On Fri, Nov 21, 2003 at 09:42:50PM +0200, Guy Teverovsky wrote:You do realize that a "no route to host" reply from a computer located on your own network segment means that no ARP reply has arrived, do you?
On Fri, 2003-11-21 at 05:06, Micha Feigin wrote:
Downloaded the file and tried accessing the modem as described, butDoes the computer, you are trying to access the ECI from, has a network
apparently my modem does think that its dumb since when I try to browse
to 192.168.1.1 I don't get any reply.
I belive it does think that that is its address, since it does answear
the arp request for that address (at list I belive the modem is the one
answearing that since I made sure it wasn't connected at the time and
its the only thing on that interface on non of my machines has that
address).
interface in 192.168.1.0/24 subnet ?
I configured the card linked to the eci modem to 192.168.1.2
There are two more cards configured as a bridge with ip 192.168.0.1
tcpdump on the interface connected to the eci shows an arp reply for 192.168.1.1
name shows that there is a host up but all port filtered.
telnet 192.168.1.1 80 and browsing to 192.168.1.1 just hang untill a
time out. Trying different addresses on the 192.168.1.255 network
returns
telnet: Unable to connect to remote host: No route to host
If the port was truely filtered, the reply would have been "connection timed out", and if it were merely closed, it would be "Connection refused".
It appears you have some sort of routing table screwup here.
Shachar
-- Shachar Shemesh Open Source integration & consulting Home page & resume - http://www.shemesh.biz/
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