* [gentoo-user] Yahoo and strange traffic.
@ 2010-08-15 20:34 Dale
2010-08-15 20:55 ` Paul Hartman
2010-08-15 21:32 ` Mick
0 siblings, 2 replies; 31+ messages in thread
From: Dale @ 2010-08-15 20:34 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
Hi folks,
I been noticing the past few weeks that something is communicating with
Yahoo at these addresses:
cs210p2.msg.sp1.yahoo.com
rdis.msg.vip.sp1.yahoo.com
I thought it was Kopete getting some info, profile pics maybe, from the
server. Thing is, it does this for a really long time. It is also
SENDING data as well. I have no idea why it is doing this or what it is
sending. I closed the Kopete app but the data still carries on. This
"transfer" has been going for a while now and the only way I can stop it
is to stop the network, wait a minute or two for it to time out and then
restart the network.
Anybody have any idea what the heck this is? Is Yahoo up to something?
Some new security issue that I haven't heard of?
Thanks.
Dale
:-) :-)
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Yahoo and strange traffic.
2010-08-15 20:34 [gentoo-user] Yahoo and strange traffic Dale
@ 2010-08-15 20:55 ` Paul Hartman
2010-08-15 21:18 ` BRM
2010-08-15 21:29 ` Alan McKinnon
2010-08-15 21:32 ` Mick
1 sibling, 2 replies; 31+ messages in thread
From: Paul Hartman @ 2010-08-15 20:55 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On Sun, Aug 15, 2010 at 3:34 PM, Dale <rdalek1967@gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi folks,
>
> I been noticing the past few weeks that something is communicating with
> Yahoo at these addresses:
>
> cs210p2.msg.sp1.yahoo.com
>
> rdis.msg.vip.sp1.yahoo.com
>
> I thought it was Kopete getting some info, profile pics maybe, from the
> server. Thing is, it does this for a really long time. It is also SENDING
> data as well. I have no idea why it is doing this or what it is sending. I
> closed the Kopete app but the data still carries on. This "transfer" has
> been going for a while now and the only way I can stop it is to stop the
> network, wait a minute or two for it to time out and then restart the
> network.
>
> Anybody have any idea what the heck this is? Is Yahoo up to something?
> Some new security issue that I haven't heard of?
I think it's normal.
The first address is one of their pool of messaging servers and the
second is a web server, probably like you said for retrieving
additional info. The sending of data could be the http request, or
updating your status/picture/whatever kopete may be doing. You could
try blocking it and see what breaks. :)
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Yahoo and strange traffic.
2010-08-15 20:55 ` Paul Hartman
@ 2010-08-15 21:18 ` BRM
2010-08-15 21:35 ` Dale
2010-08-15 21:29 ` Alan McKinnon
1 sibling, 1 reply; 31+ messages in thread
From: BRM @ 2010-08-15 21:18 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
----- Original Message ----
> On Sun, Aug 15, 2010 at 3:34 PM, Dale <rdalek1967@gmail.com> wrote:
> > Hi folks,
> > I been noticing the past few weeks that something is communicating with
> > Yahoo at these addresses:
> >
> > cs210p2.msg.sp1.yahoo.com
> >
> > rdis.msg.vip.sp1.yahoo.com
> >
> > I thought it was Kopete getting some info, profile pics maybe, from the
> > server. Thing is, it does this for a really long time. It is also
SENDING
> > data as well. I have no idea why it is doing this or what it is sending.
I
> > closed the Kopete app but the data still carries on. This "transfer" has
> I think it's normal.
>
> The first address is one of their pool of messaging servers and the
> second is a web server, probably like you said for retrieving
> additional info. The sending of data could be the http request, or
> updating your status/picture/whatever kopete may be doing. You could
> try blocking it and see what breaks. :)
Likely true as Yahoo!'a interfaces are highly AJAX driven - with their own PHP
oriented widget kit as well.
So if you have a web page open to any Yahoo! site that is probably what is doing
it.
Ben
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Yahoo and strange traffic.
2010-08-15 20:55 ` Paul Hartman
2010-08-15 21:18 ` BRM
@ 2010-08-15 21:29 ` Alan McKinnon
2010-08-16 22:55 ` Dale
1 sibling, 1 reply; 31+ messages in thread
From: Alan McKinnon @ 2010-08-15 21:29 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On Sunday 15 August 2010 22:55:23 Paul Hartman wrote:
> On Sun, Aug 15, 2010 at 3:34 PM, Dale <rdalek1967@gmail.com> wrote:
> > Hi folks,
> >
> > I been noticing the past few weeks that something is communicating with
> > Yahoo at these addresses:
> >
> > cs210p2.msg.sp1.yahoo.com
> >
> > rdis.msg.vip.sp1.yahoo.com
> >
> > I thought it was Kopete getting some info, profile pics maybe, from the
> > server. Thing is, it does this for a really long time. It is also
> > SENDING data as well. I have no idea why it is doing this or what it is
> > sending. I closed the Kopete app but the data still carries on. This
> > "transfer" has been going for a while now and the only way I can stop it
> > is to stop the network, wait a minute or two for it to time out and then
> > restart the network.
> >
> > Anybody have any idea what the heck this is? Is Yahoo up to something?
> >
> > Some new security issue that I haven't heard of?
>
> I think it's normal.
>
> The first address is one of their pool of messaging servers and the
> second is a web server, probably like you said for retrieving
> additional info. The sending of data could be the http request, or
> updating your status/picture/whatever kopete may be doing. You could
> try blocking it and see what breaks. :)
Dale,
It could also be a weather map, or any number of widgets that get data from
the intartubes.
netstat with -p can help track down the app that has the connection open
--
alan dot mckinnon at gmail dot com
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Yahoo and strange traffic.
2010-08-15 20:34 [gentoo-user] Yahoo and strange traffic Dale
2010-08-15 20:55 ` Paul Hartman
@ 2010-08-15 21:32 ` Mick
1 sibling, 0 replies; 31+ messages in thread
From: Mick @ 2010-08-15 21:32 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
[-- Attachment #1: Type: Text/Plain, Size: 1051 bytes --]
On Sunday 15 August 2010 21:34:33 Dale wrote:
> Hi folks,
>
> I been noticing the past few weeks that something is communicating with
> Yahoo at these addresses:
>
> cs210p2.msg.sp1.yahoo.com
>
> rdis.msg.vip.sp1.yahoo.com
>
> I thought it was Kopete getting some info, profile pics maybe, from the
> server. Thing is, it does this for a really long time. It is also
> SENDING data as well. I have no idea why it is doing this or what it is
> sending. I closed the Kopete app but the data still carries on. This
> "transfer" has been going for a while now and the only way I can stop it
> is to stop the network, wait a minute or two for it to time out and then
> restart the network.
>
> Anybody have any idea what the heck this is? Is Yahoo up to something?
> Some new security issue that I haven't heard of?
What does your netstat show with respect to ports being used and what does
tcpdump/tcpflow show? If it is Yahoo, you should see things that are relevant
and hopefully make sense.
--
Regards,
Mick
[-- Attachment #2: This is a digitally signed message part. --]
[-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 198 bytes --]
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Yahoo and strange traffic.
2010-08-15 21:18 ` BRM
@ 2010-08-15 21:35 ` Dale
2010-08-15 22:25 ` Peter Humphrey
0 siblings, 1 reply; 31+ messages in thread
From: Dale @ 2010-08-15 21:35 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
BRM wrote:
> ----- Original Message ----
>
>
>> On Sun, Aug 15, 2010 at 3:34 PM, Dale<rdalek1967@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>> Hi folks,
>>> I been noticing the past few weeks that something is communicating with
>>> Yahoo at these addresses:
>>>
>>> cs210p2.msg.sp1.yahoo.com
>>>
>>> rdis.msg.vip.sp1.yahoo.com
>>>
>>> I thought it was Kopete getting some info, profile pics maybe, from the
>>> server. Thing is, it does this for a really long time. It is also
>>>
> SENDING
>
>>> data as well. I have no idea why it is doing this or what it is sending.
>>>
> I
>
>>> closed the Kopete app but the data still carries on. This "transfer" has
>>>
>> I think it's normal.
>>
>> The first address is one of their pool of messaging servers and the
>> second is a web server, probably like you said for retrieving
>> additional info. The sending of data could be the http request, or
>> updating your status/picture/whatever kopete may be doing. You could
>> try blocking it and see what breaks. :)
>>
> Likely true as Yahoo!'a interfaces are highly AJAX driven - with their own PHP
> oriented widget kit as well.
> So if you have a web page open to any Yahoo! site that is probably what is doing
> it.
>
> Ben
>
>
Wouldn't it stop tho if I closed Kopete? I'm not using Yahoo's
messenger tho. I don't think they have one now.
I did also trying closing Seamonkey to but the traffic continues. I
very rarely go to yahoo.com.
Also, this can carry on for a really long time. This can last over 30
minutes.
Dale
:-) :-)
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Yahoo and strange traffic.
2010-08-15 21:35 ` Dale
@ 2010-08-15 22:25 ` Peter Humphrey
2010-08-15 22:48 ` Dale
0 siblings, 1 reply; 31+ messages in thread
From: Peter Humphrey @ 2010-08-15 22:25 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On Sunday 15 August 2010 22:35:01 Dale wrote:
> Also, this can carry on for a really long time. This can last over
> 30 minutes.
I think I'd be getting tcpdump out about now...
--
Rgds
Peter. Linux Counter 5290, 1994-04-23.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Yahoo and strange traffic.
