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    DNS Resolver doesn't work with my university domain.

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved General pfSense Questions
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    • F
      Fandangos @johnpoz
      last edited by

      @johnpoz

      I have to give my ISP a call but talking to people inside the tech area is quite difficult.
      Today is a not a working day so I can't give it a call.
      I'll try tomorrow.

      And I have no idea if my ISP have a NTP service.

      I don't think there's such a thing as retrieved NTP service address like DNS is set by dial up PPPoE, right?

      GertjanG 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • GertjanG
        Gertjan @Fandangos
        last edited by Gertjan

        @fandangos said in DNS Resolver doesn't work with my university domain.:

        people inside the tech area is quite difficult.

        Ah, good news then : you're in Europe then ;)
        Don't worry. The people who can tell you what's up are not available for the muppets like me and you.
        We have another way to express ourselves :
        Old ISP => Bye !
        New ISP => Hi !
        ( but first, before you buy, do some fact checking, and don't call them to ask if they feel they are good, ask others )

        @fandangos said in DNS Resolver doesn't work with my university domain.:

        And I have no idea if my ISP have a NTP service.

        You don't need them for that.
        They 'just' need you to give a connection, and not blocking 'some' stuff.

        Pick your NTP pool or server from here https://www.ntppool.org/en/, or, why not, keep the default one.

        There is only one important setting in pfSense :
        This one :

        7229f81e-8b31-47ba-8fd5-3a5d07aa8522-image.png

        and you can consider to select a pool nearby. But that's optional.

        No "help me" PM's please. Use the forum, the community will thank you.
        Edit : and where are the logs ??

        F 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • stephenw10S
          stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
          last edited by

          That's a 3h offset by my calculation (unless that includes the timezone?) which I could see being an issue for DNSSec. 4m seemed unlikely.
          Any sort of local server would be waaay better than 3h!

          F 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • F
            Fandangos @Gertjan
            last edited by

            @gertjan

            I'm located in Brazil.
            I've set several NTP servers, none work.
            I see this same behavior with several network devices on my lan.

            I have a FPGA board that doesn't have a RTC and it syncs the time at every boot.
            I use the bash script I posted earlier to bypass this.

            My Unraid NAS have this same problem.

            And my windows machine fails with windows ntp server.

            And I don't have many ISP options in my area that have this kind of speed I have here, which is 600 mbit down and 300 mbit up so I'll try talking to them.
            We have laws in Brazil that prevent port blocking as the law says all onlines services must be provided equally, it's called "marco civil da internet" here.
            If they don't open the port by a user request I can sue and force them to do it.

            Meanwhile a proxy/vpn bypass could be a solution?

            Or I'll try to port my bash script to pfsense shell and figure out how to run it with shell and root at startup.

            johnpozJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • johnpozJ
              johnpoz LAYER 8 Global Moderator @Fandangos
              last edited by johnpoz

              @fandangos said in DNS Resolver doesn't work with my university domain.:

              Meanwhile a proxy/vpn bypass could be a solution?

              You shouldn't have to do that, especially if there is some law in Brazil that says your isp can not be blocking ports. NTP is a very common and required service for proper operation of the internet to be honest. Many things require accurate keeping of time, while you don't have to be plus or minus a couple of ms ;)

              So all your devices are behind pfsense that have this problem right? So just to cover your bases before you go yelling at your isp. I would sniff on pfsense wan do you see it sending ntp queries? and just not getting answers?

              example.

              sniff.jpg

              You can see traffic from my wan IP to ntp server on 123, while I get responses and everything is working great.. Do you just not see any replies but see traffic going out ntp server IP on port 123..

              An intelligent man is sometimes forced to be drunk to spend time with his fools
              If you get confused: Listen to the Music Play
              Please don't Chat/PM me for help, unless mod related
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              • F
                Fandangos @stephenw10
                last edited by

                @stephenw10

                I have no idea why 4 minutes broke it for one particular site but I can say with confidence after that breaf sync that happened and it's blocked again dns resolver with dnsssec enabled is resolving my university address.

                johnpozJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • johnpozJ
                  johnpoz LAYER 8 Global Moderator @Fandangos
                  last edited by

                  @fandangos I don't think it was the 4 minutes, it was most likely your hours offset compared to your actual timezone.

                  you can be in timezone X on a system, but have the wrong time for that timezone - but be the correct time for your location as you see it on the clock on the system. But when you have systems doing math to figure out stuff you could have issues.

