![]() ![]() Traceroute: Warning: has multiple addresses using 76.223.92.165 Thank you for your patience and all the debugging so far! I recognize some of this stuff can be more revealing than you may want to share publicly you can also share this information with me directly at my-first-name at signal dot org. This is a stretch, but are comfortable sharing packet captures (or, if you feel you have the expertise, your own analysis of packet captures) to see if we can figure out where things are going wrong? We'd be looking for ICMP "destination reachable" and "fragmentation needed" (types 3 and 4 respectively) packets-or the absence thereof-and any un-ACKed TCP packets.Are you comfortable sharing both IPv4 and IPv6 traceroutes to ?. ![]() What was your initial MTU before you opted for 1492?.With that in mind, for those of you for whom an MTU adjustment helps, I have a few follow-up questions: ![]() I'm wondering if there's some common piece of network hardware filtering out ICMP somewhere, though the geographic distribution of people reporting this problem is surprising. I think the thread only needs a good flatpak suggestion.Hi, folks! I'm Jon from Signal's server engineering team, and I wanted to let you all know that we're looking into the path MTU discovery angle seems very interesting, and I'm asking folks in some other threads to try the same to see if it's universal. One could also construct that simos does know how to solve this in apt but not necessarily for all cases in flatpak. But actually the apt way is the one which is better for most people out of the box. So I agree one could construct that simos does push apt rather than flatpak. extra need for configuration as opposed to apt). And does gnome-software work for KDE (or other desktop environments)? And where to put the folders?Īnd also the Signal flatpak is not an official one, so some users might prefer to get the official packages NB: i mostly run snaps/flatpaks only without X access so those can not spy effortless on one another but that was a moving target in the recent past - not sure if the snap worked without X or not but for both flatpak and snap systems it needs different configuration to prevent the access (i.e. I just got “bitten” on my debian system that flatpak auto-updates only work with gnome-software. I think going the apt way is actually more helpful to most people, because they can be assumed to know how apt works.Īnd your answer could have been better by actually giving the commands to install flatpak and gnome-software and making sure the configuration fits (or linking an article to do that). The debian suggestion is one way to install Signal and I agree I personally would rather go the flatpak as way.īut coming from a vanilla ubuntu (or other OS which does not set up flatpak from the start) installing and configuring Signal and other necessary packages etc to run via flatpak is more complicated. ![]() Edit: oh, sorry I partly misunderstood you post on first reading so here a better response ![]()
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