NETGEAR is aware of a growing number of phone and online scams. To learn how to stay safe click here.
Forum Discussion
janpeter1
Oct 19, 2011Luminary
ReadyNAS Duo 4.1.8 and OS X Lion 10.7.2
I have lived with ReadyNAS duo for about 2 years with upgrading of Mac OS X and also ReadyNAS software with actually very little problems. I am hesitating to upgrade to OS X 10.7.2 (from latest Snow...
rorzer
Oct 23, 2011Aspirant
The problem seems to be with the avahi services cease to be advertised. Found this response from an avahi developer in this bug report https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/avahi/+bug/624043
This seems to describe something very similar to what I have experienced. The various services drop out over time, with afp going first. I guess afp has the shortest timeout.
__________________
This seems to describe something very similar to what I have experienced. The various services drop out over time, with afp going first. I guess afp has the shortest timeout.
__________________
Trent Lloyd (lathiat) wrote on 2010-10-25: #10
Hi All, Trent Lloyd here - one of the authors of the Avahi project
The cause of this situation is relatively simple, in all cases I have seen it is caused by a faulty network driver. You will find after you restart Avahi - services work for a few minutes and then they fail again - here is the cause
=> When Avahi starts, it broadcasts out to the network services exists
=> Machines discover the service and add it to the list of available services
=> Once it nears the expiry time, a query is sent out for the services
=> No response is received, because multicast functionality in the network card driver is broken.. multicast queries never reach the avahi daemon
=> Avahi detects this as a "Passive observation of failure" and removes the services from the service list (Mac OS X Bonjour does the same)
The fix is to get a different network card with a working driver support for multicast - or fix the network card driver - it would be useful to post your "lspci" outputs to the issue to identify what kind of network cards you have and mention which one it is (ethernet or wireless)
Is most common on wireless but does occur on some ethernet drivers as well.
Related Content
NETGEAR Academy
Boost your skills with the Netgear Academy - Get trained, certified and stay ahead with the latest Netgear technology!
Join Us!