UĹźytkownik Q napisaĹ:
>> System sam z siebie nie, natomiast kaĹźda przeglÄ
darka ma
>> wbudowane limity zapobiegajÄ
ce przeciÄ
Ĺźaniu serwerĂłw HTTP.
>
> Nie wiem jak 7, ale XP mial sam z siebie 2 limity
> (ktore mozna bylo odpowiednio zwiekszyc):
>
> - na TCP (zmienialo sie na 50, 100, rzadko na wiecej):
> The connection limit wasn't established by Microsoft without a reason.
> It should prevent rapid spreading of viruses and worms if a computer
> gets infected. That's why they limited it to 10 connections at a time...
> Some applications, like, for example, filesharing tools, can't unfold
> their capacity when the maximum connection limit is too low. Please
> don't raise the connection limit if you don't really need it. Look into
> the event viewer (start->run 'Eventvwr.msc'->system). When you see
> entries with the event ID 4226, the system is telling you that the
> connection limit has been reached.
>
Nie do koĹca prawdÄ w tym cytacie ktoĹ napisaĹ. To byĹ limit na tzw
half-open tcp connections czyli limit szybkoĹci nawiÄ
zywania nowych
poĹÄ
czeĹ tcp, ktĂłry wynosiĹ wĹaĹnie 10 pakietĂłw tcp syn na sekundÄ.
Liczby poĹÄ
czeĹ w Ĺźaden sposĂłb to nie ograniczaĹo. Limit ten zostaĹ
wprowadzony w SP2 do XP. Nie ma go W7 ani Vista SP2.
> - na IE (zmienialo sie na 10):
> Normally your Internet Explorer limits the maximum number of open
> connections on one server to 4. If you're downloading 4 files from a
> server, and you want to surf its websites, nothing happens coz you have
> already reached the maximum number of connections. This setting
> increases the limit to 10.
>
To jest limit Internet Explorera nie systemu.
-- Piotr BorkowskiReceived on Tue 10 Apr 2012 - 14:05:02 MET DST
To archiwum zostało wygenerowane przez hypermail 2.2.0 : Tue 10 Apr 2012 - 14:42:00 MET DST