so what do you recommend me do..
I noticed 2 clients using xchat were flooding the ircd with PUSH & ACK packets, more then the regular basic mirc script.
Being that these clients are sending more packets, im seeing more of my clients drop.. example:
[12:00] * user1 has quit IRC (Connection reset by peer)
[12:13] * user2 has quit IRC (Connection reset by peer)
[12:28] * user3 has quit IRC (Connection reset by peer)
[12:43] * user4 has quit IRC (Connection reset by peer)
[13:11] * user5 has quit IRC (Input/output error)
[13:13] * user6 has quit IRC (Connection reset by peer)
[13:14] * user7 has quit IRC (Connection reset by peer)
[14:49] * user2 has quit IRC (Connection reset by peer)
[15:06] * user5 has quit IRC (Input/output error)
[15:34] * user8 has quit IRC (Connection reset by peer)
[15:46] * user3 has quit IRC (Connection reset by peer)
[01:50] -ircd1server- *** Notice -- (link) Secure ZIPlink ircd1server-> ircd2server[@ircd2server.0] established (SSLv3-AES256-SHA-256bits)
-
[01:50] -ircd1server- (link) Secure ZIPlink ircd2server-> ircd1server[@ircd1server.34269] established (SSLv3-AES256-SHA-256bits)
-
[01:50] -ircd1server- *** Notice -- Possible negative TS split at link ircd2server (1133247054 - 1133247173 = -119) [PLEASE SYNC YOUR CLOCKS!]
-
[01:50] -ircd1server- *** Notice -- Link ircd2server-> ircd1server is now synced [secs: -119 recv: 1.1021 sent: 1.633]
-
[01:50] -ircd1server- *** Notice -- Zipstats for link to ircd2server[@ircd2server.0]: decompressed (in): 1678=>3073 (54.6%), compressed (out): 2683=>1447 (53.9%)
-
[01:50] -ircd1server- (sync) Link ircd1server-> ircd2server is now synced [secs: 120 recv: 1.631 sent: 1.1021]
-
Our clocks are synced. I cant see why this is happening.
Sometimes I will check my event viewer in win2kserver and it will say..
The time service has not been able to synchronize the system time for 49152 seconds because none of the time providers has been able to provide a usable time stamp. The system clock is unsynchronized.
For more information, see Help and Support Center at http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/events.asp.
Shall I blame it on Microsoft time server?? hehehe...those bastards