2010-08-15 22:25 ` Peter Humphrey
@ 2010-08-15 22:48 ` Dale
0 siblings, 0 replies; 31+ messages in thread
From: Dale @ 2010-08-15 22:48 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
Peter Humphrey wrote:
> On Sunday 15 August 2010 22:35:01 Dale wrote:
>
>
>> Also, this can carry on for a really long time. This can last over
>> 30 minutes.
>>
> I think I'd be getting tcpdump out about now...
>
>
I'm going to try netstat next time. Waiting on it to start again.
Dale
:-) :-)
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Yahoo and strange traffic.
2010-08-15 21:29 ` Alan McKinnon
@ 2010-08-16 22:55 ` Dale
2010-08-16 23:39 ` Adam Carter
0 siblings, 1 reply; 31+ messages in thread
From: Dale @ 2010-08-16 22:55 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
Alan McKinnon wrote:
> On Sunday 15 August 2010 22:55:23 Paul Hartman wrote:
>
>> On Sun, Aug 15, 2010 at 3:34 PM, Dale<rdalek1967@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>> Hi folks,
>>>
>>> I been noticing the past few weeks that something is communicating with
>>> Yahoo at these addresses:
>>>
>>> cs210p2.msg.sp1.yahoo.com
>>>
>>> rdis.msg.vip.sp1.yahoo.com
>>>
>>> I thought it was Kopete getting some info, profile pics maybe, from the
>>> server. Thing is, it does this for a really long time. It is also
>>> SENDING data as well. I have no idea why it is doing this or what it is
>>> sending. I closed the Kopete app but the data still carries on. This
>>> "transfer" has been going for a while now and the only way I can stop it
>>> is to stop the network, wait a minute or two for it to time out and then
>>> restart the network.
>>>
>>> Anybody have any idea what the heck this is? Is Yahoo up to something?
>>>
>>> Some new security issue that I haven't heard of?
>>>
>> I think it's normal.
>>
>> The first address is one of their pool of messaging servers and the
>> second is a web server, probably like you said for retrieving
>> additional info. The sending of data could be the http request, or
>> updating your status/picture/whatever kopete may be doing. You could
>> try blocking it and see what breaks. :)
>>
> Dale,
>
> It could also be a weather map, or any number of widgets that get data from
> the intartubes.
>
> netstat with -p can help track down the app that has the connection open
>
>
OK. It finally started doing it again. Here is the short version of
netstat -p. It looks like kopete but what in the heck is it sending and
receiving?
root@smoker / # netstat -p
Active Internet connections (w/o servers)
Proto Recv-Q Send-Q Local Address Foreign Address
State PID/Program name
tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:43577 rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http
TIME_WAIT -
tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:43438 rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http
TIME_WAIT -
tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:52423 cs204p1.msg.sp1.ya:5050
ESTABLISHED 9968/kopete
tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:43490 rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http
TIME_WAIT -
tcp 0 1 192.168.1.2:43586 rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http
SYN_SENT 18971/kopeteFc9968.
tcp 0 0 localhost:60971 localhost:nut
ESTABLISHED 9578/upsmon
tcp 1 1 192.168.1.2:43584 rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http
CLOSING -
tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:43558 rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http
TIME_WAIT -
tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:48301 cs201p1.msg.sp1.ya:5050
ESTABLISHED 9968/kopete
tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:43523 rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http
TIME_WAIT -
tcp 0 0 localhost:nut localhost:60971
ESTABLISHED 9640/upsd
tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:42517 cs215p2.msg.ac4.ya:5050
ESTABLISHED 9968/kopete
tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:43462 rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http
TIME_WAIT -
tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:43516 rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http
TIME_WAIT -
tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:43479 rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http
TIME_WAIT -
tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:43405 rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http
TIME_WAIT -
tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:43483 rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http
TIME_WAIT -
tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:43563 rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http
TIME_WAIT -
tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:43487 rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http
TIME_WAIT -
tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:43483 rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http
TIME_WAIT -
tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:43563 rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http
TIME_WAIT -
tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:43487 rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http
TIME_WAIT -
One other question, if this is kopete, how does it keep
sending/receiving after I have closed the kopete app?
This is weird. Kopete and Yahoo have not done this before.
Dale
:-) :-)
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Yahoo and strange traffic.
2010-08-16 22:55 ` Dale
@ 2010-08-16 23:39 ` Adam Carter
2010-08-17 1:20 ` Dale
0 siblings, 1 reply; 31+ messages in thread
From: Adam Carter @ 2010-08-16 23:39 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 2489 bytes --]
> root@smoker / # netstat -p
> Active Internet connections (w/o servers)
> Proto Recv-Q Send-Q Local Address Foreign Address State
> PID/Program name
> tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:43577 rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http
> TIME_WAIT -
> tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:43438 rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http
> TIME_WAIT -
> tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:52423 cs204p1.msg.sp1.ya:5050
> ESTABLISHED 9968/kopete
> tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:43490 rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http
> TIME_WAIT -
> tcp 0 1 192.168.1.2:43586 rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http
> SYN_SENT 18971/kopeteFc9968.
> tcp 0 0 localhost:60971 localhost:nut
> ESTABLISHED 9578/upsmon
> tcp 1 1 192.168.1.2:43584 rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http
> CLOSING -
> tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:43558 rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http
> TIME_WAIT -
> tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:48301 cs201p1.msg.sp1.ya:5050
> ESTABLISHED 9968/kopete
> tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:43523 rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http
> TIME_WAIT -
> tcp 0 0 localhost:nut localhost:60971
> ESTABLISHED 9640/upsd
> tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:42517 cs215p2.msg.ac4.ya:5050
> ESTABLISHED 9968/kopete
> tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:43462 rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http
> TIME_WAIT -
> tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:43516 rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http
> TIME_WAIT -
> tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:43479 rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http
> TIME_WAIT -
> tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:43405 rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http
> TIME_WAIT -
> tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:43483 rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http
> TIME_WAIT -
> tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:43563 rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http
> TIME_WAIT -
> tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:43487 rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http
> TIME_WAIT -
> tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:43483 rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http
> TIME_WAIT -
> tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:43563 rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http
> TIME_WAIT -
> tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:43487 rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http
> TIME_WAIT -
>
> One other question, if this is kopete, how does it keep sending/receiving
> after I have closed the kopete app?
>
> Since you're closing Kopete gracefully its probably decided to let those
threads complete what they're doing before shutting them down. If you kill
-9'd them instead (that is send them the KILL signal instead of the TERM
signal) they'd go away immediately.
[-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 3857 bytes --]
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Yahoo and strange traffic.
2010-08-16 23:39 ` Adam Carter
@ 2010-08-17 1:20 ` Dale
2010-08-17 1:32 ` Adam Carter
0 siblings, 1 reply; 31+ messages in thread
From: Dale @ 2010-08-17 1:20 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
Adam Carter wrote:
>
> root@smoker / # netstat -p
> Active Internet connections (w/o servers)
> Proto Recv-Q Send-Q Local Address Foreign Address
> State PID/Program name
> tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:43577 <http://192.168.1.2:43577>
> rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http TIME_WAIT -
> tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:43438 <http://192.168.1.2:43438>
> rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http TIME_WAIT -
> tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:52423 <http://192.168.1.2:52423>
> cs204p1.msg.sp1.ya:5050 ESTABLISHED 9968/kopete
> tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:43490 <http://192.168.1.2:43490>
> rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http TIME_WAIT -
> tcp 0 1 192.168.1.2:43586 <http://192.168.1.2:43586>
> rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http SYN_SENT 18971/kopeteFc9968.
> tcp 0 0 localhost:60971 localhost:nut
> ESTABLISHED 9578/upsmon
> tcp 1 1 192.168.1.2:43584 <http://192.168.1.2:43584>
> rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http CLOSING -
> tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:43558 <http://192.168.1.2:43558>
> rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http TIME_WAIT -
> tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:48301 <http://192.168.1.2:48301>
> cs201p1.msg.sp1.ya:5050 ESTABLISHED 9968/kopete
> tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:43523 <http://192.168.1.2:43523>
> rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http TIME_WAIT -
> tcp 0 0 localhost:nut localhost:60971
> ESTABLISHED 9640/upsd
> tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:42517 <http://192.168.1.2:42517>
> cs215p2.msg.ac4.ya:5050 ESTABLISHED 9968/kopete
> tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:43462 <http://192.168.1.2:43462>
> rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http TIME_WAIT -
> tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:43516 <http://192.168.1.2:43516>
> rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http TIME_WAIT -
> tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:43479 <http://192.168.1.2:43479>
> rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http TIME_WAIT -
> tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:43405 <http://192.168.1.2:43405>
> rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http TIME_WAIT -
> tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:43483 <http://192.168.1.2:43483>
> rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http TIME_WAIT -
> tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:43563 <http://192.168.1.2:43563>
> rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http TIME_WAIT -
> tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:43487 <http://192.168.1.2:43487>
> rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http TIME_WAIT -
> tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:43483 <http://192.168.1.2:43483>
> rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http TIME_WAIT -
> tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:43563 <http://192.168.1.2:43563>
> rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http TIME_WAIT -
> tcp 0 0 192.168.1.2:43487 <http://192.168.1.2:43487>
> rdis.msg.vip.sp1.y:http TIME_WAIT -
>
> One other question, if this is kopete, how does it keep
> sending/receiving after I have closed the kopete app?
