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Hosting Via Android 4.3 as Mobile Hotspot
Posted: Tue Aug 05, 2014 3:43 pm
by Lithander
Hi, like the title says, I am trying to use my android phone as a mobile hotspot, and host a myth game with it.
I found a port forwarding app, but it seems to cut off my tethering when I run it. Has anyone done anything like this before?
EDIT: I found another app that doesn't disable my tethering, but the host doesn't work and the port is reported as closed.
Re: Hosting Via Android 4.3 as Mobile Hotspot
Posted: Tue Aug 05, 2014 5:49 pm
by Lithander
It seems as though the IP my hotspot reports is different from the IP I get when looking at sites like findmyip and web-based port checking tools.
Re: Hosting Via Android 4.3 as Mobile Hotspot
Posted: Tue Aug 05, 2014 10:44 pm
by punkUser
Mobile hotspots almost always end up sharing IPs/doing NAT at an ISP level. Even if you resolve any port forwarding on the hotspot device itself, there's still sharing going on at a higher level. Short story... you're not going to be able to host Myth on that as it currently stands. There's some ongoing metaserver and client work that should solve the issue (at the cost of some latency) by proxying connections through the metaserver but it's hard for me to estimate when that will be available given the volunteer nature of Myth development.
Hopefully not too long... for my part it's definitely still on the near-term list of things to do... but no promises.
Re: Hosting Via Android 4.3 as Mobile Hotspot
Posted: Mon Aug 11, 2014 10:05 pm
by Lithander
Will this be an option for hosts? So if they have their own portforwarding setup and ready they can have lower latency by doing it the old fashioned way?
Re: Hosting Via Android 4.3 as Mobile Hotspot
Posted: Mon Aug 18, 2014 1:43 pm
by punkUser
Lithander wrote:Will this be an option for hosts? So if they have their own portforwarding setup and ready they can have lower latency by doing it the old fashioned way?
Yeah it'll likely be an option and/or the metaserver will detect when a host is unreachable and automatically switch to proxying connections. Definitely hosting with port forwarding is still the preferred option.