No problem dude. To forward your port through Kaspersky, save this text as port.ini:
Code:
[azureus.exe]
App=[YOUR PATH]
CommandLine=
UseCommandLine=0
Name=DNS Service
Enable=1
Allow=1
Log=0
Warning=0
Protocol=UDP
Direction=OutboundStream
RemotePort=53
Name=Allow TCP Connections [IN] ([YOUR PORT])
Enable=1
Allow=1
Log=0
Warning=0
Protocol=TCP
Direction=InboundStream
LocalPort=[YOUR PORT]
Name=Allow TCP Connections [OUT] (Ephemeral)
Enable=1
Allow=1
Log=0
Warning=0
Protocol=TCP
Direction=OutboundStream
LocalPort=1024-5000
Name=Allow UDP Packets [IN/OUT] (Ephemeral, [YOUR PORT])
Enable=1
Allow=1
Log=0
Warning=0
Protocol=UDP
Direction=InboundOutbound
LocalPort=1024-5000, [YOUR PORT]
Where [YOUR PATH] should be replaced with the full path to your Azureus executable, and [YOUR PORT] is replaced with the port Azureus listens on. Save the above (with the proper information filled in) as a INI file using a plain text editor (such as Notepad -- not Microsoft Word or the likes) and import it into Kaspersky's firewall rules. Works for me without hiccups.
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