>
> Since you're closing Kopete gracefully its probably decided to let
> those threads complete what they're doing before shutting them down.
> If you kill -9'd them instead (that is send them the KILL signal
> instead of the TERM signal) they'd go away immediately.
That may be true. Thing is, it is still sending and receiving traffic
even after all this time. I'm wondering what it is or if it is a bug or
something.
I just did a killall kopete and it did stop. Is there a way to "see"
what it is sending/receiving? I'm talking like is it a jpeg, some other
file or something else?
Dale
:-) :-)
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Yahoo and strange traffic.
2010-08-17 1:20 ` Dale
@ 2010-08-17 1:32 ` Adam Carter
2010-08-17 5:46 ` Dale
0 siblings, 1 reply; 31+ messages in thread
From: Adam Carter @ 2010-08-17 1:32 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 2139 bytes --]
>
> I just did a killall kopete and it did stop. Is there a way to "see" what
> it is sending/receiving? I'm talking like is it a jpeg, some other file or
> something else?
>
>
rix portage # nmap -p 5050 -sV cs210p2.msg.sp1.yahoo.com
Starting Nmap 5.21 ( http://nmap.org ) at 2010-08-17 11:27 EST
Nmap scan report for cs210p2.msg.sp1.yahoo.com (98.136.48.110)
Host is up (0.20s latency).
PORT STATE SERVICE VERSION
5050/tcp open mmcc?
1 service unrecognized despite returning data. If you know the
service/version, please submit the following fingerprint at
http://www.insecure.org/cgi-bin/servicefp-submit.cgi :
SF-Port5050-TCP:V=5.21%I=7%D=8/17%Time=4C69E58D%P=i686-pc-linux-gnu%r(GetR
SF:equest,195,"HTTP/1\.1\x20404\x20Not\x20Found\r\nContent-Type:\x20text/h
SF:tml\r\nCache-Control:\x20max-age=0,\x20must-revalidate\r\nExpires:\x20S
SF:un,\x2010\x20Jun\x202007\x2012:01:01\x20GMT\r\n\r\n<html><head>\r\n<met
SF:a\x20http-equiv=\"content-type\"\x20content=\"text/html;charset=utf-8\"
SF:>\r\n<title>404\x20Not\x20Found</title>\r\n</head>\r\n<body\x20text=#00
SF:0000\x20bgcolor=#ffffff>\r\n<hr><center>\r\n<H1>Not\x20Found</H1>\r\nTh
SF:e\x20requested\x20URL\x20was\x20not\x20found\x20on\x20this\x20server\.\
SF:r\n</center><p>\r\n</body></html>\r\n")%r(FourOhFourRequest,195,"HTTP/1
SF:\.1\x20404\x20Not\x20Found\r\nContent-Type:\x20text/html\r\nCache-Contr
SF:ol:\x20max-age=0,\x20must-revalidate\r\nExpires:\x20Sun,\x2010\x20Jun\x
SF:202007\x2012:01:01\x20GMT\r\n\r\n<html><head>\r\n<meta\x20http-equiv=\"
SF:content-type\"\x20content=\"text/html;charset=utf-8\">\r\n<title>404\x2
SF:0Not\x20Found</title>\r\n</head>\r\n<body\x20text=#000000\x20bgcolor=#f
SF:fffff>\r\n<hr><center>\r\n<H1>Not\x20Found</H1>\r\nThe\x20requested\x20
SF:URL\x20was\x20not\x20found\x20on\x20this\x20server\.\r\n</center><p>\r\
SF:n</body></html>\r\n");
Service detection performed. Please report any incorrect results at
http://nmap.org/submit/ .
Nmap done: 1 IP address (1 host up) scanned in 112.82 seconds
rix portage #
Well its obviously HTTP, NFI why NMAP cant see that. So you could capture in
wireshark, then docode port 5050 as HTTP.
[-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 2954 bytes --]
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Yahoo and strange traffic.
2010-08-17 1:32 ` Adam Carter
@ 2010-08-17 5:46 ` Dale
2010-08-17 6:09 ` Adam Carter
0 siblings, 1 reply; 31+ messages in thread
From: Dale @ 2010-08-17 5:46 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
Adam Carter wrote:
>
>
> I just did a killall kopete and it did stop. Is there a way to
> "see" what it is sending/receiving? I'm talking like is it a
> jpeg, some other file or something else?
>
>
> rix portage # nmap -p 5050 -sV cs210p2.msg.sp1.yahoo.com
> <http://cs210p2.msg.sp1.yahoo.com>
>
> << SNIP >>
>
> Well its obviously HTTP, NFI why NMAP cant see that. So you could
> capture in wireshark, then docode port 5050 as HTTP.
Is this easy to do? I have no idea where to start except that wireshark
is installed.
Dale
:-) :-)
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Yahoo and strange traffic.
2010-08-17 5:46 ` Dale
@ 2010-08-17 6:09 ` Adam Carter
2010-08-17 10:23 ` Dale
0 siblings, 1 reply; 31+ messages in thread
From: Adam Carter @ 2010-08-17 6:09 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 407 bytes --]
> Is this easy to do? I have no idea where to start except that wireshark is
> installed.
>
>
Yep, start the capture with Capture -> Interfaces and click on the start
button next to the correct interface, then right click on one of the packets
that is to the yahoo box and choose Decode As set the port and protocol then
apply. You'll need to understand the semantics of HTTP for it to be of much
use tho.
[-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 633 bytes --]
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Yahoo and strange traffic.
2010-08-17 6:09 ` Adam Carter
@ 2010-08-17 10:23 ` Dale
2010-08-17 11:15 ` Jake Moe
2010-08-17 14:29 ` BRM
0 siblings, 2 replies; 31+ messages in thread
From: Dale @ 2010-08-17 10:23 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
Adam Carter wrote:
>
> Is this easy to do? I have no idea where to start except that
> wireshark is installed.
>
>
> Yep, start the capture with Capture -> Interfaces and click on the
> start button next to the correct interface, then right click on one of
> the packets that is to the yahoo box and choose Decode As set the port
> and protocol then apply. You'll need to understand the semantics of
> HTTP for it to be of much use tho.
You had me until the last part. No semantics here. lol May see if I
can post a little and see if anyone can figure out what the heck it is
doing. I'm thinking some crazy bug or something. Maybe checking for
updates not realizing it's Kopete instead of a Yahoo program.
Thanks. Post back what I find when it does it again.
Dale
:-) :-)
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Yahoo and strange traffic.
2010-08-17 10:23 ` Dale
@ 2010-08-17 11:15 ` Jake Moe
2010-08-17 11:26 ` Dale
2010-08-17 14:29 ` BRM
1 sibling, 1 reply; 31+ messages in thread
From: Jake Moe @ 2010-08-17 11:15 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On 08/17/10 20:23, Dale wrote:
> Adam Carter wrote:
>>
>> Is this easy to do? I have no idea where to start except that
>> wireshark is installed.
>>
>>
>> Yep, start the capture with Capture -> Interfaces and click on the
>> start button next to the correct interface, then right click on one
>> of the packets that is to the yahoo box and choose Decode As set the
>> port and protocol then apply. You'll need to understand the semantics
>> of HTTP for it to be of much use tho.
>
> You had me until the last part. No semantics here. lol May see if
> I can post a little and see if anyone can figure out what the heck it
> is doing. I'm thinking some crazy bug or something. Maybe checking
> for updates not realizing it's Kopete instead of a Yahoo program.
>
> Thanks. Post back what I find when it does it again.
>
> Dale
>
> :-) :-)
>
If you do try to send it back to us, you might want to limit what it's
capturing; Wireshark can get a *lot* of data quickly.
For instance, if you know it's only communicating with a few servers,
after you click on "Capture --> Interfaces", click on the "Options"
button, and in the Capture Filter, put "host 98.136.48.110 or host
98.136.42.25", which are the two servers you listed at the beginning of
this thread (cs210p2.msg.sp1.yahoo.com and rdis.msg.vip.sp1.yahoo.com).
Or you could assume that Yahoo are using the 98.136.0.0 network only for
this sort of thing, and use a filter of "net 98.136.0.0/16", which would
grab all traffic to or from any host with an IP starting with 98.136.x.x.
Jake Moe
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Yahoo and strange traffic.
2010-08-17 11:15 ` Jake Moe
@ 2010-08-17 11:26 ` Dale
0 siblings, 0 replies; 31+ messages in thread
From: Dale @ 2010-08-17 11:26 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
Jake Moe wrote:
> On 08/17/10 20:23, Dale wrote:
>
>> Adam Carter wrote:
>>
>>> Is this easy to do? I have no idea where to start except that
>>> wireshark is installed.
>>>
>>>
>>> Yep, start the capture with Capture -> Interfaces and click on the
>>> start button next to the correct interface, then right click on one
>>> of the packets that is to the yahoo box and choose Decode As set the
>>> port and protocol then apply. You'll need to understand the semantics
>>> of HTTP for it to be of much use tho.
>>>
>> You had me until the last part. No semantics here. lol May see if
>> I can post a little and see if anyone can figure out what the heck it
>> is doing. I'm thinking some crazy bug or something. Maybe checking
>> for updates not realizing it's Kopete instead of a Yahoo program.
>>
>> Thanks. Post back what I find when it does it again.
>>
>> Dale
>>
>> :-) :-)
>>
>>
> If you do try to send it back to us, you might want to limit what it's
> capturing; Wireshark can get a *lot* of data quickly.
