There isn't some limit on number of machines that can connect coming from
somewhere?  Could be political/economic or technical. I see wifi routers
advertised as only working with n clients.

Sent from my Motorola XT1505
On Sep 24, 2017 4:35 AM, "Mark Morgan Lloyd" <
markmll.debian-...@telemetry.co.uk> wrote:

> On 23/09/17 20:00, Gene Heskett wrote:
>
> So my local network is working as expected.  BUT:
>> root@rock64:/etc# ping -c1 yahoo.com
>> PING yahoo.com (98.138.253.109) 56(84) bytes of data.
>>  From 192.168.71.2 (192.168.71.2) icmp_seq=1 Destination Host Unreachable
>>
>> Note that the dns request did resolve.
>>
>> But my dns requests are probably being answered by dnsmasq in the router.
>> I cannot find anything in the routers copious settings (it's DD-WRT)
>> that would prevent a connection, but it refuses to pass. I've tried
>> several ipv4 addresses in that 192,168.nn block. No other machines, 5
>> more, on this local net are being denied network access.
>>
>> Ideas? I'm nearly out of hair. But its been slowly thinning for 82+ years
>> too so I can't blame it on this too loudly.
>>
>
> I've only run Stretch briefly so far, in the context of trying to find out
> whether USB boot worked (patchy, but might have been a power issue).
>
> I'd suggest checking using  traceroute -I  and then looking at  route -n
> and/or  ip route ls  which should give you a bit more of an indication of
> what's going on. IME this sort of thing is usually because the router isn't
> NATting the entire 192.168.x.x range.
>
> --
> Mark Morgan Lloyd
> markMLl .AT. telemetry.co .DOT. uk
>
> [Opinions above are the author's, not those of his employers or colleagues]
>
>

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