when allowing also to deliver smaller files. My opinion is that filesize should not be taken too much into consideration, but rather the diversity (because now swarmed transfers work perfectly and with the same performance on slow and broadband connections).

For this reason, I think that bandwidth filters in searches should be removed. There's as much value for a swarmed transfer from modem users or from broadband users. Queueing should be based on smaller units than just full files.

Gnutella has never been so fast today. If we want even faster transfers we must maximize the effect of swarmed transfers by allowing more hosts downloading concurrently the same files, with PFSP enabled.

There's less risk to upload a single large file to many hosts (that will then collaborate to interchange their file fragments), than to let a single host download a very large file and then disconnect immediately once the transfer finishes. This would make the mesh much more resistant to single points of failures (a host that disconnects just after its transfer terminates). It would really increase the variety of available contents on the Gnet, and larger sets of alternate locations for large files.
__________________
LimeWire is international. Help translate LimeWire to your own language.
Visit: http://www.limewire.org/translate.shtml
Reply With Quote
  #6 (permalink)  
Old May 18th, 2004
arne_bab's Avatar
Draketo, small dragon.
 
Join Date: May 31st, 2002
Location: Heidelberg, Germany
Posts: 1,881
arne_bab is a great assister to others; your light through the dark tunnel
Default

Quote:
Originally posted by verdyp
[B]Actually Limewire uploads files by fragments of max 100KB (with a 10 bytes overlay). This allows faster propagation of the download mesh with partial file sharing is enabled in the downloader, that performs successive requests on its connection to upload new fragments and advertize its locations, and to give feedback to the uploader that it now shares some fragments of the uploaded file.

If there's something that may be impoved is to allow interleaving of download requests: for example, after uploading 1MB to the downloader (10 fragments), its connection would be rescheduled (in the active queue), to allow concurrent uploads to perform their swarmed requests, allowing serving more clients.
Please don't do it like that!
Someone out there already does and you can imagine how I hated downloading a file by a 100kB Junk, the being put behind some Modem-User.
I think feeling is far too important for this.

This is about making it possible to download small files, while many big filles are in the queue, but a downloader of a big file would also hate not really being able to download continuously, at least I would. THe difference between theh Small and te big file is: Small File downloaders come, grab the file and are content, Big file downloaders grab your Upload slot for some time. but if small-file-downloaders could get in between, the big-file-downloaders would sit in queue most of the time, that's why I'd give those small-file-downloaders an extra upload slot. It doesn't stop other downloads (which would make reconnection necessary) and allows them to spread quickly and effectively.

Also this wouldn't gain anything, when siimply five big-files were in the upload-queue (or the queue would grow indefinitely). Since swarming I often get 10 to 20 uploads to other downloaders while I download a big file, so there would be o space for a small file in between (especially because I prefer to have an upload done, and not to have it linger endlessly in Queue, because the first assures me, that the file is completely avaible on the Gnet.

Quote:
Smarter management of upload queues would allow non-infinite delay for transfers from hosts with limited upstream bandwidth, so that very large files will still continue to be uploaded when allowing also to deliver smaller files. My opinion is that filesize should not be taken too much into consideration, but rather the diversity (because now swarmed transfers work perfectly and with the same performance on slow and broadband connections).
Filesize makes a difference for me as User. I'm not patient when waiting for a small file, but when I wait for big files, I have no problems with being in a queue, because I know I'll get the file at some time (and it will take 3 hours anyway, so why bother with 15 minutes in queue?). For the first, quick download is more important, while for the second it's reliability.

Quote:
There's less risk to upload a single large file to many hosts (that will then collaborate to interchange their file fragments), than to let a single host download a very large file and then disconnect immediately once the transfer finishes. This would make the mesh much more resistant to single points of failures (a host that disconnects just after its transfer terminates). It would really increase the variety of available contents on the Gnet, and larger sets of alternate locations for large files.
Complete agreement, as long as we upload different fragments to different hosts, while still allowing them to preview the file.

I had the Idea to always alternatingly upload junks from the beginning and either the first or second third of the file (randomly selected junks from the second or third third, but for one host only for the third third and for another only for the second third, till all those have been uploaded, though I realize, that the host must request that range itself, so it is up to the downloader to download sensibly).
__________________

-> put this banner into your own signature! <-
--
Erst im Spiel lebt der Mensch.
Nur ludantaj homoj vivas.
GnuFU.net - Gnutella For Users
Draketo.de - Shortstories, Poems, Music and strange Ideas.
Reply With Quote
  #7 (permalink)  
Old May 18th, 2004
verdyp's Avatar
LimeWire is International
 
Join Date: January 13th, 2002
Location: Nantes, FR; Rennes, FR
Posts: 306
verdyp is flying high
Default

Quote:
Originally posted by arne_bab
Filesize makes a difference for me as User. I'm not patient when waiting for a small file, but when I wait for big files, I have no problems with being in a queue, because I know I'll get the file at some time (and it will take 3 hours anyway, so why bother with 15 minutes in queue?). For the first, quick download is more important, while for the second it's reliability.
Do you realize that, in this last sentence, you are contradicting your own position in the first paragraph, because you admit delays when downloading large files?

I see no difference between distribution of files of various sizes and distribution of files with equal sizes (such as file fragments). The effect I was describing is similar to splitting large files and distributing them separately with equal access to the candidate upload queues. However large files in queues take too much time on uploaders sites, and uploader cannot guarantee equal access to all downloaders.

