On Sun, 2010-12-19 at 03:22 -0600, Dale wrote:
> Neil Bothwick wrote:
> > On Fri, 17 Dec 2010 21:27:09 -0600, Dale wrote:
> >
> >    
> >> Both modem and router are set to use DHCP.  I should know when I get
> >> some sleep next time.  I'm not sure when that will be tho.
> >>      
> > So what is providing the DHCP service?
> >
> >    
> 
> Well, I guess they figure it out.  lol  I have the network set to DHCP 
> on my puter, the router has it and the modem.  So far, it works out the 
> IP part at least.  I really hadn't thought about it that much to be 
> honest.  This is the first few hops with a traceroute that shows how it 
> is getting to the internet:
> 
> traceroute to google.com (74.125.157.104), 30 hops max, 60 byte packets
>   1  192.168.1.1 (192.168.1.1)  0.248 ms  0.356 ms  0.480 ms
>   2  192.168.1.254 (192.168.1.254)  9.174 ms  9.406 ms  9.639 ms
>   3  adsl-95-128-1.jan.bellsouth.net (98.95.XXX.XX)  24.658 ms  34.443 
> ms  43.800 ms
>   4  12.81.48.52 (12.81.48.52)  66.552 ms  79.846 ms  82.490 ms
>   5  12.81.48.46 (12.81.48.46)  100.020 ms  110.546 ms  120.420 ms
>   6  ixc01mem-pos-7-0-0.bellsouth.net (65.83.239.97)  130.498 ms  38.126 
> ms  39.427 ms
> 
> I put some X's in my IP.  We never know who else may be reading this.  
> You see anything wrong with the hops?  Should I cut DHCP off on 
> something, maybe two somethings?
> 
> Dale
> 
> :-)  :-)

Hi Dale, running two or more dhcp servers that are not in sync on a
network is asking for trouble.  Traceroute wont help with dhcp as its
broadcast/unicast.

I am not sure if you have posted the full setup yet, but it appears you
have two devices running on the same class C network and are trying to
route? - doesnt make sense unless you are subnetting?

Perhaps it time to post an annotated ascii diagram of what you are
actually doing.

BillK




Reply via email to