static or dynamic (learned from a routing protocol) but more specific. On Mon, 2004-03-01 at 09:29, Alexis wrote: > because a more specific static route? > > > > On Mon, 2004-03-01 at 09:26, Ray Leach wrote: > > Hi All > > > > Can anyone explain why a machine on 10.0.0.10/24 would try and > > communicate with another machine 10.0.0.4/24 via a router? > > Mar 1 14:19:37 firefly kernel: DROP FORWARD INTERNAL: IN=eth2 OUT=eth2 > > SRC=10.0.0.10 DST=10.0.0.4 LEN=48 TOS=0x00 PREC=0x00 TTL=127 ID=17562 DF > > PROTO=TCP SPT=4601 DPT=159 WINDOW=64240 RES=0x00 SYN URGP=0 > > Mar 1 14:19:37 firefly kernel: DROP FORWARD INTERNAL: IN=eth2 OUT=eth2 > > SRC=10.0.0.10 DST=10.0.0.4 LEN=48 TOS=0x00 PREC=0x00 TTL=127 ID=17563 DF > > PROTO=TCP SPT=4602 DPT=158 WINDOW=64240 RES=0x00 SYN URGP=0 > > Mar 1 14:19:40 firefly kernel: DROP FORWARD INTERNAL: IN=eth2 OUT=eth2 > > SRC=10.0.0.10 DST=10.0.0.4 LEN=48 TOS=0x00 PREC=0x00 TTL=127 ID=17593 DF > > PROTO=TCP SPT=4601 DPT=159 WINDOW=64240 RES=0x00 SYN URGP=0 > > > > What is this? Port 158 and 159 apparently belong to > > BackupExec/NetBackup. 10.0.0.10 is our backup server, but why does it > > try and talk to 10.0.0.4 via the default router? -- Tus problemas no se pueden resolver en el mismo nivel mental que tenÃas cuando los creaste. Albert Einstein