Mystery Routing Problem driving me MAD



The gateway in question has been up for years in one office space, connected
to the internet via ATT dsl (well, Pacbell, then SBC, then ATT -- you
know). I had two ip's running on the external interface, let's say
123.123.123.123
123.123.123.124 (alias)

The alias ip forwards connections to a Filemaker Pro server on the inside
lan. Everything works perfectly for ages. Then we move to a new office
space, with T-1 via Paxio. I replace SBC ip's with newly assigned Paxio
ip's. Gateway is ever so slightly broken: it will not route connections to
one specific domain on the internet. Unfortunately, that one single domain
is THE DOMAIN THAT BELONGS TO MY CLIENT AND SERVES THEM THEIR WEBSITE AND
EMAIL! If I disable the alias, everything is perfect, except we've lost
our Filemaker Pro access. The default gateway has been set, and I've tried
applying it both before, and after configuring the alias. One thing I
notice that is probably a clue: let's say the new numbers are

345.345.345.345
345.345.345.346 (alias)

Once these are up, pinging internet sites looks normal to me, except when I
ping the domain in question. When I ping that domain, the IP of that
domain is reported correctly (DNS is working), but the IP that it is being
pinged "from" happens to be the alias IP. That doesn't look right to me --
it should be pinging from the primary, shouldn't it? In any case, I get no
response, and an error that there is no route to host.

I use ipchains, but they are unchanged from before, so I rule them out. In
addition, I've tried flushing them, and the problem remains. There is
nowhere any reference in any of my scripts or chains to the domain in
question, or to the ip's that it resolves to.

I am utterly perplexed. I run this type of configuration here at my home
office, and in various other sites around the Bay Area, and I've just never
had this happen before. In this case, I'm even using the same hardware,
having only changed the ip's and subnet mask to accommodate the Paxio T-1.
I was careful in the move, just out of standard laziness, to keep the
internal and external interfaces the same as they were before. What the
$@$%^&%@! am I missing?

Any help welcome and NEEDED! Be rude if you want. I've got to get this
fixed!

Thanks,

Eric



--
----------------------------------------
Eric Thompson
eTc Computer Consultants
duetc@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
----------------------------------------
.



Relevant Pages

  • Re: Internal LAN-Yes/Internet-No
    ... Make sure that your Gateway and DNS Server point to ... also that you only have 2 LACs (Local Area Connections). ... when I try to connect to the internet using my ...
    (microsoft.public.windowsxp.general)
  • Re: Norton Internet Security and XP Pro *before* logon
    ... The Internet Gateway is an XP Pro SP2 machine running ... > Windows is up to date on all the networked PC's. ... > other connections *even though the gateway PC is sitting at the logon ...
    (alt.comp.anti-virus)
  • Norton Internet Security and XP Pro *before* logon
    ... I have a home network. ... The Internet Gateway is an XP Pro SP2 machine running ... Norton Internet Security 2005 connected by a cable modem on ... other connections *even though the gateway PC is sitting at the logon ...
    (alt.comp.anti-virus)
  • Re: UPnP troubleshoot
    ... >> On the desktop, in network connections, there is an Internet ... >> Gateway Connection icon. ... If I connect the laptop via ethernet, ...
    (microsoft.public.windowsxp.general)
  • Re: Network problem
    ... If you want someone to get out onto the internet set ... > their default gateway to the ip address of the main computer Leave ... ventilation; avoid extreme temperatures and store in a cool, ... away from open flames, naked flames and old flames; avoid inhaling fumes; ...
    (alt.os.windows-xp)

Loading