forgot to mention, i use bezeqint too. On Sat, Oct 16, 2010 at 9:25 PM, Sorana Fraier <sf10...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi Ohad > > I ran a whois on 77.67.66.9. It turns out that it belongs to Tiscali > network. They are very notorious in traffic shaping. They use to work with > 012. I didn't know that bezeqint works with them too. I used to have tons of > problems when I had internet with 012. > > If you can avoid traffic through them, do that. Otherwise, I don't know > what can be done. Maybe other have a better idea. > > i ran too tcptraceroute to the same ip as yours. > > here is the output about tiscali from here (I skipped the first 10 hops): > > 11 77.67.66.9 65.208 ms 64.018 ms 67.894 ms > 12 89.149.187.210 89.924 ms 98.971 ms 88.379 ms > 13 194.50.100.190 158.058 ms 163.518 ms 172.186 ms > 14 * * * > 15 195.113.69.57 176.454 ms 183.741 ms 182.775 ms > 16 195.113.68.150 100.259 ms 98.225 ms 99.370 ms > 17 195.113.68.198 98.377 ms 99.620 ms 102.622 ms > 18 195.113.69.170 179.713 ms 178.286 ms 179.791 ms > 19 195.113.69.6 174.207 ms 175.161 ms 170.599 ms > 20 195.113.19.83 [open] 219.739 ms 237.707 ms 222.181 ms > > > > > On Sat, Oct 16, 2010 at 9:11 PM, Ohad Lutzky <o...@lutzky.net> wrote: > >> Okay, that's something I can use! Here's what I get - all hope up to and >> including 7 are from within bezeqint (without useful reverse dns >> resolutions). Hop 8 is >> >> sudo tcptraceroute -i eth0 -n 195.113.19.83 11371 >> traceroute to 195.113.19.83 (195.113.19.83), 30 hops max, 60 byte packets >> 1 10.0.0.138 4.018 ms 4.000 ms 3.993 ms >> 2 212.179.37.1 20.982 ms 22.589 ms 22.581 ms >> 3 212.179.87.173 24.302 ms 27.114 ms 28.475 ms >> 4 212.179.152.157 29.563 ms 30.513 ms 31.462 ms >> 5 212.179.124.145 37.292 ms 37.288 ms 37.274 ms >> 6 212.179.124.162 40.561 ms 51.928 ms 54.370 ms >> 7 62.219.189.14 4317.354 ms 212.179.124.26 4303.544 ms 4301.958 ms >> 8 77.67.66.9 199.620 ms * * >> 9 * * * >> 10 * * * >> 11 * * * >> 12 * * * >> 13 * * * >> 14 * * * >> 15 * * * >> 16 * * * >> 17 * * * >> 18 * * * >> 19 * * * >> 20 * * * >> 21 * * * >> 22 * * * >> 23 * * * >> 24 * * * >> 25 * * * >> 26 * * * >> 27 * * * >> 28 * * * >> 29 * * * >> 30 * * * >> >> >> On Sat, Oct 16, 2010 at 8:48 PM, guy keren <c...@actcom.co.il> wrote: >> >>> >>> you should have a traceroute-line utility that runs on TCP ports of your >>> choice. >>> >>> for example, tcptraceroute. >>> >>> see an explanation here: >>> >>> http://christophe.vandeplas.com/2007/11/04/using-traceroute-icmp-and-tcp >>> >>> --guy >>> >>> Ohad Lutzky wrote: >>> >>>> traceroute is ICMP. I'm having trouble with specific ports on TCP. >>>> >>>> On Sat, Oct 16, 2010 at 7:53 PM, Dave Roi <david...@gmail.com <mailto: >>>> david...@gmail.com>> wrote: >>>> >>>> Did you try running traceroute to the pgp server or android market >>>> server? >>>> See how many hops it does go and see in which one it gets stuck. >>>> >>>> >>>> On Sat, Oct 16, 2010 at 19:36, Ohad Lutzky <o...@lutzky.net >>>> <mailto:o...@lutzky.net>> wrote: >>>> >>>> Hello everyone, >>>> >>>> I have a Linksys DSL-2760u router/DSL modem, using a Wow (Bezeq) >>>> connection to the Bezeq International ISP. It seems that various >>>> outgoing ports are blocked - HTTP, HTTPS, bittorrent and SSH >>>> work well enough, but - for example - I can't download Android >>>> apps from the Market. Easier to test, I can't download PGP >>>> public keys. For example: >>>> >>>> gpg -v -v --keyserver subkeys.pgp.net <http://subkeys.pgp.net> >>>> >>>> --recv F120156012B83718 >>>> gpg: requesting key 12B83718 from hkp server subkeys.pgp.net >>>> <http://subkeys.pgp.net> >>>> >>>> >>>> This hangs indefinitely. So does this: >>>> telnet subkeys.pgp.net <http://subkeys.pgp.net> 11371 >>>> >>>> Trying 195.113.19.83... >>>> >>>> The same occurs for other keyservers, git-protocol, and various >>>> other "unconventional" high-port usage. I've gone over the >>>> router settings, disabled its firewall (but not NAT, which I >>>> need), added my machine to the DMZ (this actually seems to help, >>>> sometimes, for git - and even then, only once), tried port >>>> triggering... I can't get a consistent result. >>>> >>>> I should note that this issue only exists for *outgoing* ports. >>>> I have no problem mapping *incoming* ports (such as my openssh >>>> server or bittorrent web interface). >>>> >>>> -- Man is the only animal that laughs and weeps, for he >>>> is the only >>>> animal that is struck with the difference between what things >>>> are and what they ought to be. >>>> - William Hazlitt >>>> >>>> Ohad Lutzky >>>> >>>> _______________________________________________ >>>> Haifux mailing list >>>> Haifux@haifux.org <mailto:Haifux@haifux.org> >>>> >>>> http://hamakor.org.il/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/haifux >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> -- >>>> Man is the only animal that laughs and weeps, for he is the only animal >>>> that is struck with the difference between what things are and what they >>>> ought to be. >>>> - William Hazlitt >>>> >>>> Ohad Lutzky >>>> >>>> >>>> ------------------------------------------------------------------------ >>>> >>>> >>>> _______________________________________________ >>>> Haifux mailing list >>>> Haifux@haifux.org >>>> http://hamakor.org.il/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/haifux >>>> >>> >>> >> >> >> -- >> Man is the only animal that laughs and weeps, for he is the only animal >> that is struck with the difference between what things are and what they >> ought to be. >> - William Hazlitt >> >> Ohad Lutzky >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Haifux mailing list >> Haifux@haifux.org >> http://hamakor.org.il/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/haifux >> >> >
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