Re: [CentOS] Slow login to system without internet connection

2012-11-23 Thread Peter Eckel
Hi Hakan, 

  UseDns no doesn't  solve the problem because  GSS Api needs reverse 
 lookup.

good point. I disable the GSS API along with some other things in routine 
initial server hardening anyway so this did not occur to me. 

 If (do not need GSS Authentication) then
   put GSSAPIAuthentication no in the host /etc/ssh/sshd_config
 else
  put your server ip and server name in the client  /etc/hosts
  xxx.xxx..xxx yourserver.name
  :)

I'd rather put the client IP address in the server's /etc/hosts ...

Best regards, 

  Peter.
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Re: [CentOS] Slow login to system without internet connection

2012-11-22 Thread Hakan Can
On 11/21/2012 09:44 AM, Peter Eckel wrote:
 Hi Ljubomir,

 But when I tried to login to my server, it was not instantenous, and I
 think it was 15+, maybe even 30+ seconds (I forgot to time it) from
 start of ssh command to password prompt. It is in-house connection, so
 there is nothing to traceroute.


 are you using an external DNS server that is reachable via the internet only?

 If so, edit /etc/ssh/sshd_config and change this

#UseDNS yes

 to

UseDNS no

 Then restart sshd and see whether it still happens. sshd tries to look up its 
 counterpart's host name using DNS in the default setting, and if DNS is not 
 reachable it waits for the request to time out.

 Best regards,

Peter.
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  UseDns no doesn't  solve the problem because  GSS Api needs reverse 
lookup.

If (do not need GSS Authentication) then
   put GSSAPIAuthentication no in the host /etc/ssh/sshd_config
else
  put your server ip and server name in the client  /etc/hosts
  xxx.xxx..xxx yourserver.name
  :)

  H.can


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Re: [CentOS] Slow login to system without internet connection

2012-11-20 Thread m . roth
Ljubomir Ljubojevic wrote:
 Hi.

 For a long time I am puzzled why, when internet connection is gone
 (beyond first router, outside of subnet) SSH (and telnet?) connection is
 drastically slowed.

 Same behavior, but less impacted is observed when system boots without
 working internet connection, and I am not sure, but I think even access
 to SAMBA fileshares can be/is affected. Affected systems are mostly
 production servers, and too spaced apart in time to be able to point a
 finger in something I am doing wrong.

 I have not had time to gather more facts, I always forget/don;t have
 time, so I will only focus on definite SSH issue on CentOS 6.3, although
 I have seen same with 5.x.
snip
Have you tried traceroute to a well-known location, like google.com, and
seen where the delay is?

 mark

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Re: [CentOS] Slow login to system without internet connection

2012-11-20 Thread Ljubomir Ljubojevic
On 11/20/2012 07:34 PM, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
 Ljubomir Ljubojevic wrote:
 Hi.

 For a long time I am puzzled why, when internet connection is gone
 (beyond first router, outside of subnet) SSH (and telnet?) connection is
 drastically slowed.

 Same behavior, but less impacted is observed when system boots without
 working internet connection, and I am not sure, but I think even access
 to SAMBA fileshares can be/is affected. Affected systems are mostly
 production servers, and too spaced apart in time to be able to point a
 finger in something I am doing wrong.

 I have not had time to gather more facts, I always forget/don;t have
 time, so I will only focus on definite SSH issue on CentOS 6.3, although
 I have seen same with 5.x.
 snip
 Have you tried traceroute to a well-known location, like google.com, and
 seen where the delay is?

   mark


Let me make it more clear.

I have a small WISP. I get my internet connection vai several wireless 
links/towers. My main server is located in my house. My own PC and the 
Server in question (in the example) are separated by a router in my 
house (different subnets). Server is fresh install of CentOS 6.3, all 
updated.

Now, when there was power failure (works on the transformer there), I 
lost my internet connection, but router and wireless routers for the 
rest of my towers were accessible. SSH logins to any of them is instant.

But when I tried to login to my server, it was not instantenous, and I 
think it was 15+, maybe even 30+ seconds (I forgot to time it) from 
start of ssh command to password prompt. It is in-house connection, so 
there is nothing to traceroute.



Past experience was, separate from this example, that a CentOS 5.x 
server in one company slows access, temporary timeout to SAMBA file 
server when wireless router connecting them to internet is turned off, 
although they are in local lan with static IP's.

-- 

Ljubomir Ljubojevic
(Love is in the Air)
PL Computers
Serbia, Europe

Google is the Mother, Google is the Father, and traceroute is your
trusty Spiderman...
StarOS, Mikrotik and CentOS/RHEL/Linux consultant
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Re: [CentOS] Slow login to system without internet connection

2012-11-20 Thread Stephen Harris
On Tue, Nov 20, 2012 at 07:48:40PM +0100, Ljubomir Ljubojevic wrote:
 But when I tried to login to my server, it was not instantenous, and I 
 think it was 15+, maybe even 30+ seconds (I forgot to time it) from 
 start of ssh command to password prompt. It is in-house connection, so 
 there is nothing to traceroute.

