anthonyi 0 Posted August 24, 2004 Hi, I'm running FC2 and using a Belkin 54g wireless card/router connected to my cable modem (NTL). I use the Linuxant Driverloader software (latest version) to load Windows drivers for my wireless card. Under Kernel 2.6.7 and earlier, everything is fine. However, under 2.6.8.1 and above (both kerbel packages from kernel.org and the vanilla FC2 kernel rpm) I have problems accessing *some* and only *some* websites. The issue appears as very, very slow loading. When I boot back to a 2.6.7 kernel the issue disappears; it also disappears when I boot into WinXP. The issue is entirely reproducable and affects the same websites each time. I'm guessing it's a kernel configuration issue, but having stepped through the config options I can't find the one that's causing me a problem... Any ideas? It's driving me nuts... :-) Anthony Share this post Link to post
egorgry 0 Posted August 24, 2004 I had a similar problem using 2.6.6 with Debian/Sid. IT was something with ip6. Can you get to either of these two sites? http://www.videohelp.com/ http://disney.store.go.com/ It may be the same issue I was having. I'll try to remember how I fixed it. Share this post Link to post
anthonyi 0 Posted August 24, 2004 Hi, I can get to those...an example site that I have problems with is http://www.majorgeeks.com It loads fine when running 2.6.7 but is extremely slow under 2.6.8.1 - it does appear *eventually* but something is clearly not right. Some time ago I added the following lines to /etc/modprobe.conf alias net-pf-10 off alias ipv6 off which was supposed to fix the ipv6 DNS address resolution issue (and did seem to for 2.6.7). I've tried remming out these lines and booting 2.6.8.1 again but it made no difference. I can't see this as anything other than a config issue but I've reached the limit of my linux knowledge (converted a couple of months ago so still very new to this stuff). Cheers, Anthony Share this post Link to post
egorgry 0 Posted August 24, 2004 Try this peice of code below on the cmd line and see if you get some improvement. I have it as a startup script. Remember this is debian and I know little about redhat or fedora. ------------------------- start up script goes in. ------------------------- ./init.d/dumbfix.sh ./rcS.d/S76dumbfix -------------------- code ----------------------------------- echo 0 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_ecn ----------------------------------- Share this post Link to post
anthonyi 0 Posted August 24, 2004 Thanks for the suggestion...no joy with it, unfortunately. Anything else I should be looking at? Anthony Share this post Link to post
martouf 0 Posted August 24, 2004 was there a specific issue with the 2.6.7 kernel which prompted you to use the 2.6.8.1 instead? since you have both available, you could compare the varied /proc/sys/net/ipv4/* and ipv6/* settings - that's just a guess, though. No need to look in ipv6 if 'ifconfig' doesn't have a 'inet6 addr' line. what's the most recent kernel Linuxant has tested their driver? my €0,02 - use what works and don't update the kernel unless you have a specific security/driver reason. Share this post Link to post
anthonyi 0 Posted August 24, 2004 I guess I'm just trying to educate myself a little about the process of compiling a kernel that best matches my hardware. I see that Linuxant have released version 2.05 of their driver today, so I'll try that first. Thanks for the input. Anthony Share this post Link to post
anthonyi 0 Posted August 24, 2004 Nope, the Linuxant driver upgrade did zip. Back to looking at my kernel config! Share this post Link to post
martouf 0 Posted August 25, 2004 ok, if you're getting joy from building kernels, then one thing you could do is compare the original 2.6.7 config very carefully against the 2.6.8.1 config. (if you haven't already, that is) "diff /boot/config-2.6.7 /boot/config-2.6.8.1" anything interesting in the output? one way of expressing the design philosophy (as I understand it) is the kernel that best matches your hardware is the kernel which has loaded the modules your hardware needs. Share this post Link to post
danleff 0 Posted August 25, 2004 I bet the kernel does not have DHCP set to run on startup as a module or compiled into the kernel. Darn, I wish I could remember where the setting is exactly in the network modules during the compile. Share this post Link to post
martouf 0 Posted August 25, 2004 uuuhhh, but DHCP is done by daemons or userspace client utilities. you thinking about something else? Share this post Link to post
anthonyi 0 Posted August 26, 2004 2.6.9-rc1 didn't help either... Looks like I'm stuck with 2.6.7 for the time being...not that that is a problem, I just want to know why I have this problem! Thanks all for the input. Share this post Link to post
richardwest 0 Posted September 19, 2004 I was having the same problem and after much searching I found a solution, I think it was on a kernel list. I quote:- ----------------- echo 0 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_default_win_scale or by adding a line like: net.ipv4.tcp_default_win_scale = 0 to /etc/sysctl.conf. ----------------- Apparently it actually due to a bug in some routers. Share this post Link to post
jrift 0 Posted October 17, 2004 Hi all. I joined the forum just to say thanks. The above solution worked for me with FC2 2.6.8-1.521 behind a cheap Belkin cable/dsl Router - sorry I can't remember or easily find out the exact make (I have to go to another room for that!) Share this post Link to post
richardwest 0 Posted October 18, 2004 Glad I was able to help someone. I found the info here- http://lwn.net/Articles/92727/ Share this post Link to post
c0$ 0 Posted March 19, 2005 Actually, for SuSe9.2 it's a little bit different. You need to fix this behavior with either: # echo 0 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_window_scaling # or adding /etc/sysctl.conf net.ipv4.tcp_window_scaling = 0 to /etc/sysctl.conf, followed by the cmputer's restart http://guard.dhs.org/~cos/security/broken_router.html Share this post Link to post