On 06/24/2014 06:56 AM, Larry Linder wrote:
On Tuesday 24 June 2014 8:54 am, Joseph Areeda wrote:
Thanks Stephan,

On 06/24/2014 01:07 AM, Stephan Wiesand wrote:
On 2014-06-24, at 6:48, Joseph Areeda <newsre...@areeda.com> wrote:
I have a C++ program that runs on multiple systems.  It uses a
proprietary network protocol contained in a shared object.

On one of the systems I get this error regularly but not often enough to
use a debugger:

NDS library error: Resource temporarily unavailable

It only seems to happen on one system, my workstation.  I've reinstalled
the library.  I have Googled my heart out and while I see the error
reported in other packages I haven't found anything that explains what
it means.  NDS is the name of the service (Network Data Service).

The only hints I've gotten suggest it might mean the network interface
itself might be involved but nothing else seems to have a problem.  If
it were a bug in the library I'd expect to see it on the other systems
which are in production.

Any clues as to what it means or where to read up on it would be greatly
appreciated.
Some library call returned EAGAIN. The prime suspect is usually fork(2),
but in the case of a network library, I'd look at send(2) first.

Hth
        Stephan
Do you have a managed switch behind a router in system?
Maybe a 1G Hz router feeding a 100K Hz router?
Most newer boxes have a 1GHz NIC (built in) in them.   We have a managed 1 G
Hz switch that is managed and we have a Motorola router that is less than 1
GHz with factory default set up.   The switch shows up on our network as a
device!   I sort of wondered about it as a cause of our stack up (slowness)
sometimes in the afternoon.   I have never seen much discussion about a
managed switch and network performance.

Larry Linder
Larry Linder
Well thanks again Stephan, my problem was indeed a socket timeout problem. This project is a proxy server for the proprietary protocol, a stand alone threaded java to C++ interface. Some moron (me) put the timeout on listen connection instead of the client session socket. D'Oh!

Larry,  I do not use a managed switch.

Best,
Joe

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