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- Newsgroups: comp.dcom.sys.cisco
- Path: sparky!uunet!boulder!recnews
- From: Bob Albrightson <albright@lager.cisco.com>
- Subject: Re: IGS 9.0(1) HELLLLP!!!
- In-Reply-To: Your message of Fri, 20 Nov 92 9:27:16 MST
- Message-ID: <722546218.27400@news.Colorado.EDU>
- Sender: news
- Date: 23 Nov 92 9:06:38 PST
- Approved: news
- X-Note1: mail msgid was <CMM.0.90.2.722538398.albright@lager.cisco.com>
- X-Note2: message-id generated by recnews
- Lines: 21
-
- > I have 2 routers connected by ethernet. One (a 3-COM) connects me
- > to the internet. The other (the Cisco) is managing our routing to
- > an X.25 network. If I login in to the Cisco and try to ping
- > the 3-COM, it chokes. What's the deal here?
- > I've tried a default route on the Cisco that points as:
- > 0.0.0.0 158.68.31.254. No go. I tried taking it out.
- > No go.
- > The bottom line is that our X.25 clients can't get any further
- > than our Campus LAN as the Cisco isn't connecting to the other
- > router to get the caller to his internet target.
- > The two routers are on the same physical and logical network.
- > The cisco: 158.68.31.253, the 3-COM: 158.68.31.254. There's
- > gotta be a way to get packets from one to the other!
-
- Have you looked at the cisco to see if an arp entry is being built for
- 158.68.31.254? Have you looked at the 3com to see if an arp entry is
- being build for 158.68.31.253? Can anything else on that logical
- network (subnet 31 I presume) talk to the 3com? Have you looked to
- see if the 3com is even receiving the packets the cisco is sending?
-
- -bob
-