Everything to 184.159/16, that is, 184.159.x.x, goes out of carp0. You need to specify a netmask for carp just like any interface, and in any sane situation it should be the same as the parent's (I assume re0) when they both have (different) addresses in the same subnet.
On Wed, Feb 11, 2009 at 12:35:05PM -0800, Vivek Ayer wrote: > I tried that and here's some interesting information. > > First of all, I forgot to mention that this router was carped with > another one. Not sure if this could be leading to the problem. But > anyway, I did route -n show and for my external interface re0 > corresponding to carp0 here's the relevant info: > > Dest Gateway Interface > default 184.159.35.1 re0 > 184.159/16 link #6 carp0 <--- > 184.159.35/24 link #2 re0 > 184.159.35.1 (MAC addr) re0 > 184.159.35.23 184.159.35.23 carp0 > > The second line is interesting because it makes me wonder whether > there's more to setting up the carp interface. I assume carp0 has the > same netmask as re0, but if you can explain the second line, that'd be > great. > > Thanks, > Vivek > > Just so that you don't get confused, I think in previous emails, I > said 29 was my subnet and I'm now saying 35 when I meant to say 29, > but you get the idea, whatever. > > On Wed, Feb 11, 2009 at 11:58 AM, Jussi Peltola <pe...@pelzi.net> wrote: > > 1. ifconfig > > 2. route -n show > > 3. a network topology description > > > > -- > > Jussi Peltola