Re: Treason uncloaked!

2007-03-20 Thread Wei Chen
On 3/20/07, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: Hello everybody. There are now many years I find regularly this kind of error messages in my logs : kernel: TCP: Treason uncloaked! Peer x.x.x.x:x/80 shrinks window x:x. Repaired. There are many years, I search the web about that, and tha

Re: Treason uncloaked!

2007-03-20 Thread Matus UHLAR - fantomas
On 20.03.07 11:12, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > There are now many years I find regularly this kind of error messages in > my logs : > kernel: TCP: Treason uncloaked! Peer x.x.x.x:x/80 shrinks window x:x. > Repaired. I googled for this some time ago, and the result was like, this is ont of bugs in

Re: treason uncloaked!

2002-10-23 Thread Seneca
On Thu, Oct 24, 2002 at 12:22:18AM +0200, martin f krafft wrote: > just found this message in my kernel logs. can anyone decipher it for > me? what's treason wrt the TCP/IP stack? > > kernel: TCP: Treason uncloaked! Peer 140.198.4.56:1511/80 shrinks > window 1904581317:1904582069. Repaired. I

Re: treason uncloaked!

2002-10-23 Thread nate
martin f krafft said: > just found this message in my kernel logs. can anyone decipher it for me? > what's treason wrt the TCP/IP stack? > > kernel: TCP: Treason uncloaked! Peer 140.198.4.56:1511/80 shrinks window > 1904581317:1904582069. Repaired. > http://216.239.53.100/search?q=cache:7IXYuJyoc

Re: treason uncloaked!

2002-10-23 Thread ben
On Wednesday 23 October 2002 03:22 pm, martin f krafft wrote: > just found this message in my kernel logs. can anyone decipher it for > me? what's treason wrt the TCP/IP stack? > > kernel: TCP: Treason uncloaked! Peer 140.198.4.56:1511/80 shrinks > window 1904581317:1904582069. Repaired. > acc

Re: treason uncloaked!

2002-10-23 Thread Henrique de Moraes Holschuh
On Thu, 24 Oct 2002, martin f krafft wrote: > just found this message in my kernel logs. can anyone decipher it for > me? what's treason wrt the TCP/IP stack? Your peer was screewing up, and the TCP/IP stack detected the bogons and killed them. For a more in depth explanation, search the linux-ke