Have had issues with my 10.4 Server regularly. I believe it's something that I've done wrong in some of the hosts settings or the like. When I try and login to the server, especially on startup, I get messages saying the login attempt timed out after 60 seconds and when I login via ssh it boots me from the connection after about 60 seconds of trying to login. It's after entering the password so it's something to do with authentication most likely. I think the issue is with my /etc/hosts file as I said before. Hostname is blackbox and it's only meant to be a local network server.
/etc/hosts file:
Code:
127.0.0.1 localhost.localdomain localhost
192.168.1.5 blackbox.localdomain blackbox
# The following lines are desirable for IPv6 capable hosts
Running a LAMP server, CentOS as the OS.The sites always been slow, but now that ive optimized it with mysql cache, gzip compression and some other things, its really fast.Except when pages loading seem to randomly 'time out'. The browser sits on 'waiting for x.com'. Closing the browser and/or the tab and opening a new one fixes it, but then it'll happen again eventually. Clicking further links while its 'waiting for x.com' does nothing, basically the site becomes unusable until you close the tab and reopen it.
This happens on all 3 virtual servers we're running within apache. Mainly noticable on the PHPbb forums, probably because they are visited the most.It's not a slow mysql query, i turned on slow query logging over 2 seconds, and the only two hits i got on that i know are unrelated.Ive turned off some optimizations thinking they might be it, but no dice.
I've got a server that I just use for backing up and archiving files. Since I don't need access to it often I just keep it powered off. I set up wakeonlan and have port 9 and port 22 forwarded to it.
I travel fairly often, and how its set up now, I can send the magic packet to the connection its on and wakeonlan kicks in and powers up the server. Then I can sftp into and access the files I need and then shut it down again in ssh.
It all works good until there's a power outage. For some reason after a power outage wakeonlan doesn't work.
Here's a workaround for this: I can set the system to automatically power up after a power outage. Problem is, the computer could be on for a week or more, wasting power before I log in and turn it off. So the workaround for that is to put a "deadman's switch" where a script will run at startup that will run "shutdown -q -P +5" which will power off the system after five minutes.
After I run wakeonlan I can ssh in and run "shutdown -c" to cancel that shutdown and still use it. If there's a power outage, once power is restored, the system will start up and then automatically shutdown again and be ready for the next wakeonlan signal I send.
Everything is flawless, except one problem. When "shutdown -q -P +5" executes, it disables all new logins. If I'm fast enough I can ssh in before the shutdown program disables logins, but not always. What I want is a way I can run shutdown without disabling logins.
I am having, just installed a fresh 9.10. The only thing I did was an update and installed the wireless drivers. Well i went to to download my favorite browser Opera and firefox just times out. I can get to other websites just fine so far. Though it looks like Office Depot won't let me in either. If I boot into Windows I can connect to either site just fine.
I am running 10.04 on a Lenovo 3000 N500(?). If I leave a large download/torrent running overnight I come down in the morning to find the connect has broken and cannot reconnect.
I'm looking for a way to time how long a program runs in the terminal. I didn't have any luck searching around but I'm sure it's possible. Does anyone know of the easiest way to do this?
I ran the Kvpnc wizard and imported my config file and when I try to connect it always says connection timed out.I can connect to OpenVPN without a problem using the terminal, all I can say is kvpnc is a real pain and I don't get why I can't connect with it if I can connect without a problem from the terminal.I thought this was suppose to be a simple GUI that you just imported your config add in your cert and the cert path and that's all.
Incredibly slow this morning, timing out at most sites. Other symptoms on other days - constantly asking for my wireless key, losing connection completely from time to time. This thread relates to a different machine to that in my other recent thread**** Running 10.10 2.6.35-22-generic
I am anticipating that someone could give more further information about that, not only simple explanations. How to understand User Time, sys time, wait time, idle time of CPU
I'm having problems flash video on port 1935 is timing out, other flash video works fine though. I'm running 10.04 and have tried flash from the repos (flashplugin-nonfree) and also downloaded the .deb package form the adobe web site, neither work.
I have been using this to try and problem solve but it just says i'm timing out [URL]...
I'm experiencing an occasional frustration using Evolution with my work email which is on an MS Exchange 2003 server.Everything usually works well enough, but from time to time I'll try to retrieve a message,Is there a setting I've missed in Evolution that might take care of this, or some other workaround?Let me re-emphasize that the server is a 2003 Exchange server (and a source of endless frustration for a non-windows user). It's not a 2007 or 2010 Exchange server, which is what most companies use these days.
I have a complex network. ADSL broadband comes into the house and connects to an Orange Livebox. An Ethernet cable then connects the Livebox to a more powerful router, a DrayTek Vigor 2710Vn. The reason for this is that the Livebox has a second line capability using Voip, but it is not powerful enough to get around my stone house. The DrayTek router has Voip capability, but as yet Orange will not connect the Voip line to it. I connect to this system with Ubuntu. Android, Windows and I-phone. I can connect to either of the routers, though I usually use the DrayTek.