                  An intelligent man is sometimes forced to be drunk to spend time with his fools
                  If you get confused: Listen to the Music Play
                  Please don't Chat/PM me for help, unless mod related
                  SG-4860 24.11 | Lab VMs 2.8, 24.11

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                  • F
                    Fandangos
                    last edited by

                    @johnpoz

                    I did a quick capture here looking at the NTP logs:

                    2446e04f-9364-47a2-b2ad-939b499fd88a-image.png

                    And the capture:

                    11:08:25.168577 IP 135.181.21.151.59574 > ***.***.***.***.64050: tcp 1435
                    11:08:25.172578 IP ***.***.***.***.123 > 162.159.200.1.123: UDP, length 48
                    11:08:25.180765 IP 135.181.21.151.59574 > ***.***.***.***.64050: tcp 1435
                    11:08:25.180994 IP 135.181.21.151.59574 > ***.***.***.***.64050: tcp 1435
                    

                    No response.

                    11:08:31.261478 IP ***.***.***.***.46877 > 31.13.85.23.443: tcp 0
                    11:08:31.263652 IP ***.***.***.***.123 > 138.36.164.35.123: UDP, length 48
                    11:08:31.267118 IP 65.21.136.253.59139 > ***.***.***.***.2021: tcp 1435
                    11:08:31.267160 IP 65.21.136.253.59139 > ***.***.***.***.2021: tcp 1435
                    

                    Nothing here too

                    11:08:32.264276 IP ***.***.***.***.64050 > 135.181.21.151.59574: tcp 0
                    11:08:32.265292 IP ***.***.***.***.123 > 162.159.200.123.123: UDP, length 48
                    11:08:32.265896 IP 135.181.21.151.59574 > ***.***.***.***.64050: tcp 1435
                    11:08:32.265941 IP 135.181.21.151.59574 > ***.***.***.***.64050: tcp 1435
                    

                    Again, nothing.

                    I just removed my IP from the capture but that's it, no response.

                    johnpozJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • johnpozJ
                      johnpoz LAYER 8 Global Moderator @Fandangos
                      last edited by johnpoz

                      @fandangos you can limit your capture to just udp 123 so you don't see any other traffic..

                      But yeah if you see it going out, and no response time to call the isp and complain..

                      edit: if I had to "guess" its quite possible the isp doesn't have a problem with the destination of 123, but they may be blocking because of the source port being 123.. I don't believe you can change this, atleast not in the gui. with official ntpd I don't think you can, but very possible to change I believe with openntpd or chrony which are two other ntp applications.. So if you could run say one of those on some other box you have on network and make sure its not using 123 as the source port.

                      Notice in mine, the source is not 123 - but that is most likely because that is my ntp server I run on my pi talking to the internet, and it is using ntpsec and not official ntp distribution. And its traffic would be natted by pfsense anyway, which changes the source port anyway. If they were blocking just source 123, and pfsense would change the source port when it nats to your public - that wouldn't explain why they are all having problems. Yeah time to contact the isp..

                      pi@pi-ntp:~ $ ntpq
                      ntpq> v
                      ntpsec-1.2.1+85-g1a7bb2e3a
                      ntpq> 
                      

                      While my ntp server running on my pi does use a gps hat, I still have it talking to other ntp servers on the net as well

                      ntpq> pe
                           remote                                   refid      st t when poll reach   delay   offset   jitter
                      =======================================================================================================
                      *SHM(1)                                  .PPS.            0 l   15   16  377   0.0000  -0.6251   0.0897
                      -SHM(0)                                  .GPS.            0 l   23   64  377   0.0000 -163.411   6.8951
                      -ntp-0.gw.illinois.edu                   200.7.224.32     2 u   56   64  377  15.4833   2.3487   1.0280
                      +ntp.your.org                            .GPS.            1 u   30   64  377  12.3152   1.6419   1.7052
                      -tock.usshc.com                          .WAAS.           1 u    4   64  377  35.3330  10.2600   1.2384
                      +ntp1.netwrx1.com                        127.127.28.0     2 u   11   64  377  27.3171  -6.2840   6.5250
                      ntpq> 
                      

                      ntp via gps can be tricking to get offset worked out, etc. I have it more for the pps signal and get time from other stratum 1 and 2 public ntp servers.

