On 09/10/15 10:23, Gordon Messmer wrote:
Since those don't help, that tends to suggest that the problem isn't an intermediate host, but the server itself. Possibly an IP conflict. Also, check the output of "dmesg" to see if there are any problems recorded with the NIC. Check the output of "ifconfig" to see if there are TX or RX errors that increase when your connections are reset.
As Gordon suggests, let's see if the problem might be related to a dying NIC. The output of the following command may reveal any illness: # ip -s -d l l Cheers, ak. _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos