Re: routing problem

2021-03-21 Thread Jeremy Ardley
On 22/3/21 5:17 am, Dan Ritter wrote: ghe2001 wrote: There are 2 computers on my LAN. I'll call one Fast and the other Slow. When I, for example, type ping www.cbs.com, Fast pings right away, Slow pauses for about 5 seconds ('time' says that). When I ping something in /etc/hosts, both sta

Re: routing problem

2021-03-21 Thread Dan Ritter
ghe2001 wrote: > There are 2 computers on my LAN. I'll call one Fast and the other Slow. > When I, for example, type ping www.cbs.com, Fast pings right away, Slow > pauses for about 5 seconds ('time' says that). When I ping something in > /etc/hosts, both start right away. On Slow, 'route'

Re: routing problem

2006-05-15 Thread Mihira Fernando
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 wim wrote: > On Sat, May 13, 2006 at 08:43:35PM +0200, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > >>Hi all I have dth fallowing problem.. I have a router with public ip (for >>example 194.10.8.1/30) and my Debian whit eth1 public ip 194.10.8.2/30. >>Everything work

Re: routing problem

2006-05-15 Thread wim
On Sat, May 13, 2006 at 08:43:35PM +0200, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > Hi all I have dth fallowing problem.. I have a router with public ip (for > example 194.10.8.1/30) and my Debian whit eth1 public ip 194.10.8.2/30. > Everything works fine I can ping outside no problem.. but my Debian also fa

Re: routing problem

2006-05-14 Thread Chris
On Sat, 2006-05-13 at 20:43 +0200, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > Hi all I have dth fallowing problem.. I have a router with public ip > (for example 194.10.8.1/30) and my Debian whit eth1 public ip > 194.10.8.2/30. Everything works fine I can ping outside no problem.. > but my Debian also fas eth0

Re: routing problem

2006-05-13 Thread Hugo Vanwoerkom
Roberto C. Sanchez wrote: [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hi all I have dth fallowing problem.. I have a router with public ip (for example 194.10.8.1/30) and my Debian whit eth1 public ip 194.10.8.2/30. Everything works fine I can ping outside no problem.. but my Debian also fas eth0 interface with ip

Re: routing problem

2006-05-13 Thread Roberto C. Sanchez
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > Hi all I have dth fallowing problem.. I have a router with public ip > (for example 194.10.8.1/30) and my Debian whit eth1 public ip > 194.10.8.2/30. Everything works fine I can ping outside no problem.. but > my Debian also fas eth0 interface with ip 192.168.1.1 and i

Re: Routing problem

2006-02-14 Thread Mike Bird
On Tue, 2006-02-14 at 12:14, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > On Mon, 2006-02-13 at 13:43, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > Your network looks like this: > > .--. .---. .---. > | A | | B | | C| > | .2.2 +---+ .2.1 .1.2 +---+ .1.1 .0.6 +--- .0.* > `--' `-

Re: Routing problem

2006-02-14 Thread jb701
On Mon, 2006-02-13 at 13:43, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I cannot get my linux box to act as a router, I'm hoping someone can help. My setup is sarge on a machine with 2 NICs, 192.168.1.2 and 192.168.2.1. I attach 192.168.1.2 to another machine with 2 NICs [192.168.1.1 and 192.168.0.6]. This

Re: Routing problem

2006-02-14 Thread Mike Bird
On Mon, 2006-02-13 at 13:43, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > I cannot get my linux box to act as a router, I'm hoping someone can help. > > My setup is sarge on a machine with 2 NICs, 192.168.1.2 and 192.168.2.1. > > I attach 192.168.1.2 to another machine with 2 NICs [192.168.1.1 and > 192.168.0.6

Re: Routing problem

2006-02-14 Thread Shawn Lamson
On Mon, 13 Feb 2006 21:43:08 + [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > I cannot get my linux box to act as a router, I'm hoping someone can help. > > My setup is sarge on a machine with 2 NICs, 192.168.1.2 and 192.168.2.1. > > I attach 192.168.1.2 to another machine with 2 NICs [192.168.1.1 and > 192.

Re: routing problem

2005-12-20 Thread Lucas Barbuto
On 21/12/05 4:28 AM, Enrique Morfin wrote: All 192.168.1.1 packets MUST go in and out throught eht0. And all 192.168.1.10 packets MUST go in and out throught eth1. How can i tell the routing table this? If both interfaces are on the same subnet, then you aren't routing. Perhaps you should ret

Re: Routing problem with OpenVPN.

