![]() ![]() ![]() So this 3850 is in layer 3 mode and routing? And your pinging its SVI? Or you pinging some IP upstream in your network? It's a workstation plugged right into the Cisco 3850 switch that is also the default gateway Tracing route to ġ <1 ms <1 ms <1 ms ĭo you mean your pinging the IP address of your internet/border/edge router lan IP, and your connected to some downstream router? If this is more than 2 hops you got a really weird network setup!! And prob overcomplicated. That you would get more than 1 hop tells me there is something really really wrong!!Ĭonnection-specific DNS Suffix. Your default gateway is always going to be on the same network as you. Huh? Thought you said it was "your" default gateway. If I do a trace route to the same IP I get a varying number of hops each time I run it. I'm just trying to figure out why this is happening when it's literally the first hop in the network off the workstation, not really sure where to look or why this is happening if I do a trace route to the same IP I get a varying number of hops each time I run it. it's a whole one hop away from me network typography wise. but it's saying I have 18 hops too the IP. or nothing that explained what I saw besides it's an untraceable host in a hop. and I couldn't find anything in their documentation about the blank lines. It's a workstation plugged right into the Cisco 3850 switch that is also the default gateway, I'm as I said before pinging the default gateway, which was set up on the switch then routed back to our main ASA box.Īnd it's ping plotter. just a security requirement, I didn't write it, I don't want fired for not following it we have to mask any internal ip's by policy. Like if you were in the middle of juggling some balls and your phone rang, - what is more important So while sure ping is a easy simple test to test that connectivity exist, its not always a valid test of packet loss, etc. Doing their job is more important than answering a ping. Firewall/router might not answer ping or answer very fast, which could look like a timeout/packet loss if they are busy routing or firewalling. So your pinging something inside your network at a 10 address and your getting that sort of packet loss? Is it wireless? Or is that over the internet? What exactly are you pinging? Devices can not answer ping if they are busy doing other stuff. Its like telling you I live on the planet earth For an address. What I don't get is why are you hiding your 10.10 address? What is the point of that. The black is normally a representation of the variation in the response time. What software are you using? Did you RTFM for it? Clearly you have a packet loss there with the red lines. ![]()
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