Date: Thu, 23 Feb 2006 23:47:37 +0100
From: "antonio montagnani" < antonio.montagnani@xxxxxxxxx>
Subject: Re: Wget, Yum and network investigation
To: "For users of Fedora Core releases" <fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx>
Message-ID: < 4c37b6af0602231447p44562489t@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
2006/2/23, Tod Merley < todbot88@xxxxxxxxx>:
>
>
>
> > Date: Thu, 23 Feb 2006 18:27:20 +0100
> > From: "antonio montagnani" < antonio.montagnani@xxxxxxxxx >
> > Subject: Re: Wget, Yum and network investigation
> > To: "For users of Fedora Core releases" <fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx>
> > Message-ID: < 4c37b6af0602230927w6098941k@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> > Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8
> >
> >
> Hi Antonio!
>
> From the thread I do not know which of the routers you updated from the RH8,
> but I would guess that it is the one you are having problems on. That is
> just a guess. It may be that something related to the IPv6 stack handling
> was not handled in the process.
Yes...it is the updated router: but it worked for a long time with FC5
and I didn't have any problem at all with yum, wget....I can't
understand what changed
>
> I would be most interested in the contents of /etc/resolv.conf on all
> machines. It would be nice to know who is being looked at for name
> resolution.
>
I will post the troubled router tomorrow morning as now I am at home.
Anyway this is the resolv.conf of this machine, i.e. the router with
no problems....
nameserver 62.211.69.150
nameserver 212.48.4.15
and modprobe.conf
alias eth0 ne2k-pci
alias eth1 sk98lin
alias eth2 hisax
alias snd-card-0 snd-intel8x0
options snd-card-0 index=0
install snd-intel8x0 /sbin/modprobe --ignore-install snd-intel8x0 &&
/usr/sbin/alsactl restore >/dev/null 2>&1 || :
remove snd-intel8x0 { /usr/sbin/alsactl store >/dev/null 2>&1 || : ;
}; /sbin/modprobe -r --ignore-remove snd-intel8x0
alias usb-controller ehci-hcd
alias usb-controller1 uhci-hcd
> When I troubleshot an IPv6 name resolution problem at home here I used
> "tcpdump -w captureFileName &" along with Ethereal to analyze the tcpdump
> capture files. When I did it some of the packets were truncated so it would
> be best to use -s 0 (capture packets of arbitrary length) or -s 1515(capture
> packets as large as the max Ethernet frame) in the tcpdump command.
>
> In my case, turning off IPv6 (accomplished, I believe, by adding "alias
> net-pf-10 off" to /etc/modprobe.conf and rebooting) did resolve the problem
> on a single FC4 machine. Since I had an Ubuntu machine on the same network
> and could see no way to effectively turn off IPv6 on that machine I simply
> routed nameservice arround the DSL modem which appeared to have problems
> with IPv6 name serving (probably a frimware problem) and the problem went
> away. Of course to do this there needed to be an alternative nameserver in
> /etc/resolv.conf.
>
>
Ipv6 has been turned off on office router, but no improvement.What went wrong??
>
> Tod
>
> --
> fedora-list mailing list
> fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx
> To unsubscribe:
> https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list
>
>
--
Antonio
Skype : antoniomontag
Hi again Antonio!
I just have a bit of a thought here. You may have simply a problem with the URL names requested by yum. Is it possible that somehow the repositories have been re-named (their URLs) and that was not completed in the update process. If I try to nslookup or whois the long repo URLs you sent in your first message they fail. Are the addresses differant (the requested URL's yum is attempting to access) on the two machines? If I point firefox at the addresses it finds them - perhaps the "redirection" switch in a yum config file is set differently. Just bits of thoughts.
I must say I am curious what kind of Internet access you have over there? How do you get Internet to the machines?
Ethereal gets down to the nitty gritty and would probably be a good one to do here. Of course it takes time.
Good Hunting!
Tod