Mail Archives: cygwin/2003/07/25/02:42:12
On Thu, 24 Jul 2003, Bill McCormick wrote:
> Brian Dessent wrote:
> > I'm in agreement here, Apache should not give two shits what your
> > external IP address is if it's behind a NAT gateway and is bound to an
> > interface with a non-changing address. In fact it has no possible way
> > of knowing what the publicly-visible address is.
>
> I agree as well. However, the fact remains that Apache will run and run
> until I open up the HTTP port on my FW. After the port is open it runs for
> some time and then (speaking TCP/IP sockets here) it either stops listening
> for client connections or stops accepting client connections. At least
> that's what it looks like based on my experience writing more than a few
> client/server programs. It's likely more complicated than that though.
>
> > If Apache is dying after a certain time then that's obviously a problem,
> > and I'd suggest checking the error logs and even increasing the
> > loglevel, but the changing IP address shouldn't have anything to do with
> > it. I have found cases myself where Apache stops responding, but I've
> > not been able to figure it out so I do have some interest in this
> > matter.
>
> It will some times stop even with no outside connections (from the WAN)
> having been made (based on /var/log/appache/access_log). At least on one
> occasion, I opened up the port just for testing this issue, then continued
> making connections via the LAN side and then inexplicably Apache quits
> without anything being written to /var/log/appache/error_log. Increasing the
> debug level is a worthwhile suggestion. Now, it doesn't quit/die; httpd and
> parent and children still show up in the process list.
>
> Andrew DeFaria recently replied to one of my posts (to me only) with this:
>
> I do know that Apache for Cygwin used to have a problem where it would lock
> up, which is one of the reasons I'm using Apache for Windows (The other is
> that Apache for Cygwin is slow - but it does understand things like
> symlinks...). I narrowed it down to when it locked up I would selectively
> kill a couple of the httpd's and wham it would start working again. I
> believe the very newest versions of Cygwin and Apache for Cygwin fixed this
> problem I think.
I saw your thread and just thought I should mention the same thing. If you're
running with Cygwin 1.3.22 or earlier (until 1.3.12 I believe) you will have
problems with Apache. The cause of these problems have been fixed in 1.5.0
You could try installing the 'test' package for Cygwin, available via setup.exe
in the 'Exp' category. It will confirm if this is the problem your seeing.
> There's another piece of information that might be worth mentioning here,
> however off-topic it may seem. That is Code-Red. When I open port 80, my
> Netgear FVS318 starts logging a good amount (they arrive in 6's) of Code-Red
> activity. This is the Code-Red virus scanning my IP, finding port 80 open,
> and trying to get in. Based one the message from my router ...
>
> Thur, 07/24/2003 15:34:57 - TCP connection dropped - Source:68.165.217.91,
> 2278, WAN - Destination:68.165.41.220, 80, LAN - 'Code-Red'
> End of Log ----------
>
> ... it appears to be unsuccessful. AVG anti-virus says my system is clean
> too. Maybe there's a connection here, maybe not.
>
> Something else I've seen in the access log (although not consistently) are
> the inevitable people that try to hack in like this:
>
> 68.164.77.40 - - [24/Jul/2003:21:07:08 -0500] "GET /scripts/..%255c..%
> 255cwinnt/system32/cmd.exe?/c+copy+c:\winnt\system32\cmd.exe+c:\inetpub\scri
> pts\script.exe HTTP/1.1" 404 316
The above is just something you'll have to get used to, or filter out. Your
(almost) on UNIX, not running IIS, so these scans/attempts won't harm you.
Elfyn
--
Elfyn McBratney, EMCB | http://www.nongnu.org/wwwauth/
http://www.emcb.co.uk | http://www.emcb.co.uk/webauth/
elfyn AT emcb DOT co DOT uk | wwwauth-users AT nongnu DOT org
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