Diagnosing .gvfs access failures.

Paul W. Frields stickster at gmail.com
Wed Aug 13 20:40:17 UTC 2008


On Wed, 2008-08-13 at 12:27 -0800, Jeff Spaleta wrote:
> On Wed, Aug 13, 2008 at 10:55 AM, Jerry Amundson <jamundso at gmail.com>
> wrote:
>         What is it you've connected to, and is there a router and/or
>         firewall
>         in between?
>         
> 
> I'm on an internal network at a university...connected to a computer
> on the same subnet. At most I'm touching exactly two switches. One in
> my office, and then the switch for the subnet
> that services the floor's networking.
> 
> Here's the traceroute output:
> traceroute to remote (x.x.x.111), 30 hops max, 40 byte packets
>  1  remote (x.x.x.x)  2.238 ms  2.472 ms  1.592 ms
> 
> Can it get much simpler than that?
> 
> 
>         Sounds as if something timed out the connection.

> Assuming that is... isn't gvfs suppose to be able to handle this?

Have you already tried setting ServerAliveInterval and
ServerAliveCountMax in your ssh_config to see if one of the routers is
closing the connection on you after inactivity?

-- 
Paul W. Frields
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  http://paul.frields.org/   -  -   http://pfrields.fedorapeople.org/
  irc.freenode.net: stickster @ #fedora-docs, #fedora-devel, #fredlug
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