Yes, those are the errors, but no, I can't turn the service off, as I
do need FTP running. I've not yet tested to see if the connection
reset errors occur with FTP (I will) - so far, all the errors have
been with *web* (HTTP) downloads.
One last thing I should mention - although I *think* that the errors
starting at the same time of the SP2 upgrade, I'm not positive about
that. Could some other automated MS update (I allow them to be
applied automatically) be the culprit? It's definitely something new
within the last month or two though...
Thanks for all your help thus far Coraleigh!
On Aug 24, 6:36 am, "Coraleigh Miller" <CoraleighMil...@yahoo.com>
wrote:
> If your MSFTPSVC is an id 100 warning then it is due to people trying to log
> into your system via FTP and having incorrect username or passwords. If you
> do not use or need the FTP service you should uninstall it (via Add/Remove
> programs-> Windows Components->Application Server-> IIS->FTP), or at least
> disable the service. However, you said that you have external users who
> download files from your website, if they are doing this with FTP then you
> obviously should not remove it.
>
> I will do more thinking on this tommorrow.. in the meantime does anyone else
> have any ideas for dnigrin?
>
> Coraleigh
>
> <dnig...@gmail.com> wrote in message
>
> news:1187913429.831323.140740@r23g2000prd.googlegroups.com...
>
> > On Aug 23, 4:24 pm, "Coraleigh Miller" <CoraleighMil...@yahoo.com>
> > wrote:
> >> Do you have any related Event ids in your event log?
>
> > Nothing specific I can see. I *do* see a ton (2 per second!) of
> > System events from MSFTPSVC, failed login attempts due to bad password
> > or username. Seems like someone is trying to break in. Could that be
> > the problem? How do I block that?
>
> >> Did you try all the Workarounds in the article as well?
>
> > Yes - I applied the Resolution patch, and then also did Step 3 (Method
> > 2, at the Registry level) and Step 4. I didn't do step 1 (not running
> > ISA server), and I couldn't find any new network drivers for Step 2.
>
> >> Are you using ISA server?
>
> > Nope.
>
> >> Are you experiencing any other networking type issues? Any internal?
>
> > No, everything else seems to be fine...
>
> > Thanks,
> > Dan
>
> >> Coraleigh Miller
>
> >> <dnig...@gmail.com> wrote in message
>
> >>news:1187880222.812003.261240@r23g2000prd.googlegroups.com...
>
> >> > Unfortunately, it looks like that MS patch didn't fix the problem -
> >> > I'm still getting connection reset errors, regardless of browser used,
> >> > Mac or PC.
>
> >> > Any other thoughts?
>
> >> > Thanks...
>
> >> > On Aug 19, 7:51 am, dnig...@gmail.com wrote:
> >> >> Thanks Coraleigh, that definitely looks promising. I'll go ahead and
> >> >> apply the fix that's listed in that KB article, and pray for the best!
>
> >> >> Much appreciated, thanks again.
>
> >> >> On Aug 19, 12:01 am, "Coraleigh Miller" <CoraleighMil...@yahoo.com>
> >> >> wrote:
>
> >> >> > Hidnigrin,
>
> >> >> > Give this article a read...http://support.microsoft.com/kb/936594
>
> >> >> > Coraleigh Miller
>
> >> >> > <dnig...@gmail.com> wrote in message
>
> >> >> >news:1187494378.396510.34610@w3g2000hsg.googlegroups.com...
>
> >> >> > > I'm running Windows Server 2003 Standard Edition SP2. Around the
> >> >> > > time
> >> >> > > I applied the SP2 update, users of my website who needed to
> >> >> > > download
> >> >> > > large-ish (4MB - 12MB) files consistently started getting "Posix
> >> >> > > error, connection reset by peer" errors.
>
> >> >> > > Did something change in the SP2 update that would effect this?
>
> >> >> > > Regardless, does anyone have suggestions on what to do to fix it?
>
> >> >> > > Thx