On Wed, May 19, 2010 at 9:56 AM, Peter Bauer <s...@ferraro.net> wrote: >> On Wed, May 19, 2010 at 4:41 AM, Peter Bauer >> >> Can you ping it from within your network ? > > If I ping from my first IP my second IP in the same network, the SSH > connections lags and I loss a lot of packets from my SSH connection to the > server. > But I can ping internally the gateway.
I would an extended test between those 2 servers and also between each one and the gateway to see how many packets you lose. The idea is to isolate the problem to only one server, one interface, one path, etc. > >> >> When it's not working, if you ping from server to >> "Internet", does >> "Internet" starts receiving ping replies >> automatically ? > > I have not tested, but when I ping from Internet to server, some ICMP > sequence packets never arrived to the server when I look with snoop on it. Try running a traceroute back and forth from different locations. > >> I can't think of anything that would cause this >> besides flaky firewall >> rules. Try to test this on your local network to rule >> out any >> intermediary problems between this server and the >> other end over the >> Internet. > > I will remake tests internally by pinging the gateway. > Is it normal that e1000g0 device is missing in the router table for the > default gateway?: > $ netstat -nr > > Routing Table: IPv4 > Destination Gateway Flags Ref Use Interface > -------------------- -------------------- ----- ----- ---------- --------- > default 178.63.21.193 UG 1 125 > 178.63.21.192 178.63.21.204 U 1 45 e1000g0 > 127.0.0.1 127.0.0.1 UH 1 56 lo0 > > Routing Table: IPv6 > Destination/Mask Gateway Flags Ref Use If > --------------------------- --------------------------- ----- --- ------- > ----- > ::1 ::1 UH 1 0 lo0 Yes, it looks OK. -- Giovanni _______________________________________________ opensolaris-help mailing list opensolaris-help@opensolaris.org