2005-05-01 Thread Jiann-Ming Su
On 5/1/05, Franki <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > But this machine cannot ping any address's past the VPN server and that > is what I need to solve. > > > It seems like the VPN server will not accept any packets for IP's that > it doesn't have an exact interface match for, even though it has a route

Re: routing problem

2004-01-12 Thread David Z Maze
"Cosmin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > 1. (*) text/plain ( ) text/html (Please don't post to the list in HTML; plain text is fine.) (Summary: external router machine has external address 82.77.83.33/27, with routable internal network 81.196.166.97/29 and internal NAT network

Re: routing problem

2004-01-11 Thread André Carezia
Cosmin wrote: > [...] > I have received only five ip-s to use on my LAN: 81.196.166.98 - 102 > on netmask 255.255.255.248 but I have 15 computers. The rest of them > use IP-s like 192.168.1.1 to 15 > > I have configured the file /etc/init.d/firewall like this: > > iptables -t nat -I POSTROUTING -s

Re: routing problem

2004-01-09 Thread Gilberto Villani Brito
Do the computers with network 192.168.1.0/24 has gateway 81.196.166.97 So if it has your problem is here. You need use the gateway in the same network of yours computers. Ex: IP 192.168.1.10 GW 192.168.1.1 I recomend to you add a new network card in your server with this IP (192.168.1.1). Hu

Re: Routing Problem

2002-12-11 Thread mb
Doug MacFarlane schreibt: On 11 Dec 2002, 11:57:01, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: On Server (with debian 3.0 ofcourse, kernel 2.4.20 ) has got two network-adapter. The ip's on this adapters are in seperated subnets. NIC A ist the def.gw. The machine is running two webservers (apache). A forwarding

Re: Routing Problem

2002-12-11 Thread Doug MacFarlane
On 11 Dec 2002, 11:57:01, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > On Server (with debian 3.0 ofcourse, kernel 2.4.20 ) has got two > network-adapter. The ip's on this adapters are in seperated subnets. NIC A > ist the def.gw. The machine is running two webservers (apache). A forwarding > between the NIC sho

Re: routing problem

2002-10-05 Thread Doug MacFarlane
On 04 Oct 2002, 19:35:14, Kourosh wrote: > On Fri, Oct 04, 2002 at 08:24:51PM -0600, dave mallery wrote: > Have you enabled IP forwarding on buster? Do you have firewalling enabled > on buster? The answer is that you need to configure Buster to function as a router. Just configuring Buster to b

Re: routing problem

2002-10-04 Thread Michael D. Schleif
dave mallery wrote: > > next (and last) here's bilbo, a sarge machine on the home front: > > bilbo:/>> route -n > Kernel IP routing table > Destination Gateway Genmask Flags Metric Ref Iface > 10.42.43.0 10.42.42.112255.255.255.0 UG0 0 0 eth0 > 1

Re: routing problem

2002-10-04 Thread Alvin Oga
hi ya yuppers.. agree on all point you make.. problem is the gw is slight misconfigured .. based on the routes listed... a cluster on its own private lan needs its own ip#.. ( say 10.42.42.* ) and one of them (buster) goes to the fw on say 10.42.43.* in its current config... that is not the

Re: routing problem

2002-10-04 Thread Kourosh Ghassemieh
On Fri, Oct 04, 2002 at 07:40:37PM -0700, Alvin Oga wrote: > > hiya dave > > quick glance... and some guesswork > > - a machine should always be able to ping itself > ( 10.32.32.x or 10.42.43.x > ( evben with the nic cable disconnected ) > > - c0n1 does not have a 10.42.42.0 route

Re: routing problem

2002-10-04 Thread Alvin Oga
hiya dave quick glance... and some guesswork - a machine should always be able to ping itself ( 10.32.32.x or 10.42.43.x ( evben with the nic cable disconnected ) - c0n1 does not have a 10.42.42.0 routes and it has 10.42.43.* gateway ( wrong ?? ) - i think either eth1(43.*

