ssh delays

Chuck Young chy at genuity.com
Fri Sep 21 12:33:59 EDT 2001


You can always drop another linux box on the ethernet segment and run
tcpdump to see what the last packet was between src and dest before the long
timeout.  This may help to provide a clue.

HTH,

----------------------
Chuck Young
Internet Systems Engineer
E-Services Consulting
Genuity Solutions
-----------------------------

> -----Original Message-----
> From: owner-discuss at Blu.Org [mailto:owner-discuss at Blu.Org]On Behalf Of
> John Chambers
> Sent: Friday, September 21, 2001 12:10 PM
> To: discuss at Blu.Org
> Subject: Re: ssh delays
>
>
> Greg wrote:
> |
> | Note that dns should be caching the entries, so subsequent lookups
> | should be fast even if the dns is having problems.  is ssh still slow,
> | repeatably?
>
> Yup; that's also one of the things I've tested a lot. I can
> use  nslookup,  ping,  etc  to  verify  that  the other end
> responds quickly, then when I  try  ssh,  it  hangs  for  a
> minute or two.  You'd think that the earlier requests would
> fill up any caches, but the delay still happens.
>
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