Quoting John Tate <[email protected]>:

It worked for a while but since rebooting my router now none of my
computers work to access google.com, gmail.com works. Many other sites
are not working, it is very frustrating.

Clients on the wireless also don't work, it is the same problem. I can
ping all the sites I can't access the problem appears to be with HTTP.

Since starting the thread I have changed my pf.conf on advice of other
users to have these lines...
set reassemble yes no-df
match in  on pppoe0 scrub (max-mss 1440 no-df reassemble tcp)

Any more ideas?

On Tue, Oct 1, 2013 at 2:51 AM, John Tate <[email protected]> wrote:
Things are working fine from another one of my computers, it must be
something to do with the computer I'm using. Sorry about that
everyone.

On Tue, Oct 1, 2013 at 2:48 AM, John Tate <[email protected]> wrote:
Yeah I am using my lan not the wlan. I've not got to even seeing if
the wlan even works yet, though it used to with that configuration.
The worst thing is the hosts occasionally manage to work for a split
second, and stop again. I'm certain there is nothing wrong with my ISP
unless they have trouble with this particular setup. It worked for
months with no problems, and then they started happening.

On Tue, Oct 1, 2013 at 2:44 AM, Luis Coronado <[email protected]> wrote:
Im afraid I only read the last post of the email thread about
match/scrub/mtu. That is why I suggested the set option in my previous
email.

The fact that your router can contact the destination hosts without issues
but not the internal hosts forces me to believe that there isnt, at least at
this stage a mtu related problem.

I see that you serve your LAN over athn0. You can find out if there are
issues with your wireless setup by running ifconfig athn0 debug and watching
/var/log/messages. athn0 power savings fix was submitted almost a year ago
but how knows you could be the happy owner of a particular card that doesnt
work as expected.

Have you tried running your lan from the ethernet card instead?

-luis



On Mon, Sep 30, 2013 at 10:32 AM, John Tate <[email protected]> wrote:

On Tue, Oct 1, 2013 at 2:29 AM, Luis Coronado <[email protected]>
wrote:
> set reassemble yes no-df
>
> I tried using match and scrub rules without luck, but the 'reassemble
> yes
> no-df' solved my problems with the GRE tunnels we use among networks.
>
> Just make sure you dont have set skip on pppoe0
>
> -luis
Just trying this, something got through for a second but once again
queries to google and other sites don't work. It is still unreliable.
>
>
>
> On Mon, Sep 30, 2013 at 10:26 AM, John Tate <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> Well max-mss doesn't seem to help I can still only access gmail and
>> not google.com.au. Also it has become suddenly selective after months
>> with no problem so I wonder if this is the default these days. Still
>> problems.
>>
>> On Tue, Oct 1, 2013 at 2:02 AM, James Shupe <[email protected]>
>> wrote:
>> > On 2013-09-30 10:58, John Tate wrote:
>> >>
>> >> It would help if you told me how to do this...
>> >>
>> >> # ifconfig pppoe max-mms 1400
>> >> ifconfig: max-mms: bad value
>> >> # ifconfig pppoe0 max-mms 1440
>> >> ifconfig: max-mms: bad value
>> >>
>> >
>> > match on $ext scrub (max-mss 1400)
>> >
>> > in /etc/pf.conf
>> >
>> > Also, don't top post.
>> >
>> > --
>> > James Shupe
>> >
>> >
>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> www.johntate.org
>>

Are you using dhcp on fxp0? I thought I noticed log entries where fxp0 did not get the IP address it was requesting for.



Vijay Sankar, M.Eng., P.Eng.
ForeTell Technologies Limited
[email protected]

---------------------------------------------
This message was sent using ForeTell-POST 4.9

Reply via email to