Salut!
Mergeti la Optiuni(din BitComet)-Conexiune-Alege port aleator.
Dati clik pe buton pana vine unul care incepe cu “6”,nu conteaza restul deoarece stergem pana la “6”(mai mult nu va lasa) si scriem restul pana la zeci de mii. Cam asa: 65535 sau ce numare vreti cu conditia sa ajungeti sa aveti 5 numere dintre care primul sa fie “6”.
Nu e mai simplu sa scrie direct numarul dorit? Si e maxim 65535, pentru ca un port e o adresa compusa din 16 biti.
Sunt sigur ca ai postat cu intentii bune dar sfaturile tale se aplica doar la cei care au doar modem, cu doar un port coaxial sau de telefonie, si unul RJ45 spre restul retelei locale. Sau le merge deschiderea porturilor automata prin UPnP (ceea ce se intampla foarte rar), nu un dispozitiv de retea complet cu modem, router (NAT), switch si server DHCP incorporat, plus un firewall, asa cum sunt cele postate de mine in tutorial.
Confunzi notiunea de adresa IP statica publica (WAN) atribuita de distribuitorul tau de internet, contra cost, cu un IP local (LAN) static setat pentru a preveni situatia in care serverul DHCP din router ar da un alt IP calculatorului invalidand regulile de deschidere a porturilor de ascultare pentru acesta.
Hi!
Go to Options(from BitComet)- Connection - Choose random port.
Click on that button until you can see one starting with 6, the rest doesn’t matter because we’ll delete everything except 6 (you cant delete that too) and replace it until you reach tens of thousands. Something like this: 65535, or any other 5 digit nuber starting with 6.
Why not just write the port number directly? And 65535 is the maximum because it’s a 16bit binary address.
I’m sure you posted with good intentions, but your advice applies to those who have just a cable modem device, with one coaxial or telephone socket and one RJ45 socket for the rest of the local network. Or for those that have the port forwarding done automatically via UPnP(it rarely happens). Not those with a network device with an incorporated modem, router (NAT), switch, DHCP server, wireless card, plus a firewall like those posted by me in the tutorial.
You mistake the notion of a static public (WAN) IP address, paid for, assigned to you by your ISP and a static local (LAN) IP set to prevent the DHCP server from giving the computer a new LAN IP address, forfeiting the port forwarding rules made for it.