On Thu, Sep 26, 2024 at 4:57 PM Williams, James P. {Jim} (JSC-CD4)[KBR Wyle Services, LLC] via users <users@subversion.apache.org> wrote: > > I was pulled away from this problem, so I quoted our last exchange. Daniel, > you asked to test svn co but keeping communications entirely on the server > machine. I did that by using an https://localhost URL. I also had to turn > off Kerberos authentication, use "Require all granted", and hide the > AuthzSVNAccessFile. I assume Kerberos was failing because the Server > Principal Name doesn't use localhost, and I assume AuthzSVNAccessFile doesn't > work with "Require all granted". > > > > With those changes, checkouts consistently succeed to either local disk or an > NFS mount. I also don't see core dumps from the client (recall 90% of > attempts hang, 5% core dump, and 5% succeed). That sounds like a useful data > point, but I'm not sure what to do with it. It points at our network. My > system administrators are convinced there's no proxy or reverse proxy. I > expect there is security scanning going on, but it's nothing our production > server hasn't handled fine for many years. It's also an Apache HTTP server, > but uses SVN 1.9.7. > > > > Thanks for any direction you can give me toward a solution.
Hi Jim, This may be a silly question, but has hardware been checked? I would start by checking: network wiring to the machine; the machine's RAM. Thanks, Nathan