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Asankha,

On 10/29/12 11:56 PM, Asankha C. Perera wrote:
> Hi Chris
> 
>> Sorry, also what is your OS (be as specific as possible) and what
>> JVM are you running on?
> Locally for the Wireshark capture I ran this on: 
> asankha@asankha-dm4:~$ uname -a Linux asankha-dm4 3.2.0-31-generic
> #50-Ubuntu SMP Fri Sep 7 16:16:45 UTC 2012 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64
> GNU/Linux asankha@asankha-dm4:~$ cat /etc/lsb-release 
> DISTRIB_ID=Ubuntu DISTRIB_RELEASE=12.04 DISTRIB_CODENAME=precise 
> DISTRIB_DESCRIPTION="Ubuntu 12.04.1 LTS" asankha@asankha-dm4:~$
> java -version java version "1.6.0_33" Java(TM) SE Runtime
> Environment (build 1.6.0_33-b03) Java HotSpot(TM) 64-Bit Server VM
> (build 20.8-b03, mixed mode)
> 
> On EC2 nodes (c1.xlarge), I saw this with Ubuntu 10.10, with the
> same JDK on x64 platforms - but I believe this issue applies across
> for any OS
> 
> I'm interested to know if Tomcat can "refuse to accept" a
> connection when overloaded - without accepting and closing the ones
> that it cannot handle.

Also, are you using a load balancer, or connecting directly to the EC2
instance? Do you have a public, static IP? If you use a static IP,
Amazon proxies your connections. I'm not sure what happens if you use
a non-static IP (which are public, but can change).

- -chris
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