Voip on the Livebox does not require a computer to run it, you just plug a normal phone into it and use it to get free calls. I actually take this line into a Panasonic telephone switch to give me a 2 line system around the house. The problem with this set-up is that after a short time something happens to the network which prevents Ubuntu computers connecting to it. Windows machines, I-phones and Android phones connect, but Ubuntu does not. If I re-boot the Livebox, or in an extreme case take it back to it's factory settings, the Ubuntu machines can connect again, but it's only temporary.
The fact that fixing Livebox sorts the problem definitely points to Ubuntu being innocent, but at the moment I can't do without the Livebox. That means, for the moment, having to stay with Windows. If I post the output log after a failed connection attempt, all it would show is the connection timing out. Why is Ubuntu so sensitive to network problems that are not of it's making. Is there anything I can do about it other than changing my ISP. I am considering that, but other factors make that difficult.
I am very new to linux and I am running into an issue..I've gotten soem new HP blade servers and they cam installed with RHEL 5.3 I need to update them to RHEL 5.4 I register them with my rhn subscription, then once I see my systems online, i run yum update from the command line.
It seems to find a ton of updates and takes a long while to DL everything.Do I have to tell it to install the downloads? I don't think I do...I get some errors about timing out for the last few updates.theni reboot, but when i check redhat-release it still says 5.3
A few weeks ago I upgraded one of my laptop from Fedora 13 to Fedora 14 (using pre-upgrade). The upgrade went smoothly and no errors appeared. However ever since the upgrade ssh is not working anymore. I've tried various servers inside and outside the local network. I can't contact any of them. In all cases I get:
Code: ssh: connect to host aaa.bbb.ccc port 22: Connection timed out I've tried to get more info using the -vvv option form ssh, but it doesn't mean too much to me:
Code: OpenSSH_5.5p1, OpenSSL 1.0.0d-fips 8 Feb 2011 debug1: Reading configuration data /etc/ssh/ssh_config debug1: Applying options for * debug2: ssh_connect: needpriv 0 debug1: Connecting to aaa.bbb.ccc [xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx] port 22. debug1: connect to address xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx port 22: Connection timed out ssh: connect to host aaa.bbb.ccc port 22: Connection timed out
Actions so far: - checked internet connection. No problem there. Another laptop is working fine using the same connection and the same ethernet cable. That laptop is still using Fedora 13, since I didn't want to get stuck without ssh completely. - checked "messages" log. No messages at the time of ssh connect attempt. - checked "secure" log. No messages at the time of ssh connect attempt. - checked the firewall settings. The settings are exactly the same as before the upgrade (when ssh was still working). Moreover, the settings are the same as the other laptop that is working. - temporarily switched off the firewall. No difference. - temporarily switched off selinux. No difference.
So it doesn't seem to be a firewall or selinux problem. And I know the connection is working, so it does not seem to be a routing problem either. What am I missing here?
System specs: - Asus EEE PC (1 GB RAM, intel atom processor); - Fully up-to-date Fedora 14 (kernel 2.6.35.13-91.fc14.i686)
I just installed my first ever install of Linux (used Fedora) and am using SSH to access it from my Windows machine. It keeps timing out. Is there something I need to set to make it available all the time?
I was able to get the SSH on and to autostart just fine but when I boot up it only works half of the time. I have to move the mouse and keyboard on the Linux machine before it will respond.
Also if I am working on my Windows machine and don't move the mouse or keyboard every now and then it doesn't work.
Running a clean install of Lucid 64, I have a problem with the Firefox Java plugin with the "Live Timing" feature of the www,formula1.com site. Live Timing is an applet they provide that displays sector and lap time information for races, practice and qualifying sessions. It was working fine under Karmic 32 but no luck so far with Lucid 64.
Initially trying to start Live Timing caused Firefox to become unresponsive, I saw that the Java plugin being used was the IcedTea one, which I have heard can be a bit flakey. (Not sure what I was using under Karmic BTW).
I notice that the Sun proprietary Java stuff is installed - I presume when I installed ubuntu-restricted-extras. So I disabled the IcedTea plugin in Firefox and tried to use the Sun Java Moz plugin by creating a symlink to
Code: /usr/lib/jvm/java-6-sun-1.6.0.20/jre/lib/amd64/libnpjp2.so in
Code: /usr/lib/mozilla/plugins
Firefox then lists the Sun proprietary plugin under addons - plugins but it doesn't actually seem to do anything, as I just get an empty Window with the Live Timing Applet.
On formula1.com live timing which is java applet starts but does not refresh. Time of training is not counting and there are no new sector times and overall times for drivers laps. Firefox is 3.6.3 and jre is jre-1.6.0_20-fcs.i586.
I need to write a script that executes a wget. The difficulty being, if wget just sits there with no reply for a very long time, I don't want the script to run that long.
How can I time out the wget command in the script if it doesn't give me a reply in a minute or so?
