Sprint/HiNet
Phil Howard
phil at charon.ipal.net
Wed Aug 26 19:04:19 UTC 1998
william at pacific.net.ph writes:
> Tracing route to w3.hinet.net [168.95.1.82]
> over a maximum of 30 hops:
>
> 1 138 ms 116 ms 113 ms pi-ph-ts01.pacific.net.ph [210.23.234.128]
> 2 142 ms 111 ms 116 ms pi-ph-gw01.pacific.net.ph [210.23.234.1]
> 3 332 ms 330 ms 340 ms 204.59.178.25
> 4 375 ms 324 ms 328 ms 204.59.120.198
> 5 323 ms 322 ms 339 ms 144.232.1.153
> 6 380 ms 366 ms 365 ms 144.232.8.70
> 7 347 ms 373 ms 374 ms 144.232.4.142
> 8 * * * Request timed out.
> 9 546 ms 529 ms 523 ms 168.95.253.126
> 10 540 ms 532 ms 540 ms 168.95.253.189
> 11 547 ms 556 ms 547 ms w3.hinet.net [168.95.1.82]
>
> Trace complete.
>
> Line 8 is always like this and a customer of ours is complaining about it.
> Is this a time out or congestion or something else?
Most likely there is a private address (in one of 10.0.0.0/8, 172.16.0.0/12,
or 192.168.0.0/16) being used there. Tell the customer it is not their
router and to not worry about it.
Private addresses are often used this way. There are complications to it,
and this is one of those. But it is still commonly done for many links as
there is a huge supply of /30's in that space that can be used over and over
again in the net. Only those engineers responsible for the router need access
to it, and they probably figured that out well before they decided to assign
such addresses.
There is a remote possibility it is filtered or just a very very old router.
--
Phil Howard | die4spam at anywhere.net no7way61 at spammer0.com stop5795 at s2p5a0m4.org
phil | blow9me0 at no1where.com no5spam4 at no69ads6.net blow1me0 at spam5mer.com
at | end1it81 at no5where.com ads6suck at no71ads5.net a7b4c5d9 at no8where.edu
ipal | end1it32 at anywhere.net no1spam9 at noplace3.org stop3387 at noplace0.com
dot | w2x8y5z5 at nowhere0.edu no3way45 at lame6ads.edu stop0919 at spammer6.edu
net | a6b3c2d4 at no8place.com suck0it9 at spammer2.org end7it80 at no96ads5.net
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