On 3/15/2016 7:43 AM, Adam Dinwoodie wrote:
> On Tue, Mar 15, 2016 at 02:00:38PM +0300, Andrey Repin wrote:
>> Greetings, Frank Farance!
>>
>>> A little digression, so you understand the background ... The workstation I
>>> am
>>> doing this from is connected to a Verizon router to their FIOS netw
On 15/03/2016 01:45, Frank Farance wrote:
I have been having this problem with "ping". If I "ping" a location
that doesn't exist, then "ping" just hangs and cannot be killed via
"kill -KILL [pid]".
Back to the problem, so when I type
$ ping some.unknown.host
I do not succeed to replicate
On 16.03.2016 08:57, Michael Enright wrote:
On Wed, Mar 16, 2016 at 7:51 AM, cyg Simple wrote:
My ISP for my connection to the WWW is the one that is doing the
inappropriate redirects. I sometime get these even when using VPN to
my
employer's intranet. My ISP also provides phone and TV Cabl
Hi,
On 3/14/16, Frank Farance wrote:
> I have been having this problem with "ping". If I "ping" a location that
> doesn't exist, then "ping" just hangs and cannot be killed via "kill -KILL
> [pid]".
>
> A little digression, so you understand the background ... The workstation I
> am
> doing this
On 17/03/2016 22:10, Frank Farance wrote:
Folks-
Anyway, as we'd say in standardizing the C programming language, this
behavior is a "surprise" ... and we should look to eliminate "surprises".
Again, thank you in advance for your help.
-FF
as mentioned on:
https://cygwin.com/ml/cygwin/
On Wed, Mar 16, 2016 at 7:51 AM, cyg Simple wrote:
>
> My ISP for my connection to the WWW is the one that is doing the
> inappropriate redirects. I sometime get these even when using VPN to my
> employer's intranet. My ISP also provides phone and TV Cable and I'm
> guessing that the accepted pra
Folks-
Thank you for the thoughtful observations, responses, and suggestions, which I
will summarize:
- Suggestion #1: Try different DNS settings not using Verizon.
- Suggestion #2: Try different Verizon configuration.
- Suggestion #3: Try Windows version of ping.
- Observation #4: This should
> If I weren't happy with upstream DNS, I'd go into the router's
> configuration and tell dnsmasq to send its queries to some alternative
> DNS.
Instructions for Verizon customers to opt out of "DNS Assistance" are here:
https://www.verizon.com/support/consumer/internet/opt-out-of-dns-assist
Le
On 3/16/2016 12:56 AM, Kaz Kylheku wrote:
> On 15.03.2016 04:00, Andrey Repin wrote:
>> Greetings, Frank Farance!
>>> So all of this is normal ISP stuff: they actually resolve unknown
>>> addresses to
>>> their own website (which is 90.242.140.21).
>>
>> This is NOT "normal", this is a violation of
On Mar 16, 2016, at 10:07 AM, Lee wrote:
>
> The last time I tried the cygwin ping program it didn't return a
> failure status
It does if you don’t Ctrl-C out of it. So, if you’re using it from a script,
you just ask for one packet:
# ping does.not.exist 1 1
ping: unknown host does.no
Greetings, Kaz Kylheku!
> On 15.03.2016 04:00, Andrey Repin wrote:
>> Greetings, Frank Farance!
>>> So all of this is normal ISP stuff: they actually resolve unknown
>>> addresses to
>>> their own website (which is 90.242.140.21).
>>
>> This is NOT "normal", this is a violation of protocol.
>> W
On 3/16/16, Warren Young wrote:
> On Mar 16, 2016, at 10:07 AM, Lee wrote:
>>
>> The last time I tried the cygwin ping program it didn't return a
>> failure status
>
> It does if you don’t Ctrl-C out of it. So, if you’re using it from a
> script, you just ask for one packet:
>
> # ping does.
On 15.03.2016 04:00, Andrey Repin wrote:
Greetings, Frank Farance!
So all of this is normal ISP stuff: they actually resolve unknown
addresses to
their own website (which is 90.242.140.21).
This is NOT "normal", this is a violation of protocol.
Whoever encounter such behavior should call thei
On Mar 14, 2016, at 6:45 PM, Frank Farance wrote:
>
> I have been having this problem with "ping". If I "ping" a location that
> doesn't exist, then "ping" just hangs and cannot be killed via "kill -KILL
> [pid]”.
Are you certain that you’re using the Cygwin ping, and not the native Windows
On Tue, Mar 15, 2016 at 02:00:38PM +0300, Andrey Repin wrote:
> Greetings, Frank Farance!
>
> > A little digression, so you understand the background ... The workstation I
> > am
> > doing this from is connected to a Verizon router to their FIOS network.
> > Now the
> > reason I mention this is
Greetings, Frank Farance!
> A little digression, so you understand the background ... The workstation I am
> doing this from is connected to a Verizon router to their FIOS network. Now
> the
> reason I mention this is that the router's DNS (via DHCP to my workstation) is
> 192.168.1.1, which I p
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