Hi,

On Sun, 13 Jan 2008 16:42:56 +0530
Holla <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> One thing, I cannot understand is the difference in traceroute
> results. What does this say in plain english ? :-)
> 
> At PC2
>  # traceroute  218.248.240.46  (ISP's DNS server)
> traceroute to 218.248.240.46 (218.248.240.46), 30 hops max, 40 byte packets
>  1  192.168.2.43 (192.168.2.43)  1.730 ms  0.840 ms  0.920 ms
>  2  192.168.1.1 (192.168.1.1)  1.440 ms  1.469 ms  1.287 ms
>  3  * * *
>  4  * * *
> 
> At PC1
> 
>  # traceroute  218.248.240.46
> traceroute to 218.248.240.46 (218.248.240.46), 30 hops max, 40 byte packets
>  1  192.168.1.1 (192.168.1.1)  0.848 ms  0.706 ms  0.681 ms
>  2  117.192.128.1 (117.192.128.1)  19.712 ms  18.878 ms  19.920 ms
>  3  218.248.160.134 (218.248.160.134)  19.292 ms  19.796 ms  19.190 ms

I'd say your router (Router1) isn't doing NAT for packets from other
subnets than it's LAN interface is configured for -- regardless of the
(correctly) configured internal additional route.

So your option would be to set up PC1 for doing NAT, not necessarily
for packets 192.168.2/24<->192.168.1/24, but for all packets from
192.168.2/24 going to the internet.

Your provider most likely does not have anything to do with all this.

-hwh
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