On Wed, Jun 28, 2006 at 08:47:09PM -0700, David Miller wrote: > You can save yourself that hassle by informing the site admin > of the affected site that they have a firewall that misinterprets > the RFC standard window scaling field of the TCP headers. These > devices assume it is zero because they don't remember the window > scale negotiated at the beginning of the TCP connection. > > Your TCP performance will suffer greatly if you disable window > scaling across the board. It means that only a 64K window will > be usable by TCP, and you'll not be able to fill the pipe. > > Please don't use a screwdriver to pound in a nail :)
Indeed. The hassle I'm thinking of is the reverse situation (and please correct me if this does not apply). Say for example I run a web server. I have customers and they have customers (lets call them CCs :). Somewhere along the path between me and CCs there is such a misbehaving device. The CCs try to get to my customers website and fail (I assume). If my assumption is right, what's the probability of the CCs ever informing my customer that there is a problem? I think it's more likely they would just move on to another site offering the same thing, especially since they would mostlikely need to load the site in order to get the appropriate contact details. Basically the mostlikely end-result is I don't know what there is a problem and my customer doesn't know that there is a problem but they're just not getting as many hits to their site that they otherwise would. Ofcourse, this all depends if such a situation is possible. If it is possible would it affect dns and mail in a similar manner too? -- "To the extent that we overreact, we proffer the terrorists the greatest tribute." - High Court Judge Michael Kirby - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe netdev" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html