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A new (NAT) firewall appliance was recently installed at $WORK. Since then, I'm getting many network timeouts and interruptions, especially for operations which would require the server to think for a bit without a response (svn update, rsync, etc.). Inbound SSH sessions over VPN also timeout frequently.

That clearly suggests I need to adjust the TCP (and ssh) keepalive time on the servers in question in order to reduce these errors.

But what is the appropriate value I should use?

Assuming I have machines on both sides of the firewall between which I can make a connection, is there a way to measure what the time limit on TCP connections might be for this firewall?

In theory, I would send a packet with gradually increasing intervals until the connection is lost. Any tools that might help (free or open source would be best, but I'm open to other suggestions)?

The appliance is not under my control, so I can't just get the value, though I am attempting to ask what it currently is and if I can get it increased.

3 Answers 3

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I'm thinking that you just need to connect from one machine to the other while running a packet capture on one of the machines. Make an FTP, HTTP, SSH, etc. session and just let it sit there until it times out.

I'm not sure what you mean when you say "In theory, I would send a packet with gradually increasing intervals until the connection is lost", but I don't think you need to do anything other than make a connection, capture the traffic, and let it sit until it times out. Timeouts occur on idle sessions and if you send data to the other end it will probably reset the timer as the session will no longer be idle.

When it does time out, look at the timestamp of the capture from the first packet (beginning of the three way handshake) until the connection is terminated (you may or may not see a RST).

Barring any application layer timeouts (depending on what type of connection you make) this should give you an idea of what the timeout setting is configured to.

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  • A timeout isn't realized at the application layer until an attempt is made to send additional data. I could leave an idle connection open without sending data for 30 minutes, when in reality it timed out at the firewall after 2. I'd have to manually press a key at varying intervals to narrow in on the timeout value.
    – jmanning2k
    Mar 10, 2010 at 16:41
  • I think I have to set it up to capture on both sides... and something has to attempt to send data at various intervals. See my full response, but I'll accept this as close enough.
    – jmanning2k
    Mar 11, 2010 at 18:32
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Maybe the simplest way to know correct timeout value is just ask network administrator to tell you configured settings for new NAT appliance?

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    I've put in a request. They should get back to me in 4-6 weeks...
    – jmanning2k
    Mar 10, 2010 at 16:35
  • Ok, I shouldn't have been so sarcastic. They responded and said the timeout is 60 minutes, but I'm seeing timeouts much faster than that. Sometimes empirical data is the only way to know for sure, and it's certainly the best way to convince others that the problem is real.
    – jmanning2k
    Mar 11, 2010 at 18:31
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I tried making an ssh outbound connection, but I had to do more than just let it sit there. Without interaction, it will appear valid indefinitely, but it will stop accepting input after a certain idle time.

So I tried running:

# for n in 60 90 120 180 240 300 600 900 1800 3600; do sleep $n && echo "Still r
unning $n"; done
Still running 60
Still running 90
Still running 120
Still running 180
Still running 240

It then sat idle for more than 5 minutes. At this point, I pressed a key and got:

Connection to XXX closed by remote host.
Connection to XXX closed.

I probably should have used likely intervals plus a few seconds, but I'm pretty sure the timeout is between 240 and 300 seconds.

Network admins reported the timeout is set to 60 minutes, but this is clearly not the case. The remote side gets a connection closed much sooner, but outbound connections will just hang on my side. This is very frustrating for outbound connections for which the remote side has to think for a bit before responding (svn update, ftp with large remote directories, etc.)

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  • Could the "60" be seconds instead of minutes? It's an easy mistake to make with many products. Mar 11, 2010 at 21:17

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