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I am trying to use an API that connects to a remote server in C, but I keep having the following error message:

log_message: 15:13:19.489 I [ap:1388] Connecting to AP A3.spotify.com:4070

log_message: 15:13:19.490 E [ap:1324] AP Socket Error: Hostname not found (11001)

log_message: 15:13:19.491 E [ap:3396] Connection error:  4

log_message: 15:13:19.491 I [ap:1388] Connecting to AP A1.spotify.com:80

As you can see with the dates, the error message is instantaneous, so I think something is blocking the messages locally on my computer.

Here is the TCP stream I captured with Wireshark:

30  1.682802    MyLocalIp   193.182.8.15    HTTP    Continuation or non-HTTP traffic
31  1.702236    193.182.8.15    MyLocalIp   HTTP    Continuation or non-HTTP traffic
33  1.901706    MyLocalIp   193.182.8.15    TCP 50222 > http [ACK] Seq=12 Ack=12 Win=251 Len=0

So, according to Wireshark, the first message sent by my computer has an incorrect Header checksum.

I know the host is correct, because when I use the same C API in Java with JNA, I have the following result:

log_message() called:15:46:48.718 I [ap:1388] Connecting to AP A1.spotify.com:4070

log_message() called:15:46:53.769 E [ap:1324] AP Socket Error: Undefined Error 0x4E20 (20000)

log_message() called:15:46:53.770 E [ap:3396] Connection error:  117

log_message() called:15:46:53.770 I [ap:1388] Connecting to AP A2.spotify.com:80

log_message() called:15:46:53.789 I [ap:938] Connected to AP: 193.182.8.12:80

So, here the connection fails on port 4070, which is normal because it is blocked by the company's firewall, and then it succeeds on port 80.

And here is the Wireshark capture for the Java version:

104 6.296125    MyLocalIp   193.182.8.15    TCP 50339 > http [SYN] Seq=0 Win=8192 Len=0 MSS=1460 WS=8 SACK_PERM=1
107 6.575599    193.182.8.15    MyLocalIp   TCP http > 50339 [SYN, ACK] Seq=0 Ack=1 Win=5840 Len=0 MSS=1460 SACK_PERM=1 WS=7
108 6.575732    MyLocalIp   193.182.8.15    TCP 50339 > http [ACK] Seq=1 Ack=1 Win=65536 Len=0
109 6.582627    MyLocalIp   193.182.8.15    HTTP    Continuation or non-HTTP traffic
110 6.614789    193.182.8.15    MyLocalIp   TCP http > 50339 [ACK] Seq=1 Ack=512 Win=6912 Len=0
112 6.714201    193.182.8.15    MyLocalIp   HTTP    Continuation or non-HTTP traffic
113 6.722057    MyLocalIp   193.182.8.15    HTTP    Continuation or non-HTTP traffic
115 6.746484    193.182.8.15    MyLocalIp   TCP http > 50339 [ACK] Seq=500 Ack=677 Win=8064 Len=0
116 6.750938    193.182.8.15    MyLocalIp   HTTP    Continuation or non-HTTP traffic
117 6.751093    MyLocalIp   193.182.8.15    HTTP    Continuation or non-HTTP traffic
118 6.985366    193.182.8.15    MyLocalIp   HTTP    [TCP Retransmission] Continuation or non-HTTP traffic
119 6.985416    MyLocalIp   193.182.8.15    TCP [TCP Dup ACK 117#1] 50339 > http [ACK] Seq=787 Ack=544 Win=65024 Len=0 SLE=500 SRE=544
121 7.013666    193.182.8.15    MyLocalIp   HTTP    Continuation or non-HTTP traffic
124 7.213661    MyLocalIp   193.182.8.15    TCP 50339 > http [ACK] Seq=787 Ack=1803 Win=65536 Len=0
132 7.703708    MyLocalIp   193.182.8.15    HTTP    [TCP Retransmission] Continuation or non-HTTP traffic
133 7.721265    193.182.8.15    MyLocalIp   HTTP    Continuation or non-HTTP traffic

I tried adding the IP 193.182.8.15 in my System32/drivers/etc/hosts file for the hostname A1.spotify.com, A2.spotify.com and A3.spotify.com, but it didnt change anything.

I shut down the Windows firewall and antivirus, it didn't help either.