>
> For instance, if you know it's only communicating with a few servers,
> after you click on "Capture --> Interfaces", click on the "Options"
> button, and in the Capture Filter, put "host 98.136.48.110 or host
> 98.136.42.25", which are the two servers you listed at the beginning of
> this thread (cs210p2.msg.sp1.yahoo.com and rdis.msg.vip.sp1.yahoo.com).
> Or you could assume that Yahoo are using the 98.136.0.0 network only for
> this sort of thing, and use a filter of "net 98.136.0.0/16", which would
> grab all traffic to or from any host with an IP starting with 98.136.x.x.
>
> Jake Moe
>
>
I'll keep that in mind. I'm not sure when it will start this mess again
tho. Sometimes it starts after a day or so, sometimes it is a week or so.
Thanks.
Dale
:-) :-)
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Yahoo and strange traffic.
2010-08-17 10:23 ` Dale
2010-08-17 11:15 ` Jake Moe
@ 2010-08-17 14:29 ` BRM
2010-08-17 16:10 ` Mick
2010-08-25 2:36 ` Dale
1 sibling, 2 replies; 31+ messages in thread
From: BRM @ 2010-08-17 14:29 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
----- Original Message ----
> From: Dale <rdalek1967@gmail.com>
> Adam Carter wrote:
> > Is this easy to do? I have no idea where to start except that
> > wireshark is installed.
> > Yep, start the capture with Capture -> Interfaces and click on the start
>button next to the correct interface, then right click on one of the packets
>that is to the yahoo box and choose Decode As set the port and protocol then
>apply. You'll
>
> need to understand the semantics of HTTP for it to be of much use tho.
> You had me until the last part. No semantics here. lol May see if I can
>post a little and see if anyone can figure out what the heck it is doing. I'm
>thinking some crazy bug or something. Maybe checking for updates not realizing
>it's
>
> Kopete instead of a Yahoo program.
Wireshark will show you the raw packet data, and decode only a little of it -
enough to identify the general protocol, senders, etc.
So to understand the packet, you will need to understand the application layer
protocol - in this case HTTP - yourself as Wireshark won't help you there.
But yet, Wireshark, nmap, and nessus security scanner are the tools, less so
nessus as it really is more of a port scanner/security hole finder than a debug
tool for applications (it's basically an interface for nmap for those purposes).
HTH,
Ben
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Yahoo and strange traffic.
2010-08-17 14:29 ` BRM
@ 2010-08-17 16:10 ` Mick
2010-08-17 20:15 ` Dale
2010-08-25 2:36 ` Dale
1 sibling, 1 reply; 31+ messages in thread
From: Mick @ 2010-08-17 16:10 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On 17 August 2010 15:29, BRM <bm_witness@yahoo.com> wrote:
> ----- Original Message ----
>
>> From: Dale <rdalek1967@gmail.com>
>> Adam Carter wrote:
>> > Is this easy to do? I have no idea where to start except that
>> > wireshark is installed.
>> > Yep, start the capture with Capture -> Interfaces and click on the start
>>button next to the correct interface, then right click on one of the packets
>>that is to the yahoo box and choose Decode As set the port and protocol then
>>apply. You'll
>>
>> need to understand the semantics of HTTP for it to be of much use tho.
>> You had me until the last part. No semantics here. lol May see if I can
>>post a little and see if anyone can figure out what the heck it is doing. I'm
>>thinking some crazy bug or something. Maybe checking for updates not realizing
>>it's
>>
>> Kopete instead of a Yahoo program.
>
> Wireshark will show you the raw packet data, and decode only a little of it -
> enough to identify the general protocol, senders, etc.
> So to understand the packet, you will need to understand the application layer
> protocol - in this case HTTP - yourself as Wireshark won't help you there.
>
> But yet, Wireshark, nmap, and nessus security scanner are the tools, less so
> nessus as it really is more of a port scanner/security hole finder than a debug
> tool for applications (it's basically an interface for nmap for those purposes).
I'm not at home to experiment and I don't use yahoo, but port 5050 is
typically used for mmcc = multi media conference control - does yahoo
offer such a service? It could be a SIP server running there for VoIP
between Yahoo registered users or something similar.
The http connection could be offered as an alternative proxy
connection to the yahoo IM servers for users who are behind
restrictive firewalls. Have you asked as much in the Yahoo user
groups?
The fact that the threads continue after kopete has shut down is not
necessarily of concern as was already explained, unless it carries on
and on for a long time and the flow of packets continues. I don't
know how yahoo VoIP works. Did you install some plugin specific for
yahoo services? If it imitates the Skype architecture then it
essentially runs proxies on clients' machines and this could be an
explanation for the traffic.
--
Regards,
Mick
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Yahoo and strange traffic.
2010-08-17 16:10 ` Mick
@ 2010-08-17 20:15 ` Dale
2010-08-17 21:11 ` Mick
0 siblings, 1 reply; 31+ messages in thread
From: Dale @ 2010-08-17 20:15 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
Mick wrote:
> On 17 August 2010 15:29, BRM<bm_witness@yahoo.com> wrote:
>
>> ----- Original Message ----
>>
>>
>>> From: Dale<rdalek1967@gmail.com>
>>> Adam Carter wrote:
>>>
>>>> Is this easy to do? I have no idea where to start except that
>>>> wireshark is installed.
>>>> Yep, start the capture with Capture -> Interfaces and click on the start
>>>>
>>> button next to the correct interface, then right click on one of the packets
>>> that is to the yahoo box and choose Decode As set the port and protocol then
>>> apply. You'll
>>>
>>> need to understand the semantics of HTTP for it to be of much use tho.
>>> You had me until the last part. No semantics here. lol May see if I can
>>> post a little and see if anyone can figure out what the heck it is doing. I'm
>>> thinking some crazy bug or something. Maybe checking for updates not realizing
>>> it's
>>>
>>> Kopete instead of a Yahoo program.
>>>
>> Wireshark will show you the raw packet data, and decode only a little of it -
>> enough to identify the general protocol, senders, etc.
>> So to understand the packet, you will need to understand the application layer
>> protocol - in this case HTTP - yourself as Wireshark won't help you there.
>>
>> But yet, Wireshark, nmap, and nessus security scanner are the tools, less so
>> nessus as it really is more of a port scanner/security hole finder than a debug
>> tool for applications (it's basically an interface for nmap for those purposes).
>>
> I'm not at home to experiment and I don't use yahoo, but port 5050 is
> typically used for mmcc = multi media conference control - does yahoo
> offer such a service? It could be a SIP server running there for VoIP
> between Yahoo registered users or something similar.
>
> The http connection could be offered as an alternative proxy
> connection to the yahoo IM servers for users who are behind
> restrictive firewalls. Have you asked as much in the Yahoo user
> groups?
>
> The fact that the threads continue after kopete has shut down is not
> necessarily of concern as was already explained, unless it carries on
> and on for a long time and the flow of packets continues. I don't
> know how yahoo VoIP works. Did you install some plugin specific for
> yahoo services? If it imitates the Skype architecture then it
> essentially runs proxies on clients' machines and this could be an
> explanation for the traffic.
>
I don't have VoIP, Skype or that sort of thing here. Here is my Kopete
info tho:
[ebuild R ] kde-base/kopete-4.4.5-r1 USE="addbookmarks autoreplace
contactnotes groupwise handbook highlight history nowlistening pipes
privacy ssl statistics texteffect translator urlpicpreview yahoo
zeroconf (-aqua) -debug -gadu -jabber -jingle (-kdeenablefinal)
(-kdeprefix) -latex -meanwhile -msn -oscar -otr -qq -skype -sms -testbed
-v4l2 -webpresence -winpopup" 0 kB
Anything there that cold cause a problem?
Dale
:-) :-)
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Yahoo and strange traffic.
2010-08-17 20:15 ` Dale
@ 2010-08-17 21:11 ` Mick
2010-08-17 21:32 ` Dale
0 siblings, 1 reply; 31+ messages in thread
From: Mick @ 2010-08-17 21:11 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
[-- Attachment #1: Type: Text/Plain, Size: 3368 bytes --]
On Tuesday 17 August 2010 21:15:51 Dale wrote:
> Mick wrote:
> > On 17 August 2010 15:29, BRM<bm_witness@yahoo.com> wrote:
> >> ----- Original Message ----
> >>
> >>> From: Dale<rdalek1967@gmail.com>
> >>>
> >>> Adam Carter wrote:
> >>>> Is this easy to do? I have no idea where to start except that
> >>>> wireshark is installed.
> >>>>
> >>>> Yep, start the capture with Capture -> Interfaces and click on the
> >>>> start
> >>>
> >>> button next to the correct interface, then right click on one of the
> >>> packets that is to the yahoo box and choose Decode As set the port
> >>> and protocol then apply. You'll
> >>>
> >>> need to understand the semantics of HTTP for it to be of much use tho.
> >>> You had me until the last part. No semantics here. lol May see if
> >>> I can post a little and see if anyone can figure out what the heck it
> >>> is doing. I'm thinking some crazy bug or something. Maybe checking
> >>> for updates not realizing it's
> >>>
> >>> Kopete instead of a Yahoo program.
> >>
> >> Wireshark will show you the raw packet data, and decode only a little of
> >> it - enough to identify the general protocol, senders, etc.
> >> So to understand the packet, you will need to understand the application
> >> layer protocol - in this case HTTP - yourself as Wireshark won't help
> >> you there.