                      edit2: to be complete in your info you have when you call your isp. Always best to do your due diligence when dealing with them.. I would change your sniff to only capture udp 123, and then run your sniff for a while and make sure you have some traffic coming from other ntp server on your network natting through pfsense so your source is not the 123, and also shows it doesn't get responses either.

                      An intelligent man is sometimes forced to be drunk to spend time with his fools
                      If you get confused: Listen to the Music Play
                      Please don't Chat/PM me for help, unless mod related
                      SG-4860 24.11 | Lab VMs 2.8, 24.11

                      F 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                      • F
                        Fandangos @johnpoz
                        last edited by

                        @johnpoz

                        I have a android time server running here on port 1234.
                        The problem is that in pfsense gui I can't change the port to 1234, so I can't use it.

                        I also have a unraid box running here, that's a NAS with a modified slackware linux running so I could use that but I believe this is getting way over my head and freeBSD is different enough for me to have a hard time porting that script that checks google.

                        There's no man, date doesn't take the same arguments and there's no wget.
                        I tried changing

                        /usr/local/etc/pkg/repos/pfSense.conf
                        

                        with

                        FreeBSD: { enabled: yes }
                        

                        but

                        [2.6.0-RELEASE][admin@pfSense.home.arpa]/var/log: pkg install wget
                        Updating pfSense-core repository catalogue...
                        pfSense-core repository is up to date.
                        Updating pfSense repository catalogue...
                        pfSense repository is up to date.
                        All repositories are up to date.
                        pkg: No packages available to install matching 'wget' have been found in the repositories
                        

                        Basically this is my workaround on other devices running linux in the house:

                        date -s "$(wget -qSO- --max-redirect=0 google.com 2>&1 | grep Date: | cut -d' ' -f5-8)Z"
                        
                        johnpozJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • johnpozJ
                          johnpoz LAYER 8 Global Moderator @Fandangos
                          last edited by

                          @fandangos so you on your sniff you show traffic leaving pfsense where the source is not 123, and they get no answers either. Or did you disable their ntp servers and just use your work around..

                          Just want you to have as much info as possible when complaining to your isp. A good sniff showing traffic with source port 123 and other with other source port that your not getting any answers to anything that you send to port 123 ntp..

                          An intelligent man is sometimes forced to be drunk to spend time with his fools
                          If you get confused: Listen to the Music Play
                          Please don't Chat/PM me for help, unless mod related
                          SG-4860 24.11 | Lab VMs 2.8, 24.11

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                          • F
                            Fandangos @johnpoz
                            last edited by

                            @johnpoz

                            not sure if I follow.
                            I don't know what those TCP packets are. I just pasted those to show that right after the UDP 123 request there's nothing comming back at 123.

                            My workaround uses wget, there's nothing of NTP there, it just gets the date set by google.

                            Now I've found a docker container on Unraid called NTP that by the description uses chrony:
                            https://hub.docker.com/r/cturra/ntp

                            installed it and used

                            pool.ntp.org, time.google.com
                            

                            as NTP_SERVERS

                            Log from this docker container:

                            2022-09-07T14:43:54Z chronyd version 4.1 starting (+CMDMON +NTP +REFCLOCK +RTC +PRIVDROP -SCFILTER +SIGND +ASYNCDNS +NTS +SECHASH +IPV6 -DEBUG)
                            2022-09-07T14:43:54Z Disabled control of system clock
                            2022-09-07T14:43:54Z Could not read valid frequency and skew from driftfile /var/lib/chrony/chrony.drift
                            2022-09-07T14:43:59Z Selected source 143.107.229.210 (pool.ntp.org)
                            2022-09-07T14:43:59Z System clock wrong by 74.923575 seconds
                            2022-09-07T14:43:59Z Could not step system clock
                            2022-09-07T14:44:01Z System clock wrong by 74.923624 seconds
                            

                            So I set my unraid box as ntp server on pfsense and look at this:
                            0b7dc5aa-2932-47e6-8103-96f1df59de33-image.png

                            10.27.33.198 is my unraid box.