Re: routing problem

2002-10-04 Thread Kourosh
On Fri, Oct 04, 2002 at 08:24:51PM -0600, dave mallery wrote: > hi > > now i believe myself to be a fairly experienced deb user. this is > humiliating: Not really, these things happen to everyone =) > 10.42.42.0 0.0.0.0 255.255.255.0 U 0 00 eth0 > 0.0.0.0 10

Re: routing problem

2002-06-12 Thread martin f krafft
also sprach Derrick 'dman' Hudson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2002.06.12.0412 +0200]: > Looking at that routing table, it looks like you have the same (well, > overlapping) subnet on 2 interfaces. Linux doesn't like having > multiple interfaces on the same subnet, unless you do channel bonding. > My gues

Re: routing problem

2002-06-11 Thread Derrick 'dman' Hudson
On Tue, Jun 11, 2002 at 11:11:57PM +0200, martin f krafft wrote: | hi wizards! | | any clue on this one: | | gw2:~# route -n | Kernel IP routing table | Destination Gateway Genmask Flags Metric Ref Use Iface | xx.xxx.239.144 0.0.0.0 255.255.255.240 U 0 0

Re: routing problem

2002-05-01 Thread David Smead
Have the route you're trying to delete in the routing table? -- Sincerely, David Smead http://www.amplepower.com. On Wed, 1 May 2002, Baris Metin wrote: > Hello; > > I try to delete a routing entry but get the fallowing : > > tiger:/etc/samba# route > Kernel IP routing table > Destination

Re: routing problem

2002-05-01 Thread Elizabeth Barham
Baris Metin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > Hello; > > I try to delete a routing entry but get the fallowing : > > tiger:/etc/samba# route > Kernel IP routing table > Destination Gateway Genmask Flags Metric RefUse Ifa= > ce > localnet* 255.255.255.0

Re: routing problem

2002-02-04 Thread Cameron Kerr
On Mon, 4 Feb 2002, Jeremy T. Bouse wrote: > As I'm goin on the assumption you want Box C to have an option >of which network (.9/24 or .7/24) go through and as they are equal hop >count but obviously different bandwidth I would be tempt'd to suggest >possibly running zebra on the three mach

Re: routing problem

2002-02-04 Thread Jeremy T. Bouse
Obviously the issue resolves around the default gateway setup on the machines... Box A should obviously have the ultimate default gateway as it has the internet access directly... Box B should go to Box A if it isn't destined for either network 192.168.9/24 or 192.168.7/24 which would go ou

Re: routing problem

2002-01-22 Thread Rob Weir
Howdy On Thu, Jan 17, 2002 at 06:10:25PM -0800, Klaus Neumann wrote: > Maybe I should have mentioned that I'm using kernel 2.4.17 in Potato? To run 2.4.x kernels on potato, you'll need some newer kernel-related packages, including things like iptables, and most importantly modutils. Have a look

Re: routing problem

2002-01-21 Thread Jeff
Klaus Neumann, 2002-Jan-17 18:10 -0800: > On Thursday 17 January 2002 03:44 am, Jeff wrote: > > Klaus Neumann, 2002-Jan-16 22:07 -0800: > > > Hi, > > > > > > I just replaced my SuSE with Debian potato on my second computer (B). > > > Using computer A, still SuSE installed as router. I can ping from

Re: routing problem

2002-01-17 Thread Klaus Neumann
On Thursday 17 January 2002 03:44 am, Jeff wrote: > Klaus Neumann, 2002-Jan-16 22:07 -0800: > > Hi, > > > > I just replaced my SuSE with Debian potato on my second computer (B). > > Using computer A, still SuSE installed as router. I can ping from A to B > > without problem. If I ping from B to A,

Re: routing problem

2002-01-17 Thread Jeff
Klaus Neumann, 2002-Jan-16 22:07 -0800: > Hi, > > I just replaced my SuSE with Debian potato on my second computer (B). Using > computer A, still SuSE installed as router. I can ping from A to B without > problem. If I ping from B to A, I loose 30% to 55% packets. What am I doing > wrong? > >

Re: Routing Problem

2001-06-28 Thread Debian GNU
Dear Christoph, Tnx friend. That was the problem. I was extensively using ipchians to make this box a gateway with firewalling. I slipped this. Thanks again. Regards, Deb --- Christoph Simon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On Thu, 28 Jun 2001 19:04:41 -0700 (PDT) > Debian GNU <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wr

