Error 54 Connection Reset By Peer Mac Mail
Products NoMachine Terminal Server Products General Discussions Log in Login to the forums Register to the forums Error is 54: connection reset by peer Home / Forums / NoMachine for Mac / Error is 54: connection reset by peer Forum: NoMachine for MacTagged:error This topic contains 7 replies, has 3 voices, and was last updated by reza 2 years, 8 months ago. Author Posts January 8, 2014 at 09:47 #1606 510145752Participant I'm trying to connect to my PC using my Mac. Every time I connect to the PC, "The connection with the server was lost. Error is 54: connection reset by peer" pops up. Do anybody know how to resolve this issue? Also, I can't connect to my Mac using my PC, the message was connection timed out. My PC is running Windows 8.1. My Mac is Mac OS X mavericks. I'm downloaded the official packages from the NoMachine website (https://www.nomachine.com/download) for both OS. Attachments:Screen-Shot-2014-01-07-at-1.15.39-PM.png January 9, 2014 at 11:28 #1637 BritgirlKeymaster I can’t connect to my Mac using my PC, the message was connection timed out. This is very likely a firewall problem. Try disabling the firewall or check that the firewall is not blocking port 4000 (this is the default port used by NoMachine). Every time I connect to the PC, “The connection with the server was lost. Error is 54: connection reset by peer” pops up. Logs would be useful for the problem connecting from Mac to Windows. We would need sets from both sides, so client logs from the Mac machine and server logs from the Windows PC. You can submit them here or send them to issues using the title of your topic. Instructions on how to gather logs are available here: https://www.nomachine.com/AR10K00697. January 10, 2014 at 15:01 #1644 510145752Participant The logs are in the attachment. Also, when I tried to connect to the same PC from Ubuntu, I got the same message "connection reset by peer", except tha
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Sign in Pricing Blog Support Search GitHub This repository Watch 926 Star 21,218 Fork 3,772 kennethreitz/requests Code Issues 285 Pull requests 17 Projects 0 Wiki Pulse Graphs https://github.com/kennethreitz/requests/issues/3189 New issue error 54, 'Connection reset by peer' #3189 Closed degroat opened this Issue May 12, 2016 · 9 comments Projects None yet Labels None yet Milestone No milestone http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1434451/what-does-connection-reset-by-peer-mean Assignees No one assigned 3 participants degroat commented May 12, 2016 • edited I'm getting the dreaded Error 54, Connection reset by peer when trying to do a POST to a URL error 54 with a payment provider I'm using. Here is the basic code I'm running: import requests, base64 url = "https://sandbox.api.mxmerchant.com/checkout/v3/auth/token/282059461" headers = { 'Authorization': 'Basic ' + base64.b64encode('myusername:mypassword') , } r = requests.post(url, headers=headers) print r.text If I run this exact code on an Ubuntu server it works fine (meaning it returns a json message stating that the username and password are incorrect). If error 54 connection I run it on OSX 10.11.4, I get the connection reset error. After reading a ton of issues on here and various postings on StackOverflow, everyone seems to think it's related to SNI. Unfortunately, none of the recommendations that I've come across have fixed the issue. My Ubuntu server has Python 2.7.6, OpenSSL 1.0.1f and requests 2.8.1. My OSX has Python 2.7.10, OpenSSL 1.0.2g and requests 2.10.0. I also have ndg-httpsclient and pyopenssl both installed per #1347 Any idea what it is that I'm missing? Collaborator Lukasa commented May 12, 2016 Can you confirm for me what the output of these two commands is on your OS X machine? python -c "import ssl; print ssl.OPENSSL_VERSION" python -c "from OpenSSL.SSL import SSLeay_version, SSLEAY_VERSION; print SSLeay_version(SSLEAY_VERSION)" degroat commented May 12, 2016 >> python -c "import ssl; print ssl.OPENSSL_VERSION" --- OpenSSL 0.9.8zh 14 Jan 2016 So... obviously that's an issue there. But this looks even worse... >> python -c "from OpenSSL.SSL import SSLeay_version, SSLEAY_VERSION; print SSLeay_version(SSLEAY_VERSION)" --- Traceback (most recent call last): File "
here for a quick overview of the site Help Center Detailed answers to any questions you might have Meta Discuss the workings and policies of this site About Us Learn more about Stack Overflow the company Business Learn more about hiring developers or posting ads with us Stack Overflow Questions Jobs Documentation Tags Users Badges Ask Question x Dismiss Join the Stack Overflow Community Stack 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 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 298310 asked Sep 16 '09 at 17:38 Soubok 5,646113963 add a comment| 2 Answers 2 active oldest votes up vote 413 down vote accepted It's fatal. The remote server 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 197k17140248 answered Sep 16 '09 at 17:48 ire_and_curses 45.3k1987118 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 connection is ongoing. The two machines, when communicating, are just peers. –c