DNS.  Your host is configured to resolved IP addresses and is not able
to because of lack of external DNS, so it's timing out.


-- 

rgds
Stephen
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Re: [CentOS] Slow login to system without internet connection

2012-11-20 Thread Nicolas Thierry-Mieg
Ljubomir Ljubojevic wrote:
 Hi.

 For a long time I am puzzled why, when internet connection is gone
 (beyond first router, outside of subnet) SSH (and telnet?) connection is
 drastically slowed.

 Same behavior, but less impacted is observed when system boots without
 working internet connection, and I am not sure, but I think even access
 to SAMBA fileshares can be/is affected. Affected systems are mostly
 production servers, and too spaced apart in time to be able to point a
 finger in something I am doing wrong.

 I have not had time to gather more facts, I always forget/don;t have
 time, so I will only focus on definite SSH issue on CentOS 6.3, although
 I have seen same with 5.x.

 1 server in question is set in following maner:
 [root@chiron ~]# cat /etc/networks
 default 0.0.0.0
 loopback 127.0.0.0
 link-local 169.254.0.0

 [root@chiron ~]# cat /etc/sysconfig/network
 NETWORKING=yes
 NTPSERVERARGS=iburst
 HOSTNAME=chiron.example.com

 [root@chiron ~]# cat /etc/hosts
 127.0.0.1 localhost localhost.localdomain localhost4
 localhost4.localdomain4 chiron.example.com chiron
 ::1   localhost localhost.localdomain localhost6 localhost6.localdomain6
 chiron.example.com chiron

 Does it have anything to do with /etc/hosts file not having row with
 used IP address, or is problem somewhere else?

 Searching the net gives too much irrelevant links, and all I need it to
 be pointed in the right direction.

perhaps due to DNS being down?

try starting sshd in debug mode (-d up to -ddd) on the server and 
connecting while the internet connection is down and see what is being 
logged.

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Re: [CentOS] Slow login to system without internet connection

2012-11-20 Thread Les Mikesell
On Tue, Nov 20, 2012 at 12:48 PM, Ljubomir Ljubojevic off...@plnet.rs wrote:

 Now, when there was power failure (works on the transformer there), I
 lost my internet connection, but router and wireless routers for the
 rest of my towers were accessible. SSH logins to any of them is instant.

 But when I tried to login to my server, it was not instantenous, and I
 think it was 15+, maybe even 30+ seconds (I forgot to time it) from
 start of ssh command to password prompt. It is in-house connection, so
 there is nothing to traceroute.

Most server apps will do a reverse-DNS lookup, if only to log the name
for the connection, some will try an ident query for the user at the
other end of the socket.   A 30+ second delay is a pretty sure sign
that one or more of the DNS servers in your resolv.conf did not
respond.  Running a local nameserver with a dummy local domain is one
way to fix it, but just putting all your local systems in the
/etc/hosts file will work too.

-- 
   Les Mikesell
   lesmikes...@gmail.com
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Re: [CentOS] Slow login to system without internet connection

2012-11-20 Thread Ljubomir Ljubojevic
On 11/20/2012 09:25 PM, Les Mikesell wrote:
 On Tue, Nov 20, 2012 at 12:48 PM, Ljubomir Ljubojevic off...@plnet.rs wrote:

 Now, when there was power failure (works on the transformer there), I
 lost my internet connection, but router and wireless routers for the
 rest of my towers were accessible. SSH logins to any of them is instant.

 But when I tried to login to my server, it was not instantenous, and I
 think it was 15+, maybe even 30+ seconds (I forgot to time it) from
 start of ssh command to password prompt. It is in-house connection, so
 there is nothing to traceroute.

 Most server apps will do a reverse-DNS lookup, if only to log the name
 for the connection, some will try an ident query for the user at the
 other end of the socket.   A 30+ second delay is a pretty sure sign
 that one or more of the DNS servers in your resolv.conf did not
 respond.  Running a local nameserver with a dummy local domain is one
 way to fix it, but just putting all your local systems in the
 /etc/hosts file will work too.


OK, that is what crossed my mind, but what I was hopping for is some 
elegant solution that would decrease the timeout. My server already has 
DNS server running and nameserver 127.0.0.1 as first in /etc/resolv.conf.

So the question is: is there a setting that will reduce that DNS 
timeout for all running services, maybe like a ping-watchdog that would 
recognize the problem and skip the reverse-DNS lookup if DNS servers are 
not reachable?

Adding and maintaining 30+ subnets in /etc/hosts is not really a good 
solution, and booting the server without reachable DNS server in some 
cases can be really frustrating, like if I boot Lap-top on the silo when 
internet connection is down (It was happening to me when I ran RHEL 6 
beta I think on each opening of the terminal, but I can not say I have 
seen this lately).