Re: Routing Problem

2001-06-28 Thread Joost Kooij
On Thu, Jun 28, 2001 at 11:16:40PM -0300, Christoph Simon wrote: > On Thu, 28 Jun 2001 19:04:41 -0700 (PDT) > Debian GNU <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > > > If it would have been a permission probelem, I would > > not have been able to access the other networks. I did > > as both root and ordina

Re: Routing Problem

2001-06-28 Thread Christoph Simon
On Thu, 28 Jun 2001 19:04:41 -0700 (PDT) Debian GNU <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > If it would have been a permission probelem, I would > not have been able to access the other networks. I did > as both root and ordinary user. But both gave the same > results. Do you have some firewall rules ins

RE: Routing Problem

2001-06-28 Thread Kim De Smaele
And is does the ping works propperly to others systems in the network? greetz, kim -Oorspronkelijk bericht- Van: Debian GNU [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Verzonden: vrijdag 29 juni 2001 4:05 Aan: Miguel Griffa; debian-user@lists.debian.org Onderwerp: Re: Routing Problem If it would have

Re: Routing Problem

2001-06-28 Thread Debian GNU
If it would have been a permission probelem, I would not have been able to access the other networks. I did as both root and ordinary user. But both gave the same results. Deb --- Miguel Griffa <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > At 12:49 a.m. 28/06/01 -0700, Debian GNU wrote: > >Hi all, > > > >My machi

Re: Routing Problem

2001-06-28 Thread Miguel Griffa
At 12:49 a.m. 28/06/01 -0700, Debian GNU wrote: Hi all, My machine running potato has rtl8139 network card. I have configured it as eth0 and eth0:0 with two ip addresses. I am able to ping to machines in two ip ranges and working fine. Now I have added one more alias as eth0:0 with ip address 19

Re: Routing problem ... (thanx)

2001-03-26 Thread will trillich
On Fri, Mar 23, 2001 at 12:57:47PM +0100, Mateusz Mazur wrote: > Hello. > > I would like to thanx for all replay for my mesg. If I will be have some > another problems I will be write to this list ;). Polish mailing list and > newsgroup aren't so kind. sometimes folks around here get a bit uppity

Re: Routing problem...

2001-03-22 Thread Jim Richardson
On Thu, Mar 22, 2001 at 01:19:06PM +0100, Mateusz Mazur wrote: > Hello. > I will be very, very greatfull for your help. I'am newbie and I have big > trouble (big for me of course). I would also apologize for my english. I'am > from Poland and english isn't my nativ language. Here is some kind of ma

Re: Routing problem...

2001-03-22 Thread Chad C. Walstrom
On Thu, Mar 22, 2001 at 01:19:06PM +0100, Mateusz Mazur wrote: > Hello. > I will be very, very greatfull for your help. I'am newbie and I have > big trouble (big for me of course). I would also apologize for my > english. I'am from Poland and english isn't my nativ language. Here > is some kind of

Re: Routing problem...

2001-03-22 Thread Alson van der Meulen
On Thu, Mar 22, 2001 at 01:19:06PM +0100, Mateusz Mazur wrote: > Hello. > I will be very, very greatfull for your help. I'am newbie and I have big > trouble (big for me of course). I would also apologize for my english. I'am > from Poland and english isn't my nativ language. Here is some kind of ma

Re: Routing Problem

2000-08-14 Thread John Pearson
On Mon, Aug 14, 2000 at 11:04:27AM +0100, Sian Leitch wrote > On Sun, Aug 13, 2000 at 02:27:47AM +0930, John Pearson wrote: > > > > I'd check your ipchains/ipfwadm rules. > > > > If you're running kernel 2.0.x, what does the output of > > # ipfwadm -I -l -e > > # ipfwadm -O -l -e > > # ipfwadm -F

Re: Routing Problem

2000-08-14 Thread Sian Leitch
On Sun, Aug 13, 2000 at 02:27:47AM +0930, John Pearson wrote: > > I'd check your ipchains/ipfwadm rules. > > If you're running kernel 2.0.x, what does the output of > # ipfwadm -I -l -e > # ipfwadm -O -l -e > # ipfwadm -F -l -e > > look like? > > If you're running kernel 2.2.x, what does the ou