                            So... I'm lost, the docker is able to access the NTP pool but Pfsense and unraid itself is not?

                            Sep  7 11:58:53 Tower root: Stopping NTP daemon...
                            Sep  7 11:58:54 Tower ntpd[1525]: ntpd 4.2.8p15@1.3728-o Fri May 21 19:02:16 UTC 2021 (1): Starting
                            Sep  7 11:58:54 Tower ntpd[1525]: Command line: /usr/sbin/ntpd -g -u ntp:ntp
                            Sep  7 11:58:54 Tower ntpd[1525]: ----------------------------------------------------
                            Sep  7 11:58:54 Tower ntpd[1525]: ntp-4 is maintained by Network Time Foundation,
                            Sep  7 11:58:54 Tower ntpd[1525]: Inc. (NTF), a non-profit 501(c)(3) public-benefit
                            Sep  7 11:58:54 Tower ntpd[1525]: corporation.  Support and training for ntp-4 are
                            Sep  7 11:58:54 Tower ntpd[1525]: available at https://www.nwtime.org/support
                            Sep  7 11:58:54 Tower ntpd[1525]: ----------------------------------------------------
                            Sep  7 11:58:54 Tower ntpd[1527]: proto: precision = 0.043 usec (-24)
                            Sep  7 11:58:54 Tower ntpd[1527]: basedate set to 2021-05-09
                            Sep  7 11:58:54 Tower ntpd[1527]: gps base set to 2021-05-09 (week 2157)
                            Sep  7 11:58:54 Tower ntpd[1527]: Listen normally on 0 lo 127.0.0.1:123
                            Sep  7 11:58:54 Tower ntpd[1527]: Listen normally on 1 br0 10.27.33.198:123
                            Sep  7 11:58:54 Tower ntpd[1527]: Listen normally on 2 lo [::1]:123
                            Sep  7 11:58:54 Tower ntpd[1527]: Listening on routing socket on fd #19 for interface updates
                            Sep  7 11:58:54 Tower ntpd[1527]: kernel reports TIME_ERROR: 0x41: Clock Unsynchronized
                            Sep  7 11:58:54 Tower ntpd[1527]: kernel reports TIME_ERROR: 0x41: Clock Unsynchronized
                            Sep  7 11:58:54 Tower root: Starting NTP daemon:  /usr/sbin/ntpd -g -u ntp:ntp
                            Sep  7 12:00:17 Tower ntpd[1527]: receive: Unexpected origin timestamp 0xe6c33036.73536c7b does not match aorg 0000000000.00000000 from server@216.239.35.12 xmt 0xe6c33081.7014ee6e
                            

                            10.27.33.1 is the pfsense router.

                            johnpozJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • johnpozJ
                              johnpoz LAYER 8 Global Moderator @Fandangos
                              last edited by johnpoz

                              @fandangos

                              see here

                              11:08:25.172578 IP ***.***.***.***.123 > 162.159.200.1.123: UDP, length 48
                              

                              That is your IP talking to that 162, see the .123 is the port your talking from the "source" port.. and then the .123 on the 162 address is the "destination" port

                              If you notice in my traffic, that 69 address is mine the source port is 23455, and the destination is 123..

                              When traffic is natted through pfsense the source port is almost always changed.. This is how napt (network address port translation) works.

                              So you could have your machine 192.168.1.100:X talking to 8.8.8.8:443 when pfsense nats it to your public IP it would be like this

                              Your public IP 1.2.3.4:Y going to 8.8.8.8:443

                              Its common for many ntp clients to use source port 123, pfsense would use that or should - here for example is client on my network talking to through pfsense to my ntp server.. Since they are on different vlans. See how its source port 123 to destination port 123

                              here.jpg

                              Its a possibility that your isp is blocking traffic that has a source port of 123, because the return traffic to that would be to 123.. So it would be good to see if you still don't get answers to ntp with the source port is not 123..

                              Any client behind pfsense trying to talk to ntp out on the internet, be it using 123 or not would be natted on pfsense to some other source port.