-- 

Ljubomir Ljubojevic
(Love is in the Air)
PL Computers
Serbia, Europe

Google is the Mother, Google is the Father, and traceroute is your
trusty Spiderman...
StarOS, Mikrotik and CentOS/RHEL/Linux consultant
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Re: [CentOS] Slow login to system without internet connection

2012-11-20 Thread m . roth
Ljubomir Ljubojevic wrote:
 On 11/20/2012 09:25 PM, Les Mikesell wrote:
 On Tue, Nov 20, 2012 at 12:48 PM, Ljubomir Ljubojevic off...@plnet.rs
 wrote:
snip
 But when I tried to login to my server, it was not instantenous, and I
 think it was 15+, maybe even 30+ seconds (I forgot to time it) from
 start of ssh command to password prompt. It is in-house connection, so
 there is nothing to traceroute.

 Most server apps will do a reverse-DNS lookup, if only to log the name
 for the connection, some will try an ident query for the user at the
 other end of the socket.   A 30+ second delay is a pretty sure sign
 that one or more of the DNS servers in your resolv.conf did not
 respond.  Running a local nameserver with a dummy local domain is one
 way to fix it, but just putting all your local systems in the
 /etc/hosts file will work too.
snip
 So the question is: is there a setting that will reduce that DNS
 timeout for all running services, maybe like a ping-watchdog that would
 recognize the problem and skip the reverse-DNS lookup if DNS servers are
 not reachable?
snip
What does it say in /etc/nsswitch: is it dns files, or files dns?

   mark

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Re: [CentOS] Slow login to system without internet connection

2012-11-20 Thread Ljubomir Ljubojevic
On 11/20/2012 09:47 PM, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
 Ljubomir Ljubojevic wrote:
 On 11/20/2012 09:25 PM, Les Mikesell wrote:
 On Tue, Nov 20, 2012 at 12:48 PM, Ljubomir Ljubojevic off...@plnet.rs
 wrote:
 snip
 But when I tried to login to my server, it was not instantenous, and I
 think it was 15+, maybe even 30+ seconds (I forgot to time it) from
 start of ssh command to password prompt. It is in-house connection, so
 there is nothing to traceroute.

 Most server apps will do a reverse-DNS lookup, if only to log the name
 for the connection, some will try an ident query for the user at the
 other end of the socket.   A 30+ second delay is a pretty sure sign
 that one or more of the DNS servers in your resolv.conf did not
 respond.  Running a local nameserver with a dummy local domain is one
 way to fix it, but just putting all your local systems in the
 /etc/hosts file will work too.
 snip
 So the question is: is there a setting that will reduce that DNS
 timeout for all running services, maybe like a ping-watchdog that would
 recognize the problem and skip the reverse-DNS lookup if DNS servers are
 not reachable?
 snip
 What does it say in /etc/nsswitch: is it dns files, or files dns?

files dns
-- 

Ljubomir Ljubojevic
(Love is in the Air)
PL Computers
Serbia, Europe

Google is the Mother, Google is the Father, and traceroute is your
trusty Spiderman...
StarOS, Mikrotik and CentOS/RHEL/Linux consultant
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Re: [CentOS] Slow login to system without internet connection

2012-11-20 Thread Les Mikesell
On Tue, Nov 20, 2012 at 2:45 PM, Ljubomir Ljubojevic off...@plnet.rs wrote:

 Most server apps will do a reverse-DNS lookup, if only to log the name
 for the connection, some will try an ident query for the user at the
 other end of the socket.   A 30+ second delay is a pretty sure sign
 that one or more of the DNS servers in your resolv.conf did not
 respond.  Running a local nameserver with a dummy local domain is one
 way to fix it, but just putting all your local systems in the
 /etc/hosts file will work too.


 OK, that is what crossed my mind, but what I was hopping for is some
 elegant solution that would decrease the timeout. My server already has
 DNS server running and nameserver 127.0.0.1 as first in /etc/resolv.conf.

OK, but does it answer for your local network or do those queries
float up to the roots to get an answer?

 So the question is: is there a setting that will reduce that DNS
 timeout for all running services, maybe like a ping-watchdog that would
 recognize the problem and skip the reverse-DNS lookup if DNS servers are
 not reachable?

How about adding zone files for the things that belong to you?   I've
always been surprised that distributions that contain name servers
don't include dummy reverse zones for all the private  IP ranges.  It
must make a huge load on the DNS infrastructure when everyone passes
those queries upstream where they will always fail (but quickly...).
You'd get the same answer even faster if you had an empty zone file
yourself.

-- 
   Les Mikesell
 lesmikes...@gmail.com
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Re: [CentOS] Slow login to system without internet connection

2012-11-20 Thread Peter Eckel
Hi Ljubomir, 

 But when I tried to login to my server, it was not instantenous, and I 
 think it was 15+, maybe even 30+ seconds (I forgot to time it) from 
 start of ssh command to password prompt. It is in-house connection, so 
 there is nothing to traceroute.


are you using an external DNS server that is reachable via the internet only?

If so, edit /etc/ssh/sshd_config and change this

  #UseDNS yes

to

  UseDNS no

Then restart sshd and see whether it still happens. sshd tries to look up its 
counterpart's host name using DNS in the default setting, and if DNS is not 
reachable it waits for the request to time out. 

Best regards, 

  Peter.
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