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Special Forums IP Networking IPV6 very slow, not respecting MTU?? Post 302564438 by jusme on Thursday 13th of October 2011 04:10:08 PM
Old 10-13-2011
Quote:
Originally Posted by Corona688
This bug happened in kernels from 2008 or so. IPv6 transmissions would get their MTU from the wrong interface, I think the loopback.
This one?

https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/+bug/254622

I'm using the latest Centos Kernel (2.6.32-71.29.1.el6.i686), I'd hope a fix from 2008 would be included in that...

Tried reducing the MTU for lo but made no difference.
 

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ndd(1M) 																   ndd(1M)

NAME
ndd - network tuning SYNOPSIS
network_device parameter network_device parameter value [parameter] DESCRIPTION
The command allows the examination and modification of several tunable parameters that affect networking operation and behavior. It accepts arguments on the command line or may be run interactively. The option displays all the supported and unsupported tunable parameters that provides in the following categories: ARP, IP, IPSEC, IPV6, IPV6 Neighbor Discovery (ND), RAWIP, RAWIP6, SOCKET, TCP, and UDP. The tunable parameters in each category may be accessed with the proper valid network_device name. The network_device name is referred to as in The valid network_device names (and their associated parameter categories) are: (ARP), (IP and IPSEC), (IPV6, IPV6 Neighbor Discovery, and IPSEC v6), (RAWIP), (RAWIP6), (SOCKET), (TCP), and (UDP). Set parameter to to get a list of parameters for a particular network_device. Get the value of the parameter for network_device and print the value to standard output. Returned numbers are always displayed as decimal strings. Set parameter for network_device to value. All times are specified in milliseconds; for example, 240000 for 4 minutes. Unless stated otherwise, numbers are assumed to be in decimal. Use "0x" prefix to specify hexadecimal values. In general, all tunable parameters are global; in other words, they affect all instances of the network module. Some settings take effect immediately, while others are used to initialize data for an instance and will only affect newly opened streams. Display all the supported tunable parameters. This set of parameters are supported by HP and detailed descriptions of these tunable parameters are available through the parameter command. Display all the unsupported tunable parameters. This set of parameters are not supported by HP and modification of these tunable parameters are not suggested nor rec- ommended. Setting any unsupported tunable parameters on your system may result in adverse effects to your networking operations. When parameter is specified, a detail description of the parameter, along with its minimum, maximum, and default value are displayed. If no parameter is specified, it displays all supported and unsupported tunable parameters. Read input from the configuration file and set the tunable parameters. A user may specify tunable parameters in the nddconf configuration file, and these parameters will be set automatically each time the system boots. DIAGNOSTICS
When the command fails, an error message is printed to the standard error and the command terminates with an exit value of one. WARNINGS
Care must be used when setting parameters for a network_device. Setting a tunable parameter to an inappropriate value can result in adverse affects to your networking operations. EXAMPLES
To get help information on all supported tunable parameters: To get a detail description of the tunable parameter, To get a list of all TCP related parameters: To get the current value of the tunable parameter, To set the value of the default TTL parameter for UDP to 128: FILES
Contains tunable parameters that will be set automatically each time the system boots. AUTHOR
was developed by HP. ndd(1M)
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