ip traffic

2001-02-22 Thread Paulo Roque
HI All, I would like to know what IP´s is crossing our serial interface to internet, to accounting who is using more bandwidth. How can I do that? Thanks. -- Paulo Roque [EMAIL PROTECTED] _ FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com/lis

Re: ip traffic

2001-02-22 Thread Brian
On Thu, 22 Feb 2001, Paulo Roque wrote: > HI All, > > I would like to know what IP´s is crossing our serial interface to internet, > to accounting who is using more bandwidth. > How can I do that? what router model? The best way is using "ip route-cache flow", and taking the flowstats into a fl

Re: ip traffic

2001-02-22 Thread Tony van Ree
Hi, You could try 'ip accounting' this only works outgoing on an interface so if you want to check who on a lan is pulling the data put 'ip accounting' on the ethernet. This will show who is pulling what. Put it on the wan interface to see who is sending from your lan. router#(conf-if)ip

show ip traffic output

2000-11-30 Thread Gabriel Nickel
Hi group The following is a show ip traffic output from a Cat 2900XL: Rcvd: 18668088 total, 17981099 local destination 0 format errors, 0 checksum errors, 0 bad hop count 0 unknown protocol, 686989 not a gateway 0 security failures, 0 bad options, 0 with options Any

OT: Using a Router to redirect IP traffic [7:42217]

2002-04-22 Thread Trevor Jennings
Hello, Where I work, we have a number of servers being co-located at one location and are planning on moving those servers to another co-location provider soon. My boss asked me why we could not, when we move the servers, just place a router at the original ISP to redirect all traffic from the o

RE: Using a Router to redirect IP traffic [7:42217]

2002-04-22 Thread Blair, Philip S
TECTED]] Sent: Monday, April 22, 2002 9:16 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: OT: Using a Router to redirect IP traffic [7:42217] Hello, Where I work, we have a number of servers being co-located at one location and are planning on moving those servers to another co-location provider soon. My boss

How to route this ip traffic to pass through [7:34664]

2002-02-06 Thread Shawn Xu
connect to ISP1, and use their own IPs. How to route the client's ip traffic to pass through ISP1 and ISP2? Thank you for your help. Shawn _ Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com/intl.asp. [GroupSt

Re: OT: Using a Router to redirect IP traffic [7:42217]

2002-04-22 Thread Koen Zeilstra
Maybe you can put a router running NAT to hide the new addresses behind the old ones. K. Koen Zeilstra Legian --- You know you're a little fat if you have stretch marks on your car. -- Cyrus, Chicago Reader 1/22/82 On Mon, 22 Apr 2002, Trevor Jennings wrote:

Re: OT: Using a Router to redirect IP traffic [7:42217]

2002-04-22 Thread Marc Thach Xuan Ky
Hi Trevor, Assuming that your servers have unique public IP addresses and you can get a small new address space from the colocation provider (for use as a NAT pool) then this would be technically feasible using twice-NAT. However, you would be paying your current colo provider for twice the bandw

RE: OT: Using a Router to redirect IP traffic [7:42217]

2002-04-22 Thread Brunner Joseph
This is what I would do in your situation.. -Listing what i have to do to keep the boss happy and save money for your firm. 1. Keep old IP's at the old datacenter, hitting live servers at the new datacenter 2. Prevent the need to a second set of servers with DNS entries seperate from the origina

RE: OT: Using a Router to redirect IP traffic [7:42217]

2002-04-30 Thread Trevor Jennings
Thanks to all those who replied about this question. We ended up just setting up a server to redirect httpd requests to the new location. Seems it was alot easier to do that rather than to play around with routing issues. Cheers, - Trevor Message Posted at: http://www.groupstudy.com/form/re

Access control lists that block even-IP traffic ou [7:21592]

2001-10-01 Thread SUranjith Ariyapperuma
Dear Friends, I am trying to figure out how to block even/odd access out of the subnet!. I have managed to see the effect of the last bit of the last octet , yet wouuldn't know how to get the wild card mask !. Could you please help me as I will be taking the CCAI fast track on wednesday. Suranjith

RE: How to route this Ip traffic to pass through [7:34664]

2002-02-06 Thread Hire, Ejay
d will be very annoying. Ejay Hire CCNA,CCNP,CCIE Candidate Network Consultant (Available, Cheap!) [EMAIL PROTECTED] 434-591-4564 -Original Message- From: Shawn Xu [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Wednesday, February 06, 2002 2:29 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: How to route this ip tr

Re: Access control lists that block even-IP traffic ou [7:21598]

2001-10-01 Thread Tom Lisa
Your mask for the last octet should end in an even number. This forces a check of the last bit position. If you want to allow/deny an even number then your "test against" address should end in an even number. If it is for an odd number, then the "test against" address should end in odd. Ex: a

IP MPLS network do not pass IP traffic for routes learned via [7:35844]

2002-02-19 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Hello, We have a MPLS network and we would like to provide for our customers access into Internet. We do not want propagate Internet routes into our MPLS network (it is too large). Instead we tried to use solution with EBGP multihop to propagate Internet learned (via BGP) routes directly to our