> >>
> >> But yet, Wireshark, nmap, and nessus security scanner are the tools,
> >> less so nessus as it really is more of a port scanner/security hole
> >> finder than a debug tool for applications (it's basically an interface
> >> for nmap for those purposes).
> >
> > I'm not at home to experiment and I don't use yahoo, but port 5050 is
> > typically used for mmcc = multi media conference control - does yahoo
> > offer such a service? It could be a SIP server running there for VoIP
> > between Yahoo registered users or something similar.
> >
> > The http connection could be offered as an alternative proxy
> > connection to the yahoo IM servers for users who are behind
> > restrictive firewalls. Have you asked as much in the Yahoo user
> > groups?
> >
> > The fact that the threads continue after kopete has shut down is not
> > necessarily of concern as was already explained, unless it carries on
> > and on for a long time and the flow of packets continues. I don't
> > know how yahoo VoIP works. Did you install some plugin specific for
> > yahoo services? If it imitates the Skype architecture then it
> > essentially runs proxies on clients' machines and this could be an
> > explanation for the traffic.
>
> I don't have VoIP, Skype or that sort of thing here. Here is my Kopete
> info tho:
>
> [ebuild R ] kde-base/kopete-4.4.5-r1 USE="addbookmarks autoreplace
> contactnotes groupwise handbook highlight history nowlistening pipes
> privacy ssl statistics texteffect translator urlpicpreview yahoo
> zeroconf (-aqua) -debug -gadu -jabber -jingle (-kdeenablefinal)
> (-kdeprefix) -latex -meanwhile -msn -oscar -otr -qq -skype -sms -testbed
> -v4l2 -webpresence -winpopup" 0 kB
>
> Anything there that cold cause a problem?
No, I can't see anything suspicious, you don't even have skype or v4l2
enabled, so it is unlikely that it is running some webcam stream (as part of
VoIP).
--
Regards,
Mick
[-- Attachment #2: This is a digitally signed message part. --]
[-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 198 bytes --]
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Yahoo and strange traffic.
2010-08-17 21:11 ` Mick
@ 2010-08-17 21:32 ` Dale
2010-08-18 2:09 ` BRM
0 siblings, 1 reply; 31+ messages in thread
From: Dale @ 2010-08-17 21:32 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
Mick wrote:
> On Tuesday 17 August 2010 21:15:51 Dale wrote:
>
>> Mick wrote:
>>
>>> On 17 August 2010 15:29, BRM<bm_witness@yahoo.com> wrote:
>>>
>>>> ----- Original Message ----
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>> From: Dale<rdalek1967@gmail.com>
>>>>>
>>>>> Adam Carter wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> Is this easy to do? I have no idea where to start except that
>>>>>> wireshark is installed.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Yep, start the capture with Capture -> Interfaces and click on the
>>>>>> start
>>>>>>
>>>>> button next to the correct interface, then right click on one of the
>>>>> packets that is to the yahoo box and choose Decode As set the port
>>>>> and protocol then apply. You'll
>>>>>
>>>>> need to understand the semantics of HTTP for it to be of much use tho.
>>>>> You had me until the last part. No semantics here. lol May see if
>>>>> I can post a little and see if anyone can figure out what the heck it
>>>>> is doing. I'm thinking some crazy bug or something. Maybe checking
>>>>> for updates not realizing it's
>>>>>
>>>>> Kopete instead of a Yahoo program.
>>>>>
>>>> Wireshark will show you the raw packet data, and decode only a little of
>>>> it - enough to identify the general protocol, senders, etc.
>>>> So to understand the packet, you will need to understand the application
>>>> layer protocol - in this case HTTP - yourself as Wireshark won't help
>>>> you there.
>>>>
>>>> But yet, Wireshark, nmap, and nessus security scanner are the tools,
>>>> less so nessus as it really is more of a port scanner/security hole
>>>> finder than a debug tool for applications (it's basically an interface
>>>> for nmap for those purposes).
>>>>
>>> I'm not at home to experiment and I don't use yahoo, but port 5050 is
>>> typically used for mmcc = multi media conference control - does yahoo
>>> offer such a service? It could be a SIP server running there for VoIP
>>> between Yahoo registered users or something similar.
>>>
>>> The http connection could be offered as an alternative proxy
>>> connection to the yahoo IM servers for users who are behind
>>> restrictive firewalls. Have you asked as much in the Yahoo user
>>> groups?
>>>
>>> The fact that the threads continue after kopete has shut down is not
>>> necessarily of concern as was already explained, unless it carries on
>>> and on for a long time and the flow of packets continues. I don't
>>> know how yahoo VoIP works. Did you install some plugin specific for
>>> yahoo services? If it imitates the Skype architecture then it
>>> essentially runs proxies on clients' machines and this could be an
>>> explanation for the traffic.
>>>
>> I don't have VoIP, Skype or that sort of thing here. Here is my Kopete
>> info tho:
>>
>> [ebuild R ] kde-base/kopete-4.4.5-r1 USE="addbookmarks autoreplace
>> contactnotes groupwise handbook highlight history nowlistening pipes
>> privacy ssl statistics texteffect translator urlpicpreview yahoo
>> zeroconf (-aqua) -debug -gadu -jabber -jingle (-kdeenablefinal)
>> (-kdeprefix) -latex -meanwhile -msn -oscar -otr -qq -skype -sms -testbed
>> -v4l2 -webpresence -winpopup" 0 kB
>>
>> Anything there that cold cause a problem?
>>
> No, I can't see anything suspicious, you don't even have skype or v4l2
> enabled, so it is unlikely that it is running some webcam stream (as part of
> VoIP).
>
lol I don't have a webcam even if it was turned on. Sort of funny
about having a camera in my bedroom. o_O
I'm thinking it is Yahoo wanting to upgrade something but not realizing
that I'm not using their client but using kopete. Yahoo isn't the
sharpest tool in the shed you know?
Dale
:-) :-)
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Yahoo and strange traffic.
2010-08-17 21:32 ` Dale
@ 2010-08-18 2:09 ` BRM
2010-08-18 2:18 ` Dale
2010-08-18 2:18 ` Dale
0 siblings, 2 replies; 31+ messages in thread
From: BRM @ 2010-08-18 2:09 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
----- Original Message ----
> From: Dale <rdalek1967@gmail.com>
> Mick wrote:
> > On Tuesday 17 August 2010 21:15:51 Dale wrote:
> >> Mick wrote:
> >>> On 17 August 2010 15:29, BRM<bm_witness@yahoo.com> wrote:
> >>>> ----- Original Message ----
> >>>>> From: Dale<rdalek1967@gmail.com>
> >>>>> Adam Carter wrote:
> >>>>>> Is this easy to do? I have no idea where to start except that
> >>>>>> wireshark is installed.
> >>>>>> Yep, start the capture with Capture -> Interfaces and click on
the
> >>>>>> start
> >>>>> button next to the correct interface, then right click on one of the
> >>>>> packets that is to the yahoo box and choose Decode As set the port
> >>>>> and protocol then apply. You'll
> >>>>> need to understand the semantics of HTTP for it to be of much use tho.
> >>>>> You had me until the last part. No semantics here. lol May see if
> >>>>> I can post a little and see if anyone can figure out what the heck it
> >>>>> is doing. I'm thinking some crazy bug or something. Maybe checking
> >>>>> for updates not realizing it's
> >>>>> Kopete instead of a Yahoo program.
> >>>> Wireshark will show you the raw packet data, and decode only a little of
> >>>> it - enough to identify the general protocol, senders, etc.
> >>>> So to understand the packet, you will need to understand the
application
> >>>> layer protocol - in this case HTTP - yourself as Wireshark won't help
> >>>> you there.
> >>>> But yet, Wireshark, nmap, and nessus security scanner are the tools,
> >>>> less so nessus as it really is more of a port scanner/security hole
> >>>> finder than a debug tool for applications (it's basically an interface
> >>>> for nmap for those purposes).
> >>> I'm not at home to experiment and I don't use yahoo, but port 5050 is
> >>> typically used for mmcc = multi media conference control - does yahoo
> >>> offer such a service? It could be a SIP server running there for VoIP
> >>> between Yahoo registered users or something similar.
> >>> The http connection could be offered as an alternative proxy
> >>> connection to the yahoo IM servers for users who are behind
> >>> restrictive firewalls. Have you asked as much in the Yahoo user
> >>> groups?
> >>> The fact that the threads continue after kopete has shut down is not
> >>> necessarily of concern as was already explained, unless it carries on
> >>> and on for a long time and the flow of packets continues. I don't
> >>> know how yahoo VoIP works. Did you install some plugin specific for
> >>> yahoo services? If it imitates the Skype architecture then it
> >>> essentially runs proxies on clients' machines and this could be an
> >>> explanation for the traffic.
> >> I don't have VoIP, Skype or that sort of thing here. Here is my Kopete
> >> info tho:
> >> [ebuild R ] kde-base/kopete-4.4.5-r1 USE="addbookmarks autoreplace
> >> contactnotes groupwise handbook highlight history nowlistening pipes
> >> privacy ssl statistics texteffect translator urlpicpreview yahoo
> >> zeroconf (-aqua) -debug -gadu -jabber -jingle (-kdeenablefinal)
> >> (-kdeprefix) -latex -meanwhile -msn -oscar -otr -qq -skype -sms -testbed
> >> -v4l2 -webpresence -winpopup" 0 kB
> >> Anything there that cold cause a problem?
> > No, I can't see anything suspicious, you don't even have skype or v4l2
> > enabled, so it is unlikely that it is running some webcam stream (as part
of
> > VoIP).
