On Thu, 09 Apr 2009 07:15:44 -0400 "Robert E. Seastrom" <r...@seastrom.com> wrote:
> > Seth Mattinen <se...@rollernet.us> writes: > > > I have a few Sprint EVDO cards. They go into standby when nothing is > > actively going on and fire up within seconds when there is > > something to do. I regularly use everything from SSH to streaming > > video without any issues. I only notice the delay with SSH when I > > don't type anything for a few minutes and it has to come active > > again, but I can leave it idle for hours and it never drops. > > Interesting. When I got my Sprint EVDO card (u727) a year and a half > ago, they were pretty nasty about gunning down (bidirectional spoofed > RST coming out of the middle of the network somewhere) any TCP > sessions that were idle for ten minutes or more. Quite repeatable and > verified on the downlow by People With Insight that this was in fact > expected behavior from boxes that were in the middle of the network > due to "politics" (unlike Verizon, Sprint appears to put no > restrictions on inbound connections to the evdo-host). Putting this: > > ServerAliveInterval 60 > > in ~/.ssh/config was an effective work-around. I have not revisited > the issue to see if Sprint has corrected this behavior. Perhaps > budget constraints or customer complaints have caused Sprint to > revisit the necessity of having extraneous hardware in their network. > I use a Verizon Wireless u727; before that, I used a PCMCIA card. I've never had problems with drops on idle. *However* -- if there was a packet from the wrong IP address, the older card would drop the connection -- apparently, that behavior was required by the spec. (I haven't checked if the newer one will do that.) So, if the EVDO connection dropped while I had, say, an IMAP or ssh session open, and I dialed back in, the next TCP packet would cause EVDO to drop again... I finally "fixed" it by creating ipfilter rules in my ppp-up script to block all "bad" packets from going out. --Steve Bellovin, http://www.cs.columbia.edu/~smb