Why has m torrent stopped downloading






















When this happens, and I open task manager, I can see that utorrent is using a lot of memory. In fact, most times when I exit out of utorrent it still remains running in the background, and I have to end the process in task manager. It should be noted that this does not occur with every torrent I download, and seems to happen when adding torrents with a large file size and lots of peers.

Also worth mentioning, is that I am seeding over torrents at once I have the same problem. When I start to download a torrent, everything works fine. At the same time the memory usage of the process is growing up above MB and the OS windows 7 64 bit is not responding.

The led controller of the HDD is continually active - not blinking. When I quit the program, it seems to be closed, but it is still in the list of processes in task manager - the memory usage is unchanged. Killing the process has no effect. Restaring the system is not possible, too. The shutdown process locks on the "Shutting down" screen, the hdd-led is still active.

Just registered to say that I'm having exactly the same problem. I am getting no error messages, and nothing happens other than the fact that the utorrent client opens. All of my other files are seeding correctly, but nothing happens when I try to add any new torrent files. Utorrent appears to be working normally, all of my Windows updates are installed, and nothing else appears wrong with my computer.

I even tried disabling my firewall and still nothing. I have uninstalled the utorrent client and have restarted my computer.

Sounds like ISP throttle? Have you tried to download another file like Open Office torrent to see what happens? If you try that and it still doesn't work there good chances your ISP throttle your torrent activities. And if your other Browser usage works fine and nothing slows down that is also tells of ISP throttles only torrent activities not browsing activities.

The problem I found out is, for some strange reason, Norton has blocked this site. I'm am not asking why this is happening but an explanation of why would be appreciated if you can also solve the problem.

Bitcomet also metioned something about a listening port being blocked and would it be unsafe to download a torrent from some website like bitlet or fuge on a school wireless connection. Dec 27, 99 0 18, 5. You are probably trying to download to a location that is full or not currently mounted. Check all of your settings. Check your logs. McHenryB Estimable. Jan 31, 1 4, I would try asking the question in one of the Windows forums. Don't even think about trying to use a torrent on a school wireless network; you may end up getting expelled.

What is it that you are trying to download? McHenryB :. I can understand perfectly what Skittle was saying; he answered as if you were running Linux - not unreasonable as you posted in the Linux forum. Yes I assume you were running Linux. Same sort of requirements apply to windows though: If for some reason the HDD is not mounted think a removable drive that has been "safely removed" then you cannot write to it. Also if for some reason the torrent clients or your user do not have write permission on the drive.

Or a myriad of other reasons. To expand on blocking torrent traffic, traditionally it is very hard because many traffic are encrypted so packet detection algorithms do not work well. The only reliable method is to block by default all ports other than 43 and 80 for normal web traffic but this still does not stop someone from using torrent over port 43 and 80 and has other undesirable consequences. So I think the problem is unlikely that it is your internet connection.

Be careful playing with the firewall rules if you don't understand exactly what each one is doing and what the associated ports are assigned to. Otherwise you are likely to open your router, and possibly your network, to every hacker who happens to drop by.

Similar threads Question No torrents downloading Torrenting slow download speeds, very high upload speeds. Issues with Internet connectivity and the stability of the connection can cause downloads to fail, especially if the Internet connection is interrupted. When an Internet connection is unstable, it may disconnect and reconnect intermittently. Even a disconnection lasting a fraction of a second can cause the failure of a file download.

For users who commonly encounter intermittent connectivity issues or download failure, a download manager may help. A download managers is a third-party application that monitors, and if needed, resumes a download from where it stopped previously. There are hundreds of download managers, including many that are free. This solution is a bit tricky, in that users shouldn't normally download files without some protection active.



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