> I'm thinking it is Yahoo wanting to upgrade something but not realizing
> that I'm not using their client but using kopete. Yahoo isn't the
> sharpest tool in the shed you know?
I doubt that's the case. I use Pidgin with Yahoo, and haven't had that kind of
thing so far as I'm aware.
Ben
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Yahoo and strange traffic.
2010-08-18 2:09 ` BRM
@ 2010-08-18 2:18 ` Dale
2010-08-18 2:18 ` Dale
1 sibling, 0 replies; 31+ messages in thread
From: Dale @ 2010-08-18 2:18 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
BRM wrote:
> ----- Original Message ----
>
>
>> From: Dale<rdalek1967@gmail.com>
>>
>> I'm thinking it is Yahoo wanting to upgrade something but not realizing
>> that I'm not using their client but using kopete. Yahoo isn't the
>> sharpest tool in the shed you know?
>>
> I doubt that's the case. I use Pidgin with Yahoo, and haven't had that kind of
> thing so far as I'm aware.
>
> Ben
>
I did run into that once before. Yahoo was determined to upgrade but I
was using Kopete so things didn't go to well. It was a pop up that I
could disable but it would still start trying to download the new
version. Of course, when I told it to skip the upgrade it stopped the
download. I have not seen any sort of pop up yet with the current issue.
It is weird but it hasn't done it since my earlier post. It will do it
again eventually tho. I'm just waiting so I can get wireshark a hold
of it.
Dale
:-) :-)
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Yahoo and strange traffic.
2010-08-18 2:09 ` BRM
2010-08-18 2:18 ` Dale
@ 2010-08-18 2:18 ` Dale
1 sibling, 0 replies; 31+ messages in thread
From: Dale @ 2010-08-18 2:18 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
BRM wrote:
> ----- Original Message ----
>
>
>> From: Dale<rdalek1967@gmail.com>
>>
>> I'm thinking it is Yahoo wanting to upgrade something but not realizing
>> that I'm not using their client but using kopete. Yahoo isn't the
>> sharpest tool in the shed you know?
>>
> I doubt that's the case. I use Pidgin with Yahoo, and haven't had that kind of
> thing so far as I'm aware.
>
> Ben
>
I did run into that once before. Yahoo was determined to upgrade but I
was using Kopete so things didn't go to well. It was a pop up that I
could disable but it would still start trying to download the new
version. Of course, when I told it to skip the upgrade it stopped the
download. I have not seen any sort of pop up yet with the current issue.
It is weird but it hasn't done it since my earlier post. It will do it
again eventually tho. I'm just waiting so I can get wireshark a hold
of it.
Dale
:-) :-)
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Yahoo and strange traffic.
2010-08-17 14:29 ` BRM
2010-08-17 16:10 ` Mick
@ 2010-08-25 2:36 ` Dale
2010-08-25 8:08 ` Joshua Murphy
1 sibling, 1 reply; 31+ messages in thread
From: Dale @ 2010-08-25 2:36 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
BRM wrote:
> Wireshark will show you the raw packet data, and decode only a little of it -
> enough to identify the general protocol, senders, etc.
> So to understand the packet, you will need to understand the application layer
> protocol - in this case HTTP - yourself as Wireshark won't help you there.
>
> But yet, Wireshark, nmap, and nessus security scanner are the tools, less so
> nessus as it really is more of a port scanner/security hole finder than a debug
> tool for applications (it's basically an interface for nmap for those purposes).
>
> HTH,
>
> Ben
>
>
>
If finally did it again, and is doing it as I type. I captured some of
the traffic with Wireshark. Can someone tell me what to do with it
now? This is one frame of it:
Frame 4 (881 bytes on wire, 881 bytes captured)
Arrival Time: Aug 24, 2010 21:03:35.518314000
[Time delta from previous captured frame: 0.000383000 seconds]
[Time delta from previous displayed frame: 0.000383000 seconds]
[Time since reference or first frame: 0.010995000 seconds]
Frame Number: 4
Frame Length: 881 bytes
Capture Length: 881 bytes
[Frame is marked: False]
[Protocols in frame: eth:ip:tcp:http]
[Coloring Rule Name: HTTP]
[Coloring Rule String: http || tcp.port == 80]
Ethernet II, Src: ArchtekT_81:d5:d3 (00:01:53:81:d5:d3), Dst:
Motorola_aa:96:e4 (00:1d:6b:aa:96:e4)
Destination: Motorola_aa:96:e4 (00:1d:6b:aa:96:e4)
Address: Motorola_aa:96:e4 (00:1d:6b:aa:96:e4)
.... ...0 .... .... .... .... = IG bit: Individual address
(unicast)
.... ..0. .... .... .... .... = LG bit: Globally unique address
(factory default)
Source: ArchtekT_81:d5:d3 (00:01:53:81:d5:d3)
Address: ArchtekT_81:d5:d3 (00:01:53:81:d5:d3)
.... ...0 .... .... .... .... = IG bit: Individual address
(unicast)
.... ..0. .... .... .... .... = LG bit: Globally unique address
(factory default)
Type: IP (0x0800)
Internet Protocol, Src: 192.168.1.2 (192.168.1.2), Dst: 98.136.112.30
(98.136.112.30)
Version: 4
Header length: 20 bytes
Differentiated Services Field: 0x00 (DSCP 0x00: Default; ECN: 0x00)
0000 00.. = Differentiated Services Codepoint: Default (0x00)
.... ..0. = ECN-Capable Transport (ECT): 0
.... ...0 = ECN-CE: 0
Total Length: 867
Identification: 0xe5fb (58875)
Flags: 0x02 (Don't Fragment)
0.. = Reserved bit: Not Set
.1. = Don't fragment: Set
..0 = More fragments: Not Set
Fragment offset: 0
Time to live: 64
Protocol: TCP (0x06)
Header checksum: 0xbd48 [correct]
[Good: True]
[Bad : False]
Source: 192.168.1.2 (192.168.1.2)
Destination: 98.136.112.30 (98.136.112.30)
Transmission Control Protocol, Src Port: 43281 (43281), Dst Port: http
(80), Seq: 0, Ack: 1, Len: 815
Source port: 43281 (43281)
Destination port: http (80)
[Stream index: 1]
Sequence number: 0 (relative sequence number)
[Next sequence number: 815 (relative sequence number)]
Acknowledgement number: 1 (relative ack number)
Header length: 32 bytes
Flags: 0x18 (PSH, ACK)
0... .... = Congestion Window Reduced (CWR): Not set
.0.. .... = ECN-Echo: Not set
..0. .... = Urgent: Not set
...1 .... = Acknowledgement: Set
.... 1... = Push: Set
.... .0.. = Reset: Not set
.... ..0. = Syn: Not set
.... ...0 = Fin: Not set
Window size: 92
Checksum: 0x0d09 [validation disabled]
[Good Checksum: False]
[Bad Checksum: False]
Options: (12 bytes)
NOP
NOP
Timestamps: TSval 177975147, TSecr 3960038659
[SEQ/ACK analysis]
[Number of bytes in flight: 815]
Hypertext Transfer Protocol
GET /v1/displayImage/custom/yahoo/<screen name was here>?redirect=0
HTTP/1.1\r\n
[Expert Info (Chat/Sequence): GET
/v1/displayImage/custom/yahoo/<screen name was here>?redirect=0
HTTP/1.1\r\n]
[Message: GET /v1/displayImage/custom/yahoo/<screen name
was here>?redirect=0 HTTP/1.1\r\n]
[Severity level: Chat]
[Group: Sequence]
Request Method: GET
Request URI: /v1/displayImage/custom/yahoo/<screen name was
here>?redirect=0
Request Version: HTTP/1.1
Host: rest-img.msg.yahoo.com\r\n
Connection: close\r\n
User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (compatible; Konqueror/4.4; Linux
2.6.30-gentoo-r8; X11; i686; en_US) KHTML/4.4.5 (like Gecko)\r\n
Accept: text/html, image/jpeg;q=0.9, image/png;q=0.9, text/*;q=0.9,
image/*;q=0.9, */*;q=0.8\r\n
Accept-Encoding: x-gzip, x-deflate, gzip, deflate\r\n
Accept-Charset: iso-8859-1, utf-8;q=0.5, *;q=0.5\r\n
Accept-Language: en-US, en\r\n
[truncated] Cookie: B=ailkv295qsqnr&b=3&s=dn;
Y=v=1&n=bt77n8119ils3&l=30b4a_rzwx/o&p=m2316qt013000000&jb=16|47|&r=eg&lg=en-US&intl=us&np=1;
T=z=b/fcMBbF1cMBqnoHCK8Lm6qNDAxBjU0NDE0MjVPMzI-&a=YAE&sk=DAAgQw54KM2VAc&ks=EAAQtPQ3LsapOyL9MIqyK3.8
\r\n
No. Time Source Destination Protocol
Info
5 0.152339 98.136.112.30 192.168.1.2
HTTP HTTP/1.1 401 Authorization Required (text/html)
I changed the screen name to protect the innocent. She is a red head
with attitude. Anyway, looking at more than one frame here, it looks
like it is trying to get info, image perhaps, for that contact but it
fails so it keeps trying. Been going at it for half hour or more so
far. It looks to me like Yahoo would eventually say "bugger off"!! LOL
I remember that Yahoo removed images and some kind of profile thingy a
while back. Could that be what it is trying to find but that no longer
exists?
Thoughts?
