Hi, Works great here, except having CONFIG_INET_ECN=y breaks connections to some hosts[1]. I suggest CONFIG_INET_ECN be disabled. Lots of discussion here:
http://lists.debian.org/debian-devel/2001/debian-devel-200109/msg00041.html The Debian i386 kernels (at least) currently disable it[2]. -David [1] : Some hosts (for example www.rei.com) send a TCP reset in response to ECN enabled packets. That makes it impossible to connect. Here is some info describing why the hosts shouldn't be breaking when we have ECN enabled: http://www.icir.org/floyd/papers/draft-floyd-tcp-reset-00.txt [2] $ wget http://ftp.debian.org/debian/pool/main/k/kernel-image-2.4.22-i386/kernel-image-2.4.22-i386_2.4.22-3.tar.gz $ tar -xzf kernel-image-2.4.22-i386_2.4.22-3.tar.gz $ grep CONFIG_INET_ECN kernel-image-2.4/config/* kernel-image-2.4/config/386:# CONFIG_INET_ECN is not set kernel-image-2.4/config/586tsc:# CONFIG_INET_ECN is not set kernel-image-2.4/config/686:# CONFIG_INET_ECN is not set kernel-image-2.4/config/686-smp:# CONFIG_INET_ECN is not set kernel-image-2.4/config/default:# CONFIG_INET_ECN is not set kernel-image-2.4/config/k6:# CONFIG_INET_ECN is not set kernel-image-2.4/config/k7:# CONFIG_INET_ECN is not set kernel-image-2.4/config/k7-smp:# CONFIG_INET_ECN is not set $