Yes.

- -
Robert P. MacDonald, Network Engineer
Team Lead, e-Business Infrastructure
G o r d o n   F o o d    S e r v i c e
Voice: +1.616.261.7987 email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

>>> Ian Campbell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 11/16/00 1:11:45 PM >>>
>
>Could these 1918 addresses be used for WAN links by your ISP?
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Tom Sevy [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
>Sent: Thursday, November 16, 2000 9:48 AM
>To: 'Hoang'; [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
>Subject: RE: [FW1] Logging question
>
>We see *lots* of RFC 1918 (illegal internet, set aside for internal)
>addresses.  Ended up putting in throrough Access lists in my border routers
>to stop them (with syslog logging to another host, so I still see them, but
>not at the FW logs, only in the Syslogs).
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Hoang [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
>Sent: Thursday, November 16, 2000 11:06 AM
>To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
>Subject: [FW1] Logging question
>
>Lately,  I've noticed from the log that I got a lot of drop records
>generating from 192.168.27.x to my FW external interface.  The 192.168.27.x
>network is a private class C, and it is not part of my internal network.
>The ports are 9960, 15994, 17600, etc.. All high ports.  Can anyone give
>some insight on this?
>
>Thanks
>Hoang




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