Re: [Evolution] I/O operation timing out
- From: Eric Beversluis <ebever researchintegration org>
- To: samarjit Adhikari <samarjit adhikari gmail com>
- Cc: Evolution List <evolution-list gnome org>
- Subject: Re: [Evolution] I/O operation timing out
- Date: Sun, 01 Dec 2013 22:29:16 -0500
Interesting because now I'm getting the timeouts on my straight Ethernet
cable connection as well as through the wireless AP.
On Mon, 2013-12-02 at 06:21 +0530, samarjit Adhikari wrote:
Hi All,
I was facing similar issues of evolution timeout. My Evolution version
was 3.10.2 from git source. Even I have observe that evolution was
throwing timeout very intermittently. Thus I have decided to
investigate it further. I could find that eds has implemented a
"camel-network-service" which is responsible for connecting any
network socket and identifying network change, calls
"g_network_monitor_can_reach_async" with callback of
"network_service_can_reach_cb". The call
"g_network_monitor_can_reach_async" supposed to connect mail server
and transfer the handle to Evolution to use. It was a gio call and my
gio version is 2.38.1. Evolution was very dependent on this call and
will misbehave if such call "g_network_monitor_can_reach_async"
misbehaves. I have observed that the above mentioned call some time
returns without actually connecting to the mail server(verified
through wireshark) and in that case Evolution failed to connect
showing "Timeout". Further looking into the code of gio implementation
I could find that gio keep caching all network connections e.g. first
time if evolution able to connect the mail server, gio will cache it
and if you reopen evolution the call
"g_network_monitor_can_reach_async" will return some time without
connecting the mail server explicitly and such behavior continues till
cache become invalid.
It is very annoying and could be a bug of GIO module rather than
Evolution stack.
I did not investigate further in GIO side due to time crunch , but I
believe it would certainly help in isolating evolution behavior from
GIO.
With regards,
Samarjit
With regards,
Samarjit
On Mon, Dec 2, 2013 at 12:12 AM, Pete Biggs <pete biggs org uk> wrote:
> >
> > Almost certainly from your network stack; and my $$$ would
be on your
> > ISP/customer router.
> >
> So it's this way?
> -the router (Linksys WRT350N) is creating the time out (or
something
> else in the "subsystem")
> -it aborts the mission and somehow signals Evolution, which
then pops up
> the timed out message
Sort of. Your computer will send out ethernet packets to the
internet
via the router. The packets that it sends out originate in
Evolution
via system calls. Evolution doesn't create the packets,
somewhere
further down the ethernet software stack does that, evolution
just tells
the operating system what to put in the packets.
Once a packet is sent out, the system sits and waits for a
response (as
instructed by Evolution), if there is no response received in
a specific
time, then the operation times out. The reasons that no
packet has been
received back are numerous - the remote end may be down, there
may be a
network problem, or some hardware may be malfunctioning.
There is no
way to say for sure without extensive logging and tracing at
both ends.
Once the network operation has timed out, the OS tells the
originating
program, i.e. Evolution, what has happened, and it is up to
the program
what it does then; Evolution happens to pop up a message about
it,
others may silently try again a number of times. The timeout
on the
network operation is, I think, set by the OS, not the
application.
The bottom line is that the timeout is NOT Evolution failing,
it is
merely reporting a failure elsewhere in the system.
P.
_______________________________________________
evolution-list mailing list
evolution-list gnome org
To change your list options or unsubscribe, visit ...
https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/evolution-list
_______________________________________________
evolution-list mailing list
evolution-list gnome org
To change your list options or unsubscribe, visit ...
https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/evolution-list
[
Date Prev][
Date Next] [
Thread Prev][
Thread Next]
[
Thread Index]
[
Date Index]
[
Author Index]