To setup an fserve
Step 4: Commands to Run the Server. Step 5: Setting up Server Properties. After pressing done, this will take you back to the multiplayer tab, you should see the server now listed. Joining a Server Find a server on a Minecraft server listing website.
Read the descriptions and pick one you like. Start Minecraft, click Multiplayer and click Add Server. You will be taken back to the server list. Click the server, click Join Server. Leave the CMD window open if you want to set up your own Minecraft server otherwise close it. Go to java. Step 2: Download the Minecraft Server.
Step 3: Run the Server. Step 4: Server Commands. Step 5: Connect to Your Server. Start a LAN game Click. Click the pen icon to create a new world or edit a current world. Choose Create or Play to start the world. Or nothing at all, for that matter.
If you want to run your server silent, as it is mandatory in many channels, you'll have to disable the channel ads uncheck the ad delay box. This way, people will know about your server only if they!
Set the force close to whatever you want. It's the delay until which your server will close the session automatically, to avoid camping. The Max Users setting allows you to choose how many people will be able to log into your server at the same time. It is NOT the number of people that can download from you at the same time.
Set it to what you want, more than 1 is recommended to avoid lag issues. The Queue pool thing in the middle of the window is where you can create new pools by choosing Add and providing a name. All the settings on the left are specific to each queue pool, so be careful to be consistent when playing with those.
Once a new pool has been created, go back to the File Server Triggers section and assign this pool to your trigger. Remember to always highlight the trigger before you try to change any settings there, or it won't do anything. The Lower-middle part of the tab allows you to set parameters relative to speed. Instant send sets the maximum size below which the user will get the file instantly, whatever the queue may be. This can be dangerous if you are too slow, and share stuff like pictures for example.
If you set this too high, all pictures will be instant sends, and you will end up flooding out. The min cps and max cps are respectively the minimum required and maximum allowed speed on your server.
Sends below the min cps for a certain time will be terminated, and no send will go above your set max cps. The values are in bytes per second. To the Right, Max Sends determines how many simultaneous sends you can have, for each user and in total. Max Queues is the same thing with queues. You better enable them by the way; could prove useful. Of course, those settings are to be done for each queue pool.
Resend Control lets you set the number of times a failed send will try again, and how it will do: resend directly send , requeue in 1st place start or in last place end. Send Bumping is used when you want your sends to show some flexibility. If the total amount of bandwith used for all your sends is smaller than the min cps set here, it will increase the number of send slots by the value you specify. This is the theory, don't ask me more about that. You thought you were done! Just switch from basic options to advanced options There are both very important settings and totally useless ones here.
Let's look at them as they come, you'll do the sorting by yourself. The Color Configuration is one of the very important features. It lets you decide which colors will be used for your server. This will have a direct impact on the way people see you. Chose Purple and Blue, you are Pick Yellow and Brown, you need a eye-check.
Follow your taste or your friends' here. You can also do this by simply closing the window the DCC chat session was in. Once you have done this, simply wait until you have reached the front of the queue and the fserve will send your file to you, as long as you are still in the same channel as the fserve. How do I set up an fserve? However, there are many other fserve scripts , such as UPP , Excursion or Invision which you could also use.
The first step is to download sysreset from the above site. The of course install it to whatever directory you like, and run the mirc. This is actually a normal working copy of mIRC in every way, except that it has an additional menu labelled " SysReset " for the fserve options. Here you can set all the details of your fserve, such as the number of sends, queues, and minCPS. Fill it out however you prefer, as your ideal settings will vary depending on your connection speed.
When doing this, be sure to fill out the ad message, as this will appear in your fserve's reply to the! Once this is done, click on the File Server Triggers tab , and click add.
Follow the prompts, and point sysreset at the directory you want to share on the fserve. Note that this will also share all subdirectories , so be sure there's nothing in there you don't want shared. If you want to share multiple seperate directories, you can do this by adding more triggers.
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