Originally posted by dummy00001
LinkSys has a DMZ setup for my notebook. Mac OS firewall is up with port range for ed2k net open.
Hmm. Just to clarify, when you say "port range for ed2k", do you include the UDP ports? There are two: one is at TCP+3, the other is specified in preferences. The TCP+3 one is most important for acquiring sources. See
this wiki page. When aMule reports "High-ID", it means that the TCP port is open; it doesn't indicate anything about the UDP ports.
I believe that, when you are High-ID, aMule uses UDP to occasionally poll all the servers in your server list for sources. When you are Low-ID, aMule only gets sources over its TCP connection to the server. I don't know what happens when you are High-ID but your UDP port is blocked by a firewall. It may result in what you are seeing. In other words, it may assume that the UDP port is open and try to use that to query servers for sources, but since it's blocked you don't get any responses.
I don't know enough about routers to know if the DMZ implies port forwarding, but if not you have to forward the UDP ports to your notebook as well as opening them in your firewall.
I am behind a firewall that I don't control, so I'm Low-ID. Of course, that means I only ever acquire sources from my server and from other clients. Nevertheless, I don't see a problem like you are seeing. I do have to connect to a server that has sources for the files I download, but I will eventually get those sources even for newly added downloads.