Do all of the intermediate routers along the path to the server know about the network 
10.0.0.5 is on?  They might know of *a* network to get back to the router (which is 
why you can ping the server from the router), but for some reason they don't know 
about that network specifically.

Hope this helps -

Bradley Wilson
CCNA, CCDA, CCSE, MCSE, MCT, CTT


David Ristau <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> 
a web site say 12.0.0.1 sits out on a public network,

a user across the nation, say in Oregon, on his workstation
host 10.0.0.5 cannot ping the server at 12.0.0.1

the user telnets into his Cisco router at 10.0.0.1 and
can ping the server at 12.0.0.1

the user goes out the the internet to several looking-glass
sites and can ping/tracert to the server.

There are no filters on the 10.0.0.1 router

it appears there are no filters in the path to the
12.0.0.1 router from the 10.0.0.1 router

any ideas why this happening or ways to figure it out...

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