Hello!
> I'll keep trying though.
Please, try... It is very important issue.
No open-sources OSes (including NT4) can produce this illegal pattern.
The rest are derived from them. So that I have to assume that
it is some unknown bug at our side.
Alexey
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[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> Hello!
>
> > I'll keep looking.
>
> Is it easy to reproduce? If so, try to make tcpdump, which
> covers one of these messages.
It's extremely rare. We maintain persistent connections open for long
periods of time and even though a user who triggered it is online, i
Hello!
> I'll keep looking.
Is it easy to reproduce? If so, try to make tcpdump, which
covers one of these messages.
Alexey
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"David S. Miller" wrote:
>
> The IP addresses are important because we can use them to find out
> what TCP implementations shrink their offered windows.
>
> Actually, you don't need to tell me or anyone else what these IP
> addresses are, you can instead run one of the "remote OS identifier"
> p
The IP addresses are important because we can use them to find out
what TCP implementations shrink their offered windows.
Actually, you don't need to tell me or anyone else what these IP
addresses are, you can instead run one of the "remote OS identifier"
programs out there to those sites and ju
I've begun to test 2.4.0 kernels on some high traffic machines to see
what kind of difference it makes. I have seen a lot of these error
messages in dmesg and although they don't seem to happen very often and
seem harmless, I figured I'd report it anyway. They show up in groups
(mostly) from the
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