netstat -nrv did the trick. My subnet mask showed 255.128.0.0 like you
mentioned.

Once I did the route delete with that netmask it were gone


On Tue, Jul 8, 2008 at 1:53 PM, James Carlson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:

> Asif Iqbal writes:
> > (root)@apa-pdr-02:~$ netstat -nr
>
> Try "-nrv" to get netmasks as well.
>
> > 101.0.0.0             101.117.9.129         UG        1         21
> [...]
> > (root)@apa-pdr-02:~$ route delete 101.0.0.0/8 101.117.9.129
> > delete net 101.0.0.0/8: gateway 101.117.9.129: not in table
> >
> > Is it a bug?
>
> Not necessarily.  Route delete is exact-match (not "best match"), so
> if that route isn't exactly 101.0.0.0/8 (it could actually be /9,
> given the next hop address), it won't find it.
>
> But if you can't delete the route using the right netmask, then it's a
> bug.
>
> --
> James Carlson, Solaris Networking              <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Sun Microsystems / 35 Network Drive        71.232W   Vox +1 781 442 2084
> MS UBUR02-212 / Burlington MA 01803-2757   42.496N   Fax +1 781 442 1677
>



-- 
Asif Iqbal
PGP Key: 0xE62693C5 KeyServer: pgp.mit.edu
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