try getting the file from a completely different machine, completely
different internet connection, etc. if THAT fails, then its an apache
problem, or a problem on the Server-Side. does the file work if you
open it? does it pass md5 checks?
On 11/28/06, Todd Hivnor <spambox_98103@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> > I've got one user who always seems to have problems
> > downloading files from my Apache server. She reports that the
> > download process hangs, often with 1% of the file remaining
> > to download.
> >
> > The server logs have this error:
> >
> > (104)Connection reset by peer: Could not get next bucket
> > brigade [500, #0]
> >
> >
> >
> > I'm running Apache 2.0.51 on Fedora Core 2.
> >
> > Does anyone know how to address this bug ?
>
> Imaginatively... If it's only one user and can't be reproduced with a
> standard browser at your end, it looks like a client-side issue
> (especially with "Connection reset by peer" - ie the client broke the
> connection).
>
> - is it size dependent, can she download smaller files?
> - how is she connected to internet (eg, ADSL, dial-up?) do they have a
> size limit?
> - does the file contain anything that a virus-scanner on the client
> might reject? (try replacing the file with plain ascii of same size or
> ask her to switch off any virus-scannners).
>
> We have tried determining if there is a pattern to when the download fails.
> We haven't been able to find a pattern to it: she can often download large
> files, while smaller files fail. There might be a virus checking problem ...
> I will follow up on that idea.
>
> In terms of network connections, I've got this very same error popping up
> with a long list of diffent IP addresses. And I know it happens with her,
> when she logs in from home, or when she uses an office network. So the error
> sure sounds "network related," the logs show it happening on a lot of
> different networks.
>
> - Todd
>
>
>
> ________________________________
> Access over 1 million songs - Yahoo! Music Unlimited.
>
>
--
Morgan gangwere
"Space does not reflect society, it expresses it." -- Castells, M.,
Space of Flows, Space of Places: Materials for a Theory of Urbanism in
the Information Age, in The Cybercities Reader, S. Graham, Editor.
2004, Routledge: London. p. 82-93.
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