On Fri, Jun 20, 2008 at 11:57:38AM -0700, Jo Rhett wrote: > On Jun 20, 2008, at 11:49 AM, John Hardin wrote: >> 10.x is (supposedly) not routable on the public internet. If you see >> 10.x (or other RFC-1918) traffic coming in from the world, your ISP is >> broken. > > > You don't run packet sniffers on your hosts much, do you? ;-) > > Does your ISP filter egress packets on your interface? No, neither does > mine ;-) (and in this case I control the border routing so I know it for > sure) > > Most competent ISPs will filter customer interfaces to prevent bogons, > and some will filter public peering ports for bogons, but even with both > of those a surprising number of 10.x packets make their way to our hosts. > > belt-and-suspenders: Even if it's unlikely for a 10.x packet to reach > the host, why should I trust it?
Jo, you are unbelievable in a funny way. You always come up with dozens of posts seemingly with the attitude "I must be right". You don't configure things like they should be, and then complain that things don't work. Just set up the friggin networks right and let's continue normal life. If you need help, post your detailed setup so we don't need to guess. :-) etc