Swarming, if PFSP is enabled, allows implementing this equality policy, and differences of file sizes become much less relevant than with PFSP disabled (where it makes sense to make distinctions between uploader's upstream bandwidth for large files, but at a too expensive cost for the distribution of small files.
What just needs to be guaranteed is that large files swarmed from multiple sources that got only some fragments, will converge rapidly to create the whole file for all clients.

This is possible provided that the uploader queue keeps at least 1 upload slot per fragmented file. If everybody (at least Limewire agents) adheres to this policy, all uploaders will be able to redistribute their copy of the fragments, and will collaborate to help the initial uploader (that may be the first and single source for that file, placing it at risks to monitoring, as long as the mesh contains too few alternate locations with complete files). Rapidly the intial single source will be helped and will no longer to alone to distribute the needed fragments.

I do think this is the whole interest of PFSP: faster distribution of new files, which will become popular and accessible much faster without depending to much on the first source. For very popular files that get lots of incoming transfer requests, we could even imagine to reduce the fragment size depending on the number of known alternate sources. That this file will be large or medium will not make a big difference. But for some small files below 1MB, this could be an improvement so that uploaders will be less likely placed at risk of failure.

This is already a problem still today: I got some partial files for which I can no more find any other copy and the initial source is offline, however the file was already large and it took lot of time to download that large fragment from the initial source. But as nobody helped that source, there was no other copy available for the end of file. Result: the time and bandwidth to upload this fragment in uploader was lost, and my own time and bandwidth was also lost too as I can't recover a complete copy.

My own measure for large files (videos or collections of graphics or CD images) show that this event occurs quite often, for 2/3 of attempted transfers, and for which there will never be any other source (the initial uploader may have spent much time to upload the begining of files to many candidate downloaders, without having finally uploaded at least one copy of the end-of-file fragment). If that uploader decides to stop there after uploading that file for 3 or 4 days, all this bandwidth will be lost. That's where we need a better strategy to make sure that after 2 or 3 hours of uploads, for a file that could have been uploaded directly to a single downloader, this file will have at least 1 or 2 complete mirrors on many hosts collaborating each other to terminate their partial copies.
__________________
LimeWire is international. Help translate LimeWire to your own language.
Visit: http://www.limewire.org/translate.shtml
Reply With Quote
  #8 (permalink)  
Old May 18th, 2004
arne_bab's Avatar
Draketo, small dragon.
 
Join Date: May 31st, 2002
Location: Heidelberg, Germany
Posts: 1,881
arne_bab is a great assister to others; your light through the dark tunnel
Default

Quote:
Originally posted by verdyp
Do you realize that, in this last sentence, you are contradicting your own position in the first paragraph, because you admit delays when downloading large files?
Yes, but only in the beginning, else I could as well say I download only with 1/3rd of the possible download-speed. THis is an issue for DSL-Users, but far more for Modem-Users. While a DSL-User often doesn't manage to max out the download-speed, the modem User does so most of the time, and when he doesn't download for 2/3rd of the time (because he's in queue) he's losing real speed (except if all others directly upload to him instead of uploading something else).

Do you mean, that every program should always keep some upload-slots reserved for currently or brief ago downloaded-files?

Quote:
My own measure for large files (videos or collections of graphics or CD images) show that this event occurs quite often, for 2/3 of attempted transfers, and for which there will never be any other source (the initial uploader may have spent much time to upload the begining of files to many candidate downloaders, without having finally uploaded at least one copy of the end-of-file fragment). If that uploader decides to stop there after uploading that file for 3 or 4 days, all this bandwidth will be lost. That's where we need a better strategy to make sure that after 2 or 3 hours of uploads, for a file that could have been uploaded directly to a single downloader, this file will have at least 1 or 2 complete mirrors on many hosts collaborating each other to terminate their partial copies.
This is only for big files, though (but true, I think).

Three Upload Queues aim mainly at making Small files more avaible.
__________________

-> put this banner into your own signature! <-
--
Erst im Spiel lebt der Mensch.
Nur ludantaj homoj vivas.
GnuFU.net - Gnutella For Users
Draketo.de - Shortstories, Poems, Music and strange Ideas.
Reply With Quote
  #9 (permalink)  
Old May 18th, 2004
Software Developer
 
Join Date: November 4th, 2002
Location: New York
Posts: 1,366
sberlin is flying high
Default

>Do you mean, that every program should always keep some upload-slots reserved for currently or brief ago downloaded-files?

We are looking into this option. Specifically, we're examining if it would be feasable/helpful for a downloader to reserve a slot for its uploader to download parts of the file from it, if the uploader requires some ranges that the downloader has.
Reply With Quote
Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
File sizes garbagefan2 BearShare Open Discussion 6 October 29th, 2006 05:26 PM
Same file sizes?? Robert_R Download/Upload Problems 3 October 24th, 2006 09:35 PM
huge file sizes/verifying file contents jofreakdotcom Download/Upload Problems 3 February 18th, 2006 01:38 AM
New guy wants to know about file sizes crusty48 Tips & Tricks 1 February 12th, 2005 05:07 AM
File sizes caneschamps5x Open Discussion topics 1 December 10th, 2004 04:11 PM


All times are GMT -7. The time now is 09:00 PM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
SEO by vBSEO 3.6.0 ©2011, Crawlability, Inc.

Copyright © 2020 Gnutella Forums.
All Rights Reserved.