Connection Reset By Peer Read Error
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Read Error Connection Reset By Peer In Headers
ads with us Stack Overflow Questions Jobs Documentation Tags Users Badges Ask Question x Dismiss Join the Stack Overflow Community Stack rsync read error connection reset by peer (104) Overflow is a community of 4.7 million programmers, just like you, helping each other. Join them; it only takes a minute: Sign up What does “connection reset by peer” mean? up vote 317 down
Connection Reset By Peer Socket Write Error
vote favorite 69 What is the meaning of the "connection reset by peer" error on a TCP connection? Is it a fatal error or just a notification? sockets tcp share|improve this question edited Apr 19 '13 at 2:04 Nick Caplinger 278310 asked Sep 16 '09 at 17:38 Soubok 5,636113962 add a comment| 2 Answers 2 active oldest votes up vote 413 down vote accepted It's fatal. The remote server realvnc connection reset by peer 10054 has sent you a RST packet, which indicates an immediate dropping of the connection, rather than the usual handshake. This bypasses the normal half-closed state transition. I like this description: "Connection reset by peer" is the TCP/IP equivalent of slamming the phone back on the hook. It's more polite than merely not replying, leaving one hanging. But it's not the FIN-ACK expected of the truly polite TCP/IP converseur. share|improve this answer edited Jul 19 '14 at 18:34 EJP 196k17140247 answered Sep 16 '09 at 17:48 ire_and_curses 45.2k1987118 13 Why is it labelled "connection reset by peer”? It sounds like it should be "connection reset by the host", or "connection reset by the server" –Robert Sep 26 '14 at 13:57 12 @Robert Because that's where the reset came from. The peer sent an RST packet. –EJP Dec 17 '14 at 22:44 16 ... Robert, your concern makes no sense to me. Peer is just strictly more general than that. In a typical client-server model, the server can just as easily receive this notification from the "client". The machine that initially requests the connection has just as much power to send this notification. On a TCP level, it looks identical once the connec
(only! no help requests!) to docs@dal.net. If you need help on issues not covered in this document, please see the information at http://help.dal.net. Introduction The http://docs.dal.net/docs/connection.html following document has been written to help users troubleshoot their connection problems and find a solution. To help you understand the situation better, we have included an analogy: Joe is your mIRC, an IRC Client Mary is the IRC server (as are Jane, Helga and Kyoko, all of whom work at the same place (network) Mary connection reset does). The switchboard operator where Mary works is the random server on a network (usually irc.dal.net). In most cases in our scenario, Joe is trying to call Mary via telephone. Contents 1 [10049] Can't assign requested address 2 [10050] Network is down or [10051] Network unreachable 3 [10052] Network dropped connection on reset 4 [10053] Software connection reset by cause connection abort 5 [10054] Connection reset by peer 5.1 Read Error 5.2 Write Error 5.3 Ping Timeout 5.4 Broken pipe 5.5 Miscellaneous 6 [10055] No buffer space available 7 [10060] Connection timed out 8 [10061] Connection refused 9 [10065] No route to host Error 10 Unable to resolve IRC server 11 Final Note 1 [10049] Can't assign requested address Scenario: Joe is trying to call Mary's workplace; he doesn't really care who he talks to there (Mary, Jane, Helga, Kyoko), so he just dials the main company number, which has been (temporarily) changed to 9. The solution, of course, is to dial up Mary or (Jane, or Helga, etc.) directly. This means the IRC server is unreachable for everybody. Most probably the admins have tweaked their DNS records to point to the non-existant IP number 255.255.255.255 to detour a DDoS (Distributed Denial of Service) attack. Better try a specific IRC server on that network or another network! (When they set the server IP addres