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Free Download Manager site redirected Linux users to malware for years
(www.bleepingcomputer.com)
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Right? I've not thought about download speeds since the 2000's.
FDM does some clever things to boost download speeds. It splits up a download into different chuncks, and somehow downloads them concurrently. It makes a big difference for large files (for example, Linux ISOs).
It only makes a difference if the server is capping the speed per connection. If it's not then it will not make a difference.
I guess many servers are capping speeds them. Makes sense since I almost never see downloads actually take advantage of my Gigabit internet speeds.
It's interesting to me people still download things in that fashion. What are you downloading?
I occasionally download something from a web server, but not enough to care about using a download manager that might make it marginally faster. Most larger files I'm downloading are either TV shows and movies from torrents and usenet, or games on steam. All of which will easily saturate a 1Gbps connection.
It could make multiple requests to the server, asking each request to resume starting at a certain byte.
The key thing to know is that a client can do an HTTP
HEAD
request to get just theContent-Length
of the file, and then performGET
requests with theRange
request header to fetch a specific chunk of a file.This mechanism was introduced in HTTP 1.1 (byte-serving).
just grabbed a gig file - it would take about 8 minutes with a standard download in Firefox. Use a manager or axel and it will be 30 seconds. Then again speed isnt everything, its also nice to be able to have auto retry and completion.
I was just going to recommend this too; Use axel, aria2 or even ancient hget.