Wierd network

2000-12-23 Thread Charles Nunie
Hi everyone, We have this network setup linking two offices. There was a link failure and we had to replace the routers. The same settings were used but. The server cannot ping across the network (only the immediate router interface). All workstations can ping across and some were also w

Re: Wierd network

2000-12-23 Thread Brian Lodwick
off the subject but, -Sounds like the way telco fixes things they just suddenly come up on their own. >>>Brian >From: Charles Nunie <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> >Reply-To: Charles Nunie <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> >To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] >Subject: Wierd network >Date: 2

Re: Wierd network

2000-12-23 Thread Priscilla Oppenheimer
Could the ARP cache on the server have finally timed out? Perhaps the server had learned the MAC address of the old router for all remote devices. This assumes the router was doing proxy ARP, which is the default, and that the server was ARPing for remote devices, which happens under certain

RE: Wierd network

2000-12-23 Thread MCDONALD, ROMAN (SBCSI)
d not ping each other - no layer three! Shut the interfaces down and brought them back up and voila! Another undocumented feature . Roman -Original Message- From: Charles Nunie [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Saturday, December 23, 2000 7:59 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Wierd network

Re: Wierd network

2000-12-23 Thread Tony van Ree
Hi, This seems like it may have had some ARP cache stuff lying about. Sometimes you need to reset servers etc whenreplacing routers as the ARP caches hold the old MAC Addresses for the IP Addresses. Teunis, Hobart, Tasmania Australia On Saturday, December 23, 2000 at 06:59:12 AM, Charles

Re: Wierd network

2000-12-25 Thread Pradeep Kumar
sage- From:Priscilla Oppenheimer [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent:Sat, 23 Dec 2000 11:29:14 -0800 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: Wierd network Could the ARP cache on the server have finally timed out? Perhaps the server had learned the MAC address of the old router f