routing problem
Kelsay, Brian - Kansas City, MO
brian.kelsay at kcc.usda.gov
Wed Aug 31 14:16:10 CDT 2005
The arp cache doesn't stay very long. Maybe a minute at most. IIRC
DNS cache maybe, that lasts longer. Is your router doing DNS as well as
DHCP? I ask because this is not default. You have to set both up
separately or create a hosts file on each box.
-----Original Message-----
From: kclug-bounces at kclug.org [mailto:kclug-bounces at kclug.org] On Behalf
Of hanasaki
Sent: Wednesday, August 31, 2005 1:16 PM
To: jason at stdbev.com
Cc: Jeremy Fowler; kclug at kclug.org
Subject: Re: routing problem
working like a champ now!
is it possible that there was something in the ip stack that had to
timeout? I did manually arp -d the host3 entries and after a "ping" arp
-a showed them with a MAC of "<incomplete>" whatever that means.
Jason Munro wrote:
> On 11:34:52 am 08/31/05 "Jeremy Fowler" <JFowler at westrope.com> wrote:
>
>>Default gateway for host1 is set to 10.1.1.2, change to 10.1.1.1
>
>
> Umm.. no. The default gateway is for any request outside the local
subnet
> and if 10.1.1.2 is the router out then this is correct. The routing
table
> for host1 shows that no gateway is required for 10.1.1.0/24 and that
all
> else (0.0.0.0) should be shoved out 10.1.1.2.
>
>
>>host3 = 101.1.1.10 / mask 255.255.255.0
>
>
> If this is correct then this is the problem since 101.1.1.10 is not on
the
> same subnet as host1 and therefore requests are being sent out the
router.
> I wonder if host3 is actually online? If the above is a typo and host3
is
> actually 10.1.1.10 then maybe you should try resetting the switch
because
> your routing tables look ok AFAIKT.
>
> \__ Jason Munro
> \__ jason at stdbev.com
> \__ http://hastymail.sourceforge.net/
>
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