Re: dymanic route table problem
- From: "J.H" <jpthsd@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Fri, 22 Sep 2006 09:54:44 -0700
Hi there,
It might have learned the routes from the Router's routing table.
You might check that routing table to see what exactly the defined routing
table on that router is
If there is a route defined on that router, even one ping to the far side
host of different segment,
the routing table on your machine will be updated automatically. (even with
ping, however in
your case, your machine is up and doing something else on the network that
might've been
talking to that far side host, so the route keep updating itself
automatically when you removed!!)
Hope it helps!!
Regards,
J.H
"Brian E" <dirwolf@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:Ot6dq7d3GHA.4748@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
I agree whole heartedly, the unfortunate part is that I am admin for the
outsourcer, I all of the hundreds systems for this client and I know every
piece of software that is running and there is nothing installed that could
do this.
Would you happen to have any references on how 2000/2003 discovers routes on
boot, I have a feeling this is something learned, something like spanning
tree.
"Phillip Windell" <@.> wrote in message
news:uvQRIEc3GHA.4900@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
"Brian E" <dirwolf@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message news:%
These are three I see consistently and all are valid internal hosts to the
outsourcer.
And is only the systems that live on the same vlan that pix firewall for the
outsourcer sits on , 167.126.101.101 is the internal interface for that
device.
So the question again is how are these OS learning about routes when they
should just send to the dgatway? :-)
------------------------------------
The "outsourcer" needs to get involved. They are probably the cause, or they
have software on your machines that is creating this. It is almost
blatantly obvious that they have at least something to do with this since
everyone of these routes tartgets one of their machines and it only happens
on machine that are on the same segment as their PIX.
I have 4 local segments here with VPN connecting us to about 40 other sites
across the United States and none of my machine do anything similar to this.
--
Phillip Windell [MCP, MVP, CCNA]
www.wandtv.com
.
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