Had to do a fresh install of 10.04 as upgrade went pear shaped. Now I cannot get hunderbird 3.0.4 to work just keeps timing out trying to access mail server pop.1and1.co.uk.Had to change some Firefox options to get it to work with any site other than google.Noticed that ping pop.1and1.co.uk sometimes gave a bad address until I disabled IPv6.
I've just recently started using Fedora again and have a question about BOINC.I see that Fedora 13 is using 6.10.45, but the latest recommended release is 6.10.56.What is the timing on updated RPMs for new BOINC versions? Or is there a guide to updating manually, which I've been unable to locate?
I'm having a bit of Internet trouble with a fresh install of Ubuntu Natty and I haven't been able to track down the problem. I have my desktop running over a wireless network, which connects without fail. Somewhat frequently, however, connections to particular websites will start timing out (google, facebook, stackoverflow, us ubuntu archive, etc.). I'm also having a strange issue where my home page [URL] is redirecting to [URL].
Initially I thought it might be an issue with Comcast DNS, so I updated the router to use OpenDns servers. When that didn't work I started to try accessing some of the problematic sites through my laptop (which is using the same router) and they all connect without problem. The issue seems to be with my Ubuntu install, but I'm not sure where to look.
EDIT After doing some further digging, this is starting to look like a DNS issue. My home page appears the resolve to an incorrect ip address when the redirect issue occurs. Still not sure how to track down the problem, however.
Is there a way to prevent a user from being able to login more than once. Not a one-time login, but a single login. What I'm trying to do here is in moving our email system, an email user would login to this account, enter some password information, sync up their email, and have the passwords files removed, then log off. Next user can log in to the same account.
The reason for the single login is to protect the user's passwords.
i have 10.04 installed through wubi on my school hard drive and i notice that after i turn it off, then later put it in one of the many computers, firefox seems to forget i had things to keep me logged in, such as this forum.
now it could be that i use it on different computers(all have the same hardware), but its just odd if you ask me this doesn't get in the way of use but is happening.
Code: Linux ubuntu 2.6.32-22-generic #33-Ubuntu SMP Wed Apr 28 13:28:05 UTC 2010 x86_64 GNU/Linux Mozilla/5.0 (X11; U; Linux x86_64; en-US; rv:1.9.2.3) Gecko/20100423 Ubuntu/10.04 (lucid) Firefox/3.6.3 cookies are enabled
a NAS running Debian that frequently (but not always) has two removable media attached,a Debian desktop that mounts the above NAS via sshfs,the aforementioned removable media are symlinked to the directory on tha NAS that is then mounted by the desktop.
What I'd like this setup to do is to immediately time out if mounts as unavailable. Instead, I only get the expected behaviour if the NAS is down (the ssh client takes about 3 seconds to do that); if it's up, the removable media automounts (they are symlinked to the directory shared with the desktop) seem to never time out, ever. This happens locally on the NAS as well, when ssh'ing to the NAS and trying to run `ls /media/Storage` or `ls /media/Backup`, these commands never return. It's as if systemd was ignoring the x-systemd.device-timeout setting on the NAS.
I find it highly interesting that despite both removable media being detached, only one is flagged as having a dependency failed. Both paths exhibit the hang behaviour, though.
What can I do to actually time out when the media are not there?
I have a remote desktop session to a Windows 7 Workstation that keeps timingut/disconnecting after a minute or two of idiling. Also, sometimes it disconnects while I am in the middle of using it.I have tried turing off all NIC power saving options, the sound option for remote desktop, and all the go to sleep power saving options. I don't have any issues with remote desktop connecting to various Windows Server 2008 R2 Machines and VMs.
we have a problem with dhcpcd at boot time on any openSUSE version from 11.0 to 11.3. It seems that a number of workstations never send out DHCPDISCOVER or DHCPREQUEST at boot time, we have verified this with packet dumps. The dhcp client progress bar is displayed on the console but eventually times out, goes into background and the system continues booting.This is a problem because the timeout takes a long time and users have to wait. Sometimes the display manager is even started but users cannot using LDAP authentication. Eventually these systems just continue to use their old lease and networking works.Curiously, when we do a network restart after boot, the clients send DHCPDISCOVER/-REQUEST normally, we only have this problem at boot time.
On the server side we're using ISC dhcpcd-1.3.22pl4-223.13 on SLES 10 SP2. I have read about others who had the same problem, they switched from dhcpcd to dhclient. I have also tried this, but for us dhclient is not an option for a number of other reasons. Another thing I have tried is setting DHCLIENT_SLEEP ("Some interfaces need time to initialize. Add the latency time in seconds")o two minutes to give the interface time to initialize.nfortunately this didn't change anything.
I am seeing log messages that I don't understand. If I run tail -f /var/log/messages, some times I will see this this sort of repeating pattern. I don't know if I have cut at the start of the sequence or not. Incidentally, this is a normaly well-behaved client/host.
[Code].....
Why is the client repeatedly sending the (1/4) message and then timing out?