Dale
:-) :-)
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Yahoo and strange traffic.
2010-08-25 2:36 ` Dale
@ 2010-08-25 8:08 ` Joshua Murphy
2010-08-25 9:58 ` Dale
0 siblings, 1 reply; 31+ messages in thread
From: Joshua Murphy @ 2010-08-25 8:08 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On Tue, Aug 24, 2010 at 10:36 PM, Dale <rdalek1967@gmail.com> wrote:
> BRM wrote:
>>
>> Wireshark will show you the raw packet data, and decode only a little of
>> it -
>> enough to identify the general protocol, senders, etc.
>> So to understand the packet, you will need to understand the application
>> layer
>> protocol - in this case HTTP - yourself as Wireshark won't help you there.
>>
>> But yet, Wireshark, nmap, and nessus security scanner are the tools, less
>> so
>> nessus as it really is more of a port scanner/security hole finder than a
>> debug
>> tool for applications (it's basically an interface for nmap for those
>> purposes).
>>
>> HTH,
>>
>> Ben
>>
>>
>>
>
> If finally did it again, and is doing it as I type. I captured some of the
> traffic with Wireshark. Can someone tell me what to do with it now? This
> is one frame of it:
>
> Frame 4 (881 bytes on wire, 881 bytes captured)
> Arrival Time: Aug 24, 2010 21:03:35.518314000
> [Time delta from previous captured frame: 0.000383000 seconds]
> [Time delta from previous displayed frame: 0.000383000 seconds]
> [Time since reference or first frame: 0.010995000 seconds]
> Frame Number: 4
> Frame Length: 881 bytes
> Capture Length: 881 bytes
> [Frame is marked: False]
> [Protocols in frame: eth:ip:tcp:http]
> [Coloring Rule Name: HTTP]
> [Coloring Rule String: http || tcp.port == 80]
> Ethernet II, Src: ArchtekT_81:d5:d3 (00:01:53:81:d5:d3), Dst:
> Motorola_aa:96:e4 (00:1d:6b:aa:96:e4)
> Destination: Motorola_aa:96:e4 (00:1d:6b:aa:96:e4)
> Address: Motorola_aa:96:e4 (00:1d:6b:aa:96:e4)
> .... ...0 .... .... .... .... = IG bit: Individual address (unicast)
> .... ..0. .... .... .... .... = LG bit: Globally unique address
> (factory default)
> Source: ArchtekT_81:d5:d3 (00:01:53:81:d5:d3)
> Address: ArchtekT_81:d5:d3 (00:01:53:81:d5:d3)
> .... ...0 .... .... .... .... = IG bit: Individual address (unicast)
> .... ..0. .... .... .... .... = LG bit: Globally unique address
> (factory default)
> Type: IP (0x0800)
> Internet Protocol, Src: 192.168.1.2 (192.168.1.2), Dst: 98.136.112.30
> (98.136.112.30)
> Version: 4
> Header length: 20 bytes
> Differentiated Services Field: 0x00 (DSCP 0x00: Default; ECN: 0x00)
> 0000 00.. = Differentiated Services Codepoint: Default (0x00)
> .... ..0. = ECN-Capable Transport (ECT): 0
> .... ...0 = ECN-CE: 0
> Total Length: 867
> Identification: 0xe5fb (58875)
> Flags: 0x02 (Don't Fragment)
> 0.. = Reserved bit: Not Set
> .1. = Don't fragment: Set
> ..0 = More fragments: Not Set
> Fragment offset: 0
> Time to live: 64
> Protocol: TCP (0x06)
> Header checksum: 0xbd48 [correct]
> [Good: True]
> [Bad : False]
> Source: 192.168.1.2 (192.168.1.2)
> Destination: 98.136.112.30 (98.136.112.30)
> Transmission Control Protocol, Src Port: 43281 (43281), Dst Port: http (80),
> Seq: 0, Ack: 1, Len: 815
> Source port: 43281 (43281)
> Destination port: http (80)
> [Stream index: 1]
> Sequence number: 0 (relative sequence number)
> [Next sequence number: 815 (relative sequence number)]
> Acknowledgement number: 1 (relative ack number)
> Header length: 32 bytes
> Flags: 0x18 (PSH, ACK)
> 0... .... = Congestion Window Reduced (CWR): Not set
> .0.. .... = ECN-Echo: Not set
> ..0. .... = Urgent: Not set
> ...1 .... = Acknowledgement: Set
> .... 1... = Push: Set
> .... .0.. = Reset: Not set
> .... ..0. = Syn: Not set
> .... ...0 = Fin: Not set
> Window size: 92
> Checksum: 0x0d09 [validation disabled]
> [Good Checksum: False]
> [Bad Checksum: False]
> Options: (12 bytes)
> NOP
> NOP
> Timestamps: TSval 177975147, TSecr 3960038659
> [SEQ/ACK analysis]
> [Number of bytes in flight: 815]
> Hypertext Transfer Protocol
> GET /v1/displayImage/custom/yahoo/<screen name was here>?redirect=0
> HTTP/1.1\r\n
> [Expert Info (Chat/Sequence): GET
> /v1/displayImage/custom/yahoo/<screen name was here>?redirect=0
> HTTP/1.1\r\n]
> [Message: GET /v1/displayImage/custom/yahoo/<screen name was
> here>?redirect=0 HTTP/1.1\r\n]
> [Severity level: Chat]
> [Group: Sequence]
> Request Method: GET
> Request URI: /v1/displayImage/custom/yahoo/<screen name was
> here>?redirect=0
> Request Version: HTTP/1.1
> Host: rest-img.msg.yahoo.com\r\n
> Connection: close\r\n
> User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (compatible; Konqueror/4.4; Linux
> 2.6.30-gentoo-r8; X11; i686; en_US) KHTML/4.4.5 (like Gecko)\r\n
> Accept: text/html, image/jpeg;q=0.9, image/png;q=0.9, text/*;q=0.9,
> image/*;q=0.9, */*;q=0.8\r\n
> Accept-Encoding: x-gzip, x-deflate, gzip, deflate\r\n
> Accept-Charset: iso-8859-1, utf-8;q=0.5, *;q=0.5\r\n
> Accept-Language: en-US, en\r\n
> [truncated] Cookie: B=ailkv295qsqnr&b=3&s=dn;
> Y=v=1&n=bt77n8119ils3&l=30b4a_rzwx/o&p=m2316qt013000000&jb=16|47|&r=eg&lg=en-US&intl=us&np=1;
> T=z=b/fcMBbF1cMBqnoHCK8Lm6qNDAxBjU0NDE0MjVPMzI-&a=YAE&sk=DAAgQw54KM2VAc&ks=EAAQtPQ3LsapOyL9MIqyK3.8
> \r\n
>
> No. Time Source Destination Protocol
> Info
> 5 0.152339 98.136.112.30 192.168.1.2 HTTP
> HTTP/1.1 401 Authorization Required (text/html)
>
>
> I changed the screen name to protect the innocent. She is a red head with
> attitude. Anyway, looking at more than one frame here, it looks like it is
> trying to get info, image perhaps, for that contact but it fails so it keeps
> trying. Been going at it for half hour or more so far. It looks to me like
> Yahoo would eventually say "bugger off"!! LOL
>
> I remember that Yahoo removed images and some kind of profile thingy a while
> back. Could that be what it is trying to find but that no longer exists?
>
> Thoughts?
>
> Dale
>
> :-) :-)
Well, glancing at the GET request it's making there, as well as the
API google points me to when I look it up...
http://developer.yahoo.com/messenger/guide/ch03s02.html#d4e4628
You're right that it's after an image from their profile, but the
cause of the failure appears to be related to some sort of credentials
Yahoo wants the messenger to provide. You might poke Kopete's
bugtracker to see if they've a related bug on file already, and if
they don't, throw one their way.
The API Yahoo appears to be using there (based on a response I got
back in poking lightly) is, or is based on, OAuth, which according to
this:
http://oauth.net/core/1.0/#http_codes
specifies that a request should give a 401 response (Authorization
Required vs Unauthorized is purely the choice of phrase used in the
program decoding the numerical code, i.e. wireshark in your example of
it there) in the following cases:
HTTP 401 Unauthorized
* Invalid Consumer Key
* Invalid / expired Token
* Invalid signature
* Invalid / used nonce
Yahoo, essentially, *does* give a "bugger off"!! with that response,
but Kopete simply takes it, considers it a brief instant, then decides
"Maybe the answer will change if I try again *now*!"... at which point
it proceeds to introduce its proverbial cranium to the proverbial
brick and mortar vertical surface one might term "the wall."
Repeatedly.
--
Poison [BLX]
Joshua M. Murphy
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Yahoo and strange traffic.
2010-08-25 8:08 ` Joshua Murphy
@ 2010-08-25 9:58 ` Dale
2010-08-25 13:21 ` BRM
0 siblings, 1 reply; 31+ messages in thread
From: Dale @ 2010-08-25 9:58 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
Joshua Murphy wrote:
> Well, glancing at the GET request it's making there, as well as the
> API google points me to when I look it up...
>
> http://developer.yahoo.com/messenger/guide/ch03s02.html#d4e4628
>
> You're right that it's after an image from their profile, but the
> cause of the failure appears to be related to some sort of credentials
> Yahoo wants the messenger to provide. You might poke Kopete's
> bugtracker to see if they've a related bug on file already, and if
> they don't, throw one their way.
