On Tue, Jun 11, 2013 at 05:09:11PM +0100, David Laight wrote: > > On Tue, Jun 11, 2013 at 04:00:06PM +0100, David Laight wrote: > > > To quote that bug: > > > > > > I stumbled upon this problem in debian bug #541658[1] ("[iceweasel] cannot open > > > research.microsoft.com" - only worth reading for entertainment purposes) and, > > > after that bug was closed, analysed it in my blog[2] until a friend of mine > > > found out why the page loads when clamping mss to pmtu is disabled or > > > restricted to a range (like with "iptables -A FORWARD -p tcp --tcp-flags > > > SYN,RST SYN -m tcpmss --mss 1400:1536 -j TCPMSS --clamp-mss-to-pmtu") but > > > doesn't load with "simple" clamping. His really great and detailed analysation > > > of the problem may be seen at [3]. > > > > > > If I read/understand that correctly, clamping to 1400 worked - there was > > > no need to clamp all the way down to 536. > > > > You are not understanding the issue correctly. The reason the command worked with > > "-m tcpmss --mss 1400:1536" is because that implies an MSS option was provided. > > The issue occurs only when NO MSS option is sent. In these cases, we cannot > > ASSUME that it is ok to use some arbitrarily high value (1400 as you propose). > > The RFC is clear on this point. > > My problem is that I don't want TCP connections to drop the mss to > 536 when talking to minimal/old implementations that don't add any > options to SYN packets. That will not happen if you use: ... -m tcpmss --mss 1400:1536 ... as in your example above. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe netfilter-devel" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html