I've seen this before -- last time it was a misconfigured switch connected to the firewall, and the packets were bouncing back and forth. This made it LOOK like double IP addresses, even though they didn't exist. Check the switch and the router! Dave Gianna, MS, CCSE, CCSI, NSA, ACE/ADM Technical Sales Engineer Security Technologies Group (914) 829-7351 Westcon, Inc. <http://www.westcon.com/online/> 520 White Plains Road Tarrytown, NY 10591 ==================================================== "It's time to reach the goals we set for ourselves" -- Trevor Rabin/Jon Anderson ==================================================== |--------+-----------------------> | | Beatriz Tapia| | | L
�pez | | | <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> | | | | | | 01/17/02 | | | 03:48 AM | | | Please | | | respond to | | | Mailing list | | | for | | | discussion of| | | Firewall-1 | | | | |--------+-----------------------> >----------------------------------------------------------------------------| | | | To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] | | cc: (bcc: David Gianna/Westchester/Westcon/US/WestconGroup) | | Subject: [FW-1] FW-1 too many internal hosts detected | >----------------------------------------------------------------------------|
Sometimes we get this message and after that a list of those hosts detected. The problem is that some of these addresses are repeated. They are the same but written from right to left. For example, the address 195.10.32.1 would be written in that message first like 195.10.32.1 and then like 1.32.10.195. Does anyone know if this is usual? Why does it happen? Thanks very much!!
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Sometimes we get this message and after that a list
of those hosts detected. The problem is that some of these addresses are
repeated. They are the same but written from right to left. For example, the
address 195.10.32.1 would be written in that message first like 195.10.32.1 and
then like 1.32.10.195. Does anyone know if this is usual? Why does it
happen?
Thanks very much!!
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