[GNC] Finance::Quotes stopped working for me

Bruno Acklin backlin at gmail.com
Fri Apr 26 12:36:52 EDT 2019


Thanks David,

Does the corresponding curl command work from your other computers as well?
Any suggestions what “coercing” involved in your case?

Best, Bruno

> On Apr 22, 2019, at 6:48 PM, David Carlson <david.carlson.417 at gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> I too use ATT&T Uverse as my ISP and i know they do have some strange settings in their router, but the basic firewall and TCP port settings out of the box are fine for most users without tinkering with pinholes or other firewall settings.  In my neighborhood they now set IPV6 as preferred addressing protocol.  I have several Windows and Linux real or virtual computers including a few with GnuCash 2.6.17 or 19, but I have only managed to coerce one of them to download price quotes, and then only when running in a local desktop but not in a remote terminal.
> 
> I do not know enough about networking to be able to say whether you have a problem with your router or firewall.
> 
> David Carlson 
> 
> 
> On Mon, Apr 22, 2019, 3:16 PM Bruno Acklin <backlin at gmail.com <mailto:backlin at gmail.com>> wrote:
> Wow, thanks all for your thoughts, although unfortunately this remains an unsolved mystery to me!
> 
> Tools/"Price Editor"/"Get Quotes" still works smoothly when I disconnect the ethernet cable to my router (standard ATT Uverse DSL router and configuration with DNS 68.94.156.1 and ..157.1) and use wifi to my neighbors router (cable based), and vice versa not if I reconnect my ethernet.
> 
> [@David] So definitely different ISP, DNS, etc for the two paths.
> 
> [@AC] I did not see any proxy information on my routers broadband status.
> <"LWP apparently will also self report a 500 status if the connection fails for any reason"> I also “interpreted" the 500 error as a sort of timeout error, because the response comes only after a second or two while it is instantaneous with curl or browser.
> 
> [@Ronal, ..] I checked for open TCP ports using loopback address 127.0.0.1 (Is this the right way?). Received identical responses for both paths, including Port 88 (but not 80!).
> 
> In looking at my firewall settings I noticed that “the computer that will host applications through the firewall” is still set to my old Time Machine router (which I assume still runs its own firewall which used to work fine for gnc-fc before). Should that be set to my desktop?
> 
> I am assuming that a server response to an http: call is governed by “outgoing protocol control” rules, and does not need any inbound protocol control enabled, correct? 
> 
> Thanks and best,
> Bruno
> 
> > On Apr 13, 2019, at 12:41 PM, Adrien Monteleone <adrien.monteleone at lusfiber.net <mailto:adrien.monteleone at lusfiber.net>> wrote:
> > 
> > It doesn’t make any sense to me either. But curl works, perl doesn’t. What does that perl script actually do when it tries to pull that URL?
> > 
> > Regards,
> > Adrien
> > 
> >> On Apr 13, 2019, at 9:17 AM, John Ralls <jralls at ceridwen.us <mailto:jralls at ceridwen.us>> wrote:
> >> 
> >> The URL is given several times in the thread, it's http, port 80. That aside, get real: A firewall that blocks a port when perl's LWP is the agent but not when curl or a web browser is?
> >> 
> >> Besides, the request isn't blocked, it's munged so that Yahoo! returns a 500--server error response. So we have to imagine that the router can somehow tell that the packets are coming from curl and not messing with them or perl LWP and messing with them? That's a pretty amazing firewall.
> >> 
> >> Regards,
> >> John Ralls
> >> 
> >>> On Apr 13, 2019, at 2:32 AM, Adrien Monteleone <adrien.monteleone at lusfiber.net <mailto:adrien.monteleone at lusfiber.net>> wrote:
> >>> 
> >>> More likely a blocked port though since the OP said curl works to retrieve the same URL, but not perl. A look at the perl script will probably expose the issue.
> >>> 
> >>> Regards,
> >>> Adrien
> >>> 
> >>>> On Apr 13, 2019, at 4:29 AM, David Carlson <david.carlson.417 at gmail.com <mailto:david.carlson.417 at gmail.com>> wrote:
> >>>> 
> >>>> A different router could also mean a different ISP, a different DNS, and
> >>>> that is just the starting point...
> >>>> 
> >>>> David Carlson
> >>>> 
> > 
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