[ale] md5sum weirdness on firefox -- SOLVED
Joe Bayes
jbayes at spoo.mminternet.com
Wed Mar 28 19:19:02 EDT 2007
Geoffrey typeth:
>Joe Bayes wrote:
>> Solution 2: No, there's nothing wrong with md5sum: it was my
>> router. When my router does its own peculiar version of NAT, it
>> replaces 216.86.915.37 with 192.168.0.2 in incoming packets. In
>> outgoing packets, it reverses the process. Apparently it does this
>> substitution in packet data as well as in the routing information,
>> and firefox-1.5.0.9-3.fc6.i386.rpm just happened to contain (the
>> encoded representation of) 216.86.195.37 somewhere in the data.
>
>This makes absolutely no sense to me. If you downloaded the file, it
>should not contain any remnants of your network configuration.
Exerpted from http://www.azureuswiki.com/index.php/NinetyNine :
Some routers employ a trick called game mode, rewriting internal
and external IP address bytes within incoming and outgoing
packets. This allows older games that hard-code IP addresses to
function behind a NAT setup. However, when such an address-byte
sequence is coincidentally present within a file being sent via the
BitTorrent protocol, the router mistakenly rewrites the data. This
changes the content of the packet, which fails hash-checking. Any
incoming packet that has a byte sequence that happens to match the
address byte sequence is susceptible to mangling, an event
estimated to happen once for about every 4GB of data transferred.
I don't *know* that this is what is going on, but it's currently my
best guess.
Joe
--
Joe Bayes -- jbayes at spoo.mminternet.com
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