As mentioned above, it appears this is a duplicate of another issue, though that issue specifically mentions webrick and a remote desktop connection, neither of which was I looking for, as I didn't know it was specific to webrick.
So I think it should be noted that this is NOT a misconfiguration of the virtual machine or BIOS settings or anything like that. This is strictly a webrick issue. Other services work just fine if they aren't trying to do reverse DNS lookups.
The problem stems from Webrick's default setting to try and do a reverse DNS lookup, which has issues when the lookup fails, as it tends to do consistently for me on my local machine.
There are a few ways to fix this.
Hack /etc/hosts
The first is to hack /etc/hosts
so your client machine has an entry. Hacking /etc/hosts
is semi-advanced, but basically amounts to figuring out what you host machine's IP address is and adding a line to your /etc/hosts
file. This requires root-level permissions.
- Get your IP address - this will be seen in the Rails console when you make a request, and will look something like this:
Started GET "/" for 10.0.2.2 at Tue Aug 21 11:33:23 -0700 2012
- in this case, the IP address is 10.0.2.2.
- Add a line to
/etc/hosts
to identify that IP address: 10.0.2.2 Nerdmaster
All should be well!
Disable daemon
This seemed to work for some ubuntu users:
service avahi-daemon stop
Given you're killing a service, there may be other apps which have issues. This is probably best as a temporary measure, not a permanent one, but I know very little about the service, so avoid taking my word for this one :)
This also requires root-level permissions.
Hack webrick
I really despise hacking core Ruby code that I have to re-hack on every update, but this is what a lot of people do:
- Find your
webrick/config.rb
- It may be in
/usr/lib/ruby/[version]/webrick/config.rb
if you're running a normal Ruby
- If you use RVM, you'll have to find the appropriate ruby directory, e.g.
/home/username/.rvm/rubies/[version]/lib/ruby/[version]/webrick/config.rb
- I don't know jack about other options like rbenv
- Worst-case scenario, try
find / -type d -name "webrick"
- Edit in your favorite editor (obviously this would be vim)
- Look for
:DoNotReverseLookup => nil
.
- Change
nil
to true
.
- If you don't see this setting, you may have to use the
/etc/hosts
hack above.
If you aren't using rvm or something similar, this will require root-level permissions.
Don't use webrick
I don't think this is a real solution, as webrick is sometimes your best (or at least quickest) option, but you can try a different server. Thin and mongrel seem to have good support and, based on what others with this problem are saying, appear not to do a reverse DNS lookup. I haven't tried these approaches, so I don't know for sure how good they are.
This can be done without root-level permissions.
DoNotReverseLookup
option totrue
.