                              Which if your saying no ntp client works behind pfsense, that its most likely not the case - but its good to have that info to tell/show the ISP when you complain.

                              An intelligent man is sometimes forced to be drunk to spend time with his fools
                              If you get confused: Listen to the Music Play
                              Please don't Chat/PM me for help, unless mod related
                              SG-4860 24.11 | Lab VMs 2.8, 24.11

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                              • F
                                Fandangos @johnpoz
                                last edited by Fandangos

                                @johnpoz

                                I'm not so sure anymore that my ISP is blocking it.

                                root@Tower:~# ntpq
                                ntpq> v
                                ntpq 4.2.8p15@1.3728-o Fri May 21 19:02:16 UTC 2021 (1)
                                ntpq> pe
                                     remote           refid      st t when poll reach   delay   offset  jitter
                                ==============================================================================
                                 LOCAL(0)        .LOCL.          10 l   55   64    1    0.000   +0.000   0.000
                                +time2.google.co .GOOG.           1 u   42   64    1  137.169   -6.854   2.481
                                *a.st1.ntp.br    .ONBR.           1 u   45   64    1   11.026   -4.679   1.775
                                 lrtest2.ntp.ifs 143.107.229.211  2 u   42   64    1   18.545   -2.760   3.131
                                 time.cloudflare 10.221.8.4       3 u   41   64    1   18.712   +2.339   3.138
                                ntpq>
                                

                                using:
                                time.google.com
                                a.st1.ntp.br
                                0.br.pool.ntp.org
                                pool.ntp.org

                                unraid is able to access it.

                                Pfsense is not.
                                Unraid is on my LAN that is accessing WAN behind Pfsense.
                                That makes zero sense to me.

                                johnpozJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • johnpozJ
                                  johnpoz LAYER 8 Global Moderator @Fandangos
                                  last edited by johnpoz

                                  @fandangos well that points to my theory of them blocking source port 123..

                                  If that is the case, then the simple solution is just point pfsense to that box for its ntp server. Then your other clients could either use pfsense for ntp, or also point to this device.

                                  An intelligent man is sometimes forced to be drunk to spend time with his fools
                                  If you get confused: Listen to the Music Play
                                  Please don't Chat/PM me for help, unless mod related
                                  SG-4860 24.11 | Lab VMs 2.8, 24.11

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                                  • F
                                    Fandangos @johnpoz
                                    last edited by

                                    @johnpoz said in DNS Resolver doesn't work with my university domain.:

                                    If that is the case, then the simple solution is just point pfsense to that box for its ntp server. Then your other clients could either use pfsense for ntp, or also point to this device.

                                    That's what I'm doing.
                                    My question is, does ntpq (out of the box since I changed nothing) uses other port that's not 123?

                                    Or how is it possible that ntpq is able to access those servers and pfsense is not?
                                    If I understand everything so far, it is using port 123, or at least it should be.

                                    johnpozJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • johnpozJ
                                      johnpoz LAYER 8 Global Moderator @Fandangos
                                      last edited by

                                      @fandangos it is very very common for ntp to use source of 123.. Its possible that some ntp clients might allow you to change - openntpd might, chrony might for example..

                                      I do not believe there is anyway to change it in pfsense, there sure isn't in the gui, and I do not believe the client they use has anyway to do it.

                                      So the simple solution is pick a box, your nas, whatever this tower box is - something that is on 24/7 and use that as your ntp server. Then just point pfsense to it, all your clients to it - or once you have pfsense syncing ntp to this server you pick to use on your network. Clients could just use pfsense as their ntp source, etc.

                                      But really doesn't matter what source port a box your going to use as your ntp server on your network uses, since pfsense will change the source port to something other than 123 when it nats that traffic to the internet.