Re: Routing Problem

2000-08-13 Thread Peter Welte
> Weird. Yah! :) > Firstly, can you ping hosts out on the > 192.168.0. network? Yes, there is a computer at 192.168.0.16 that i am able to ping. >Is your cabling okay? It appears so. The gateway computer (the one with the ping problem) actually gets its ip address for eth0 (192.168.1.12 for

Re: Routing Problem

2000-08-12 Thread John Pearson
On Sat, Aug 12, 2000 at 04:37:50AM -0700, Peter Welte wrote > hey there... > > I have a linux computer that is supped to act as a > gateway to a school network and the internet for some > linux clients, but im having this problem right now > where the gateway itself can't even ping another > compu

Re: Routing Problem

2000-08-12 Thread C. Falconer
At 04:37 AM 8/12/00 -0700, you wrote: ##here is the out put of netstat -nr: Kernel IP routing table Destination Gateway Genmask Flags MSS Window irtt Iface 192.168.1.0 0.0.0.0 255.255.255.0 U0 0 0 eth0 192.168.0.0 0.0.0.0 255.255.255.0 U0 0 0 eth1 looks correct ##In case i

Re: Routing Problem

2000-05-02 Thread Ron Rademaker
I guess you should add routes: On the incoming machine: (10.0.0.1 / 11.0.0.1) 10.0.0.0* 255.255.255.0 eth0 11.0.0.0* 255.255.255.192 eth1 Instead of 10.0.0.2 and 11.0.0.2 Ron Rademaker On Tue, 2 May 2000, Fraser Campbell wrote: > I have added an e

Re: Routing Problem

2000-02-18 Thread Ernest Johanson
It looks to me like you need to set up the slink box to masqeurade for your 192.168.2 network. The machines on the other side of your linux machine have no idea what to do with a source address from your private network. There is a how-to and kernel docs on this. Ernest Johanson Web Systems Admini

Re: routing problem?

1999-07-06 Thread John Hasler
Mark Brown writes: > If you are using diald it's easiest to *only* use diald. In your diald > configuration, you shouldn't be using something like > connect "/usr/sbin/chat -f /etc/chatscripts/" That works just fine. > diald starts pppd itself, and the connect program should simply bring the >

Re: routing problem?

1999-07-05 Thread John Hasler
Christopher Clark writes: > The reference to sl0 is presumably diald. Why are you trying to dial out with diald running? > Could anybody give my a pointer please. If you really need to dial out with diald running and establish a default route over the ppp link, put route commands in ip-up.d and

Re: routing problem?

1999-07-05 Thread Mark Brown
On Mon, Jul 05, 1999 at 07:46:04PM +0100, Christopher Clark wrote: > dialing out (e.g. using pon) connects ok to my ISP and negotiates PPP > The reference to sl0 is presumably diald. > Could anybody give my a pointer please. If you are using diald it's easiest to *only* use diald. In your diald

Re: routing problem solved

1996-06-12 Thread Bruce Perens
The installation menu provides a prototype network number made from the logical AND of your IP address and your netmask. If the user types in the wrong netmask or overrides the prototype network number (which I think is what happened here), they can get an incorrect value. I'll have to look at this

Re: routing problem solved

1996-06-12 Thread Rick Hawkins
> : NETWORK=129.186.31.38 > > IPADDR as the same as the NETWORK address?? Strange, isn't it? err, forgot about this in the message i just sent. On these machines, i found that i had to use their own address as teh network address, rather than the .0 address; otherwise they wouldn't talk to anyt

Re: routing problem solved

1996-06-12 Thread Rick Hawkins
> The reason the last "route add -net ${NETWORK}" is not working is that it > is expecting a network address (ending in .0) and it is getting a host > address instead. In the above example, change the "NETWORK=129.186.31.38" > line to "NETWORK=129.186.31.0" and things should work. If this is i

Re: routing problem solved

1996-06-12 Thread Gerry Jensen
On Wed, 12 Jun 1996, Rick Hawkins wrote: > Under the beta releases with 1.3.9x, the following file is created: > > #! /bin/sh > ifconfig lo 127.0.0.1 > route add 127.0.0.1 > IPADDR=129.186.31.38 > NETMASK=255.255.255.0 > NETWORK=129.186.31.38 > BROADCAST=129.186.31.255 > GATEWAY=129.186.31.