Date: Thu, 7 Mar 1996 23:35:26 -0800 (PST) From: Robert Du Gaue <rdugaue@calweb.com> To: "Garrett A. Wollman" <wollman@lcs.mit.edu> Cc: questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: [Robert Du Gaue: routing] Message-ID: <Pine.BSF.3.91.960307233454.28074A-100000@web1.calweb.com> In-Reply-To: <9603071844.AA06801@halloran-eldar.lcs.mit.edu>
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Errr. I think I've received this about 5 times now already in my email box... You can probably stop forwarding it! :-) On Thu, 7 Mar 1996, Garrett A. Wollman wrote: > Date: Thu, 7 Mar 1996 13:44:51 -0500 > From: Garrett A. Wollman <wollman@lcs.mit.edu> > To: questions@FreeBSD.ORG > Cc: Robert Du Gaue <rdugaue@calweb.com> > Subject: [Robert Du Gaue: routing] > > Forwarding this to questions in case I don't have an opportunity to > figure it out... Has anybody else seen this problem, and what was the > solution? (Is this another instance of the `routed' bug? I can't > tell since this person doesn't say what version he is running.) > > -GAWollman > > ------- start of forwarded message (RFC 934 encapsulation) ------- > Message-Id: <Pine.BSF.3.91.960306080902.11887A-100000@www.calweb.com> > Mime-Version: 1.0 > Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII > Resent-To: wollman@freebsd.org > Resent-Date: Wed, 06 Mar 1996 14:46:02 -0800 > Resent-Message-Id: <16611.826152362@time.cdrom.com> > Resent-From: "Jordan K. Hubbard" <jkh@time.cdrom.com> > From: Robert Du Gaue <rdugaue@calweb.com> > To: "Jordan K. Hubbard" <jkh@calweb.com> > Subject: routing > Date: Wed, 6 Mar 1996 08:16:21 -0800 (PST) > > Could you forward to your routing gurus. We have had a terrible couple of > days. Our machine keep 'learning' bogus routes and we can't trace just > where it's coming from. I'm trying now to give the system some fixed > routes to overcome some problems, however the machines don't seem to also > be learning arp entries, at least not all of them. Some machines are > missing entries for various interfaces. I'm more worried about the > portmasters right now, because if I do a net route to a portmaster that's > not in the arp table, the route takes as a host instead of a net. I've > made a file of fixed_arps to run with 'arp -f filename' command, but all > entries for the portmasters that the system doesn't know about fail > anyways. Here's what I'm seeing: > > bash# arp -a > lan1.calweb.com (165.90.138.1) at 8:0:87:14:ac:2e > calweb.calweb.com (165.90.138.3) at 8:0:69:8:8c:24 > sun1.calweb.com (165.90.138.6) at 8:0:20:8:4e:b0 > web1.calweb.com (165.90.138.10) at 0:0:c0:1c:f4:c6 > web2.calweb.com (165.90.138.11) at 0:0:c0:18:6c:e > web3.calweb.com (165.90.138.12) at 0:0:c0:de:8b:e > web4.calweb.com (165.90.138.15) at 0:0:c0:63:c:9f > mail.calweb.com (165.90.138.20) at 0:0:c0:1d:f4:c6 > sac1.calweb.com (165.90.138.26) at 0:c0:5:1:d:25 > sac2.calweb.com (165.90.138.27) at 0:c0:5:1:1e:48 > ded1.calweb.com (165.90.138.28) at 0:c0:5:1:2e:f6 > infosite.com (165.90.138.203) at 0:80:ad:14:b9:15 > ? (165.90.138.255) at (incomplete) > bash# cd /common > bash# arp -f fixed_arps > writing to routing socket: File exists > writing to routing socket: File exists > writing to routing socket: File exists > cannot intuit interface index and type for sac3 > cannot intuit interface index and type for sac4 > cannot intuit interface index and type for sac5 > cannot intuit interface index and type for sac6 > bash# cat fixed_arps > sac1 0:c0:05:01:0d:25 > sac2 0:c0:05:01:1e:48 > ded1 0:c0:05:01:2e:f6 > sac3 0:c0:05:01:2a:d2 > sac4 0:c0:05:01:36:0e > sac5 0:c0:05:01:36:ea > sac6 0:c0:05:01:42:bf > bash# > > I've tried putting 'temp' and 'pub' entries on sac3-6, but still get the > same thing. Very wierd. > > The machines at some point learn routes of like: > > 165.90 > and 165.90.138 > > Usually ether to the #link address or to a portmaster. Though I've test > various different things and can't find anything that would cause the PM > to broadcast routes like that. If everything was dynamic I'd just to RIP > off on the PMs, but we do have some fixed IP people that can come in > under any PM that I think would case problems. > > ------- end ------- >
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