                                      An intelligent man is sometimes forced to be drunk to spend time with his fools
                                      If you get confused: Listen to the Music Play
                                      Please don't Chat/PM me for help, unless mod related
                                      SG-4860 24.11 | Lab VMs 2.8, 24.11

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                                      • stephenw10S
                                        stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                                        last edited by

                                        If you set an interface (or interfaces) for ntpd to listen on it will also use those for outbound requests. If WAN is not included it will NAT that traffic and change the source port:

                                        WAN 	udp 	172.21.16.10:41229 (192.168.10.1:123) -> 141.95.116.44:123 	MULTIPLE:MULTIPLE 	7 / 7 	532 B / 532 B 	
                                        WAN 	udp 	172.21.16.10:36854 (192.168.10.1:123) -> 201.217.3.85:123 	MULTIPLE:MULTIPLE 	7 / 7 	532 B / 532 B 	
                                        WAN 	udp 	172.21.16.10:49005 (192.168.10.1:123) -> 165.140.142.118:123 	MULTIPLE:MULTIPLE 	7 / 7 	532 B / 532 B 	
                                        WAN 	udp 	172.21.16.10:53482 (192.168.10.1:123) -> 46.165.252.57:123 	MULTIPLE:MULTIPLE 	7 / 7 	532 B / 532 B 	
                                        

                                        Steve

                                        johnpozJ F 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                        • johnpozJ
                                          johnpoz LAYER 8 Global Moderator @stephenw10
                                          last edited by johnpoz

                                          @stephenw10 great idea steve - yup that should do it.

                                          Mine doesn't have it selected - so try that first, that be much easier solution.

                                          ntp.jpg

                                          An intelligent man is sometimes forced to be drunk to spend time with his fools
                                          If you get confused: Listen to the Music Play
                                          Please don't Chat/PM me for help, unless mod related
                                          SG-4860 24.11 | Lab VMs 2.8, 24.11

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                                          • F
                                            Fandangos @johnpoz
                                            last edited by

                                            @johnpoz

                                            I did a packet capture while trying ntpq on unraid, selected ipv4 and udp only
                                            I'm looking at the log for .123 only

                                            13:22:57.861449 IP ***.**.**.***.33801 > 216.239.35.0.123: UDP, length 48
                                            13:22:57.861500 IP ***.**.**.***.62024 > 143.107.229.210.123: UDP, length 48
                                            13:22:57.879592 IP 143.107.229.210.123 > ***.**.**.***.62024: UDP, length 48
                                            13:22:57.920856 IP 216.239.35.0.123 > ***.**.**.***.33801: UDP, length 48
                                            
                                            13:22:59.920620 IP 216.239.35.0.123 > ***.**.**.***.33801: UDP, length 48
                                            13:23:00.861400 IP ***.**.**.***.37425 > 201.49.148.135.123: UDP, length 48
                                            

                                            and

                                            13:23:03.861526 IP ***.**.**.***.33801 > 216.239.35.0.123: UDP, length 48
                                            13:23:03.861546 IP ***.**.**.***.62024 > 143.107.229.210.123: UDP, length 48
                                            13:23:03.879777 IP 143.107.229.210.123 > ***.**.**.***.62024: UDP, length 48
                                            13:23:03.920821 IP 216.239.35.0.123 > ***.**.**.***.33801: UDP, length 48
                                            13:23:04.861879 IP ***.**.**.***.37425 > 201.49.148.135.123: UDP, length 48
                                            13:23:04.861897 IP ***.**.**.***.37188 > 200.160.7.186.123: UDP, length 48
                                            13:23:04.872419 IP 200.160.7.186.123 > ***.**.**.***.37188: UDP, length 48
                                            13:23:04.885491 IP 201.49.148.135.123 > ***.**.**.***.37425: UDP, length 48
                                            13:23:05.862358 IP ***.**.**.***.33801 > 216.239.35.0.123: UDP, length 48
                                            13:23:05.862377 IP ***.**.**.***.62024 > 143.107.229.210.123: UDP, length 48
                                            13:23:05.880758 IP 143.107.229.210.123 > ***.**.**.***.62024: UDP, length 48
                                            13:23:05.921698 IP 216.239.35.0.123 > ***.**.**.***.33801: UDP, length 48
                                            13:23:06.862783 IP ***.**.**.***.37425 > 201.49.148.135.123: UDP, length 48
                                            13:23:06.862893 IP ***.**.**.***.37188 > 200.160.7.186.123: UDP, length 48
                                            

                                            So I get it, it's not blocked at all.

                                            johnpozJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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