>
> The API Yahoo appears to be using there (based on a response I got
> back in poking lightly) is, or is based on, OAuth, which according to
> this:
>
> http://oauth.net/core/1.0/#http_codes
>
> specifies that a request should give a 401 response (Authorization
> Required vs Unauthorized is purely the choice of phrase used in the
> program decoding the numerical code, i.e. wireshark in your example of
> it there) in the following cases:
>
> HTTP 401 Unauthorized
> * Invalid Consumer Key
> * Invalid / expired Token
> * Invalid signature
> * Invalid / used nonce
>
> Yahoo, essentially, *does* give a "bugger off"!! with that response,
> but Kopete simply takes it, considers it a brief instant, then decides
> "Maybe the answer will change if I try again *now*!"... at which point
> it proceeds to introduce its proverbial cranium to the proverbial
> brick and mortar vertical surface one might term "the wall."
> Repeatedly.
>
>
I was sort of figuring that it was trying to get something and Yahoo
wasn't liking it. At least now we know for sure.
I went to bug.kde and searched but I didn't see anything. Of course,
I'm not really sure what the heck to look for since I don't know what is
failing, other than Kopete.
Thanks.
Dale
:-) :-)
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Yahoo and strange traffic.
2010-08-25 9:58 ` Dale
@ 2010-08-25 13:21 ` BRM
2010-08-25 13:57 ` Joshua Murphy
0 siblings, 1 reply; 31+ messages in thread
From: BRM @ 2010-08-25 13:21 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
----- Original Message ----
> Joshua Murphy wrote:
> > Well, glancing at the GET request it's making there, as well as the
> > API google points me to when I look it up...
> >
> > http://developer.yahoo.com/messenger/guide/ch03s02.html#d4e4628
> >
> > You're right that it's after an image from their profile, but the
> > cause of the failure appears to be related to some sort of credentials
> > Yahoo wants the messenger to provide. You might poke Kopete's
> > bugtracker to see if they've a related bug on file already, and if
> > they don't, throw one their way.
> >
> > The API Yahoo appears to be using there (based on a response I got
> > back in poking lightly) is, or is based on, OAuth, which according to
> > this:
> >
> > http://oauth.net/core/1.0/#http_codes
> >
> > specifies that a request should give a 401 response (Authorization
> > Required vs Unauthorized is purely the choice of phrase used in the
> > program decoding the numerical code, i.e. wireshark in your example of
> > it there) in the following cases:
> >
> > HTTP 401 Unauthorized
> > * Invalid Consumer Key
> > * Invalid / expired Token
> > * Invalid signature
> > * Invalid / used nonce
> >
> > Yahoo, essentially, *does* give a "bugger off"!! with that response,
> > but Kopete simply takes it, considers it a brief instant, then decides
> > "Maybe the answer will change if I try again *now*!"... at which point
> > it proceeds to introduce its proverbial cranium to the proverbial
> > brick and mortar vertical surface one might term "the wall."
> > Repeatedly.
> >
> >
>
> I was sort of figuring that it was trying to get something and Yahoo
> wasn't liking it. At least now we know for sure.
>
> I went to bug.kde and searched but I didn't see anything. Of course,
> I'm not really sure what the heck to look for since I don't know what is
> failing, other than Kopete.
Best bet would probably be to check with the Kopete devs on IRC or mailing list
(kopete-devel).
Ben
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Yahoo and strange traffic.
2010-08-25 13:21 ` BRM
@ 2010-08-25 13:57 ` Joshua Murphy
2010-08-25 22:34 ` Dale
0 siblings, 1 reply; 31+ messages in thread
From: Joshua Murphy @ 2010-08-25 13:57 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
On Wed, Aug 25, 2010 at 9:21 AM, BRM <bm_witness@yahoo.com> wrote:
> ----- Original Message ----
>
>> Joshua Murphy wrote:
>> > Well, glancing at the GET request it's making there, as well as the
>> > API google points me to when I look it up...
>> >
>> > http://developer.yahoo.com/messenger/guide/ch03s02.html#d4e4628
>> >
>> > You're right that it's after an image from their profile, but the
>> > cause of the failure appears to be related to some sort of credentials
>> > Yahoo wants the messenger to provide. You might poke Kopete's
>> > bugtracker to see if they've a related bug on file already, and if
>> > they don't, throw one their way.
>> >
>> > The API Yahoo appears to be using there (based on a response I got
>> > back in poking lightly) is, or is based on, OAuth, which according to
>> > this:
>> >
>> > http://oauth.net/core/1.0/#http_codes
>> >
>> > specifies that a request should give a 401 response (Authorization
>> > Required vs Unauthorized is purely the choice of phrase used in the
>> > program decoding the numerical code, i.e. wireshark in your example of
>> > it there) in the following cases:
>> >
>> > HTTP 401 Unauthorized
>> > * Invalid Consumer Key
>> > * Invalid / expired Token
>> > * Invalid signature
>> > * Invalid / used nonce
>> >
>> > Yahoo, essentially, *does* give a "bugger off"!! with that response,
>> > but Kopete simply takes it, considers it a brief instant, then decides
>> > "Maybe the answer will change if I try again *now*!"... at which point
>> > it proceeds to introduce its proverbial cranium to the proverbial
>> > brick and mortar vertical surface one might term "the wall."
>> > Repeatedly.
>> >
>> >
>>
>> I was sort of figuring that it was trying to get something and Yahoo
>> wasn't liking it. At least now we know for sure.
>>
>> I went to bug.kde and searched but I didn't see anything. Of course,
>> I'm not really sure what the heck to look for since I don't know what is
>> failing, other than Kopete.
>
> Best bet would probably be to check with the Kopete devs on IRC or mailing list
> (kopete-devel).
>
> Ben
Yep, but... just from a glance at their bug tracker and their commits
list... they made quite a few changes to the Yahoo plugin's handling
of avatars and such in January that're in 4.4... so their go-to answer
on Yahoo avatar related issues seems to be "Try it on 4.4, then come
back if it's still broken."
So... to save a little time and effort when that answer's thrown
around... might be best to test with that. I don't have QT or anything
that depends on it on any of my boxes (the only box I actually have X
on right now's my netbook, so adding's not even a feasable option) and
my yahoo account went dead a few years ago, so I'm not much use for
testing.
--
Poison [BLX]
Joshua M. Murphy
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Yahoo and strange traffic.
2010-08-25 13:57 ` Joshua Murphy
@ 2010-08-25 22:34 ` Dale
0 siblings, 0 replies; 31+ messages in thread
From: Dale @ 2010-08-25 22:34 UTC (permalink / raw
To: gentoo-user
Joshua Murphy wrote:
> Yep, but... just from a glance at their bug tracker and their commits
> list... they made quite a few changes to the Yahoo plugin's handling
> of avatars and such in January that're in 4.4... so their go-to answer
> on Yahoo avatar related issues seems to be "Try it on 4.4, then come
> back if it's still broken."
>
> So... to save a little time and effort when that answer's thrown
> around... might be best to test with that. I don't have QT or anything
> that depends on it on any of my boxes (the only box I actually have X
> on right now's my netbook, so adding's not even a feasable option) and
> my yahoo account went dead a few years ago, so I'm not much use for
> testing.
>
>
Then I guess they would have to look at the bug report then.
[ebuild R ] kde-base/kopete-4.4.5-r1 USE="addbookmarks autoreplace
contactnotes groupwise handbook highlight history nowlistening pipes
privacy ssl statistics texteffect translator urlpicpreview yahoo
zeroconf (-aqua) -debug -gadu -jabber -jingle (-kdeenablefinal)
(-kdeprefix) -latex -meanwhile -msn -oscar -otr -qq -skype -sms -testbed
-v4l2 -webpresence -winpopup"
Since I am on 4.4.5 already, I am using their preferred version. My
current fix, just close Kopete. I'll see if that keeps it from doing
this. lol I bet that works too.
Maybe 4.5.* will be better.
Dale
:-) :-)
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 31+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2010-08-25 22:35 UTC | newest]
Thread overview: 31+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2010-08-15 20:34 [gentoo-user] Yahoo and strange traffic Dale
2010-08-15 20:55 ` Paul Hartman
2010-08-15 21:18 ` BRM
2010-08-15 21:35 ` Dale
2010-08-15 22:25 ` Peter Humphrey
2010-08-15 22:48 ` Dale
2010-08-15 21:29 ` Alan McKinnon
2010-08-16 22:55 ` Dale
2010-08-16 23:39 ` Adam Carter
2010-08-17 1:20 ` Dale
2010-08-17 1:32 ` Adam Carter
2010-08-17 5:46 ` Dale
2010-08-17 6:09 ` Adam Carter
2010-08-17 10:23 ` Dale
2010-08-17 11:15 ` Jake Moe
2010-08-17 11:26 ` Dale
2010-08-17 14:29 ` BRM
2010-08-17 16:10 ` Mick
2010-08-17 20:15 ` Dale
2010-08-17 21:11 ` Mick
2010-08-17 21:32 ` Dale
2010-08-18 2:09 ` BRM
2010-08-18 2:18 ` Dale
2010-08-18 2:18 ` Dale
2010-08-25 2:36 ` Dale
2010-08-25 8:08 ` Joshua Murphy
2010-08-25 9:58 ` Dale
2010-08-25 13:21 ` BRM
2010-08-25 13:57 ` Joshua Murphy
2010-08-25 22:34 ` Dale
2010-08-15 21:32 ` Mick
This is a public inbox, see mirroring instructions
for how to clone and mirror all data and code used for this inbox