I tried running this at home without company proxy and firewall, but it was the same (except that on the Java version the service was able to connect on port 4070)

Any idea?

Thanks!

3 Answers 3

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Incorrect header checksums are not critical. Lots of software relies on the hardware re-computation of header checksums so they rarely pre-compute the header checksum in the CPU. Since wireshark grabs the information before it goes to the chip that sends it out the wire, wireshark will report incorrect header checksums with some frequency.

Note that the original error was dealing with host A3, but some of your "proof" that machines were reachable was demonstrated with hosts A1 and A2. Odds are good that these hosts do not share the same IP address, so I would be careful about "setting them all to X.X.X.X" in the hosts file.

Also note that bind clients can be configured to skip over host file entries. I'm not sure that's the case here, but I would look to adding a public name server to the resolv.conf file (or equivalent) and see if you get better results. If the machine you ran on "at home" was the same laptop you used "at work" a bad resolv.conf file would have "traveled with you".

Good luck

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  • windows/system32/drivers/etc/hosts is the equivalent to "resolv.conf" And he says he tried it.
    – selbie
    Mar 13, 2011 at 14:51
  • A host file is not the equivalent to a resolv.conf file. One (the host file) resolves the hostname to an ip address. The other (resolv.conf) configures which dns servers will be queried and which domain names might be appended to the "starting" hostname.
    – Edwin Buck
    Mar 14, 2011 at 17:16
  • Thank you for the note on Wireshark incorrect header checksums. I don't believe this is a DNS problem, as the hostname is correctly resolved when the API is used through the JVM, and as I am able to ping it.
    – nbarraille
    Mar 17, 2011 at 1:05
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You didn't say which networking library you are using. Presumably a 3rd party or internal library.
I'm going to take a wild guess, but I bet your networking library expects IP addresses and not DNS names? Have you tried programming your app to just connect to "193.182.8.15" instead of "a3.spotify.com"? If that works, do a gethostbyname call to resolve the DNS name to IP address.

Here's some other things to try

Type this from the command line:

ping a3.spotify.com

If successful, the result will look something like this:

Pinging a3.spotify.com [193.182.8.15] with 32 bytes of data:
Reply from 193.182.8.15: bytes=32 time=79ms TTL=49
Reply from 193.182.8.15: bytes=32 time=79ms TTL=49
Reply from 193.182.8.15: bytes=32 time=79ms TTL=49
Reply from 193.182.8.15: bytes=32 time=79ms TTL=49

Ping statistics for 193.182.8.15:
    Packets: Sent = 4, Received = 4, Lost = 0 (0% loss),
Approximate round trip times in milli-seconds:
    Minimum = 79ms, Maximum = 79ms, Average = 79ms

The output of this program tells me two things.

  1. That a3.spotify.com correctly resolves to 193.182.8.15. No hosts files hacks necessary. (Maybe on your corporate network you do need this).

  2. Since I got valid pings back, that means the host is likely reachable. But some machines are configured not to accept pings, so lack of a ping response it not a definitive answer. What is important to see if ping successfully resolved the hostname.

Now type this from the command line to test connectivity to port 80.

telnet a3.spotify.com 80 (don't have telnet? see below)

Does it "connect" (and jump to a blank screen)? (Press CTRL+] to exit, followed by "quit")

Do the same telnet, except for port 4070.

ping and telnet are quick and dirty ways to test for DNS resolution and IP:port connectivity.

These above commands may not work on your corporate network, because your firewall may require all traffic to go through a proxy. Your browser at work is likely configured to work this way either via auto-detect or by admin install. If this is the case, then your app isn't likely to work on the corporate network - unless your networking library can be configured to use a proxy. (Some network libraries auto-detect or read your browser settings).

To install Telnet Client Click the Start button , click Control Panel, and then click Programs.

Under Programs and Features, click Turn Windows features on or off. If you are prompted for an administrator password or confirmation, type the password or provide confirmation.

In the Windows Features dialog box, select the Telnet Client check box.

Click OK. The installation might take several minutes.

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  • Sorry for not getting back to you earlier. Thank you for your suggestions. I can ping a3.spotify.com (it often resolves to a different machine (last byte of the IP different)). I am also able to connect to it on port 80, but not on port 4070 on my company network. There is no proxy on any network I use.
    – nbarraille
    Mar 17, 2011 at 1:01
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I finally found the solution: Running my program as Administrator solved the problem

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