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    Why outgoing LAN being blocked?

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Firewalling
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    • johnpozJ
      johnpoz LAYER 8 Global Moderator
      last edited by

      If you pinging your isp gateway and your getting 800ms.. that is high to be sure..  So either your pipe is full and that is causing it, or their router (your gateway) is loaded and not answering pings quickly or not at all..  As mentioned not all sites on the internet will answer ping.

      what does a traceroute to say googledns look like?

      example

      traceroute -n 8.8.8.8
      traceroute to 8.8.8.8 (8.8.8.8), 30 hops max, 60 byte packets
      1  192.168.1.253  0.387 ms  0.308 ms  0.290 ms
      2  24.13.x.1  12.922 ms  12.926 ms  28.036 ms
      3  68.85.131.149  11.891 ms  12.437 ms  12.440 ms
      4  68.86.196.33  15.119 ms 68.86.187.213  13.798 ms 68.86.197.149  14.935 ms
      5  68.86.94.45  17.214 ms * *
      6  68.86.88.22  23.731 ms  22.785 ms  23.554 ms
      7  68.86.87.126  19.738 ms  13.399 ms  13.459 ms
      8  66.208.233.142  12.663 ms  11.966 ms  15.963 ms
      9  * * *
      10  72.14.237.133  12.689 ms 209.85.254.240  16.457 ms  18.607 ms
      11  209.85.241.22  37.496 ms 72.14.238.104  37.271 ms  36.170 ms
      12  216.239.43.217  28.410 ms  28.363 ms  27.931 ms
      13  * * *
      14  8.8.8.8  29.482 ms  25.311 ms  27.303 ms

      So this is from a linux box behind pfsense.. so first hop is pfsense - notice that is very fast because its local lan.  Then next hop is my ISP gateway.. not bad 10 to 12 ms..  And then notice the rest..  I snipped out part of the isp IP since it would of told you what network specific comcast network I am on, its a large /21 but no reason that is needed in this example, etc.

      So curious if your seeing really slow times for the whole path, or only to specific hops in the path?  The -n tells it not to do PTR lookups on the IPs makes for quicker finish to the trace.  that is linux, windows it would be tracert -d 8.8.8.8 for example

      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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      • S
        SixXxShooTeR
        last edited by

        @johnpoz:

        If you pinging your isp gateway and your getting 800ms.. that is high to be sure..  So either your pipe is full and that is causing it, or their router (your gateway) is loaded and not answering pings quickly or not at all..  As mentioned not all sites on the internet will answer ping.

        what does a traceroute to say googledns look like?

        example

        traceroute -n 8.8.8.8
        traceroute to 8.8.8.8 (8.8.8.8), 30 hops max, 60 byte packets
        1  192.168.1.253  0.387 ms  0.308 ms  0.290 ms
        2  24.13.x.1  12.922 ms  12.926 ms  28.036 ms
        3  68.85.131.149  11.891 ms  12.437 ms  12.440 ms
        4  68.86.196.33  15.119 ms 68.86.187.213  13.798 ms 68.86.197.149  14.935 ms
        5  68.86.94.45  17.214 ms * *
        6  68.86.88.22  23.731 ms  22.785 ms  23.554 ms
        7  68.86.87.126  19.738 ms  13.399 ms  13.459 ms
        8  66.208.233.142  12.663 ms  11.966 ms  15.963 ms
        9  * * *
        10  72.14.237.133  12.689 ms 209.85.254.240  16.457 ms  18.607 ms
        11  209.85.241.22  37.496 ms 72.14.238.104  37.271 ms  36.170 ms
        12  216.239.43.217  28.410 ms  28.363 ms  27.931 ms
        13  * * *
        14  8.8.8.8  29.482 ms  25.311 ms  27.303 ms

        So this is from a linux box behind pfsense.. so first hop is pfsense - notice that is very fast because its local lan.  Then next hop is my ISP gateway.. not bad 10 to 12 ms..  And then notice the rest..  I snipped out part of the isp IP since it would of told you what network specific comcast network I am on, its a large /21 but no reason that is needed in this example, etc.

        So curious if your seeing really slow times for the whole path, or only to specific hops in the path?  The -n tells it not to do PTR lookups on the IPs makes for quicker finish to the trace.  that is linux, windows it would be tracert -d 8.8.8.8 for example

        Hi John, thanks for the response. Here is the results of doing the -d 8.8.8.8 with a windows machine connected to a Cisco SG-200-08 which is connected to my pfSense box:

        1 <1 ms <1ms <1ms      192.168.1.1
        2 821ms 998ms 966ms  10.xxx.x.1
        3 73ms  926ms 1001ms 68.6.12.38
        4 *          *        *            Request timed out.
        5 211ms 676ms 324ms  68.6.8.100
        6 328ms 782ms 217ms  68.1.0.136
        7 217ms 33ms  966ms  68.105.30.181
        8 220ms 745ms 999ms  64.233.174.238
        9 1000ms 1025ms 973ms 64.233.174.192
        10 218ms 52ms  73ms  72.14.239.153
        11 411ms 315ms 918ms  216.239.48.167
        12 *        *          *          Request timed out.
        13 228ms 585ms 432ms  8.8.8.8

        What. The. Hell.

        Here are the results using traceroute on pfSense (directly connected to modem):

        Traceroute output:
        1  10.xxx.x.1 (10.xxx.x.1)  49.116 ms  988.726 ms  975.036 ms
        2  (68.6.12.38)  1003.208 ms  369.721 ms  177.508 ms
        3  * * *
        4  (68.6.8.100)  909.782 ms  80.088 ms  64.463 ms
        5  (68.1.0.136)  21.123 ms  47.357 ms  460.282 ms
        6  (68.105.30.181)  155.108 ms  58.613 ms  27.881 ms
        7  216.239.46.40 (216.239.46.40)  33.634 ms
            64.233.174.238 (64.233.174.238)  167.878 ms  75.303 ms
        8  64.233.174.188 (64.233.174.188)  211.115 ms  937.086 ms
            72.14.238.0 (72.14.238.0)  195.566 ms
        9  72.14.239.155 (72.14.239.155)  998.353 ms
            72.14.239.162 (72.14.239.162)  347.896 ms
            72.14.239.159 (72.14.239.159)  423.843 ms
        10  64.233.174.131 (64.233.174.131)  999.183 ms
            216.239.48.165 (216.239.48.165)  119.867 ms
            216.239.48.167 (216.239.48.167)  68.999 ms
        11  * * *
        12  google-public-dns-a.google.com (8.8.8.8)  860.106 ms  981.388 ms  1000.152 ms

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        • johnpozJ
          johnpoz LAYER 8 Global Moderator
          last edited by

          821ms 998ms 966ms  10.xxx.x.1

          10 address is not public, so your behind a double nat.  is that your ISP doing gobal nat or is that the device your pfsense is directly connected too.. You mention "modem" what model number - since its seems to be doing NAT.. and then your ping times to isp would be this hop

          3 73ms  926ms 1001ms 68.6.12.38

          So to me it looks like you have a problem between pfsense and whatever that 10.x devices is – your "modem"  Which would be local on your network..  and should be more like the speeds your seeing to pfsense of <1ms

          So what need to figure out what this 10.x.x is - is that your local device or something outside your location at the ISP..  I am thinking its your modem which would be local... BTW anything that starts with 10.x.x.x is a rfc1918 address and not routeable on the internet - so no reason to hide that, just like the 192.168.x.x addresses.

          edit: So your 3rd hop which I would to me be first hop to your ISP with that 10.x address as second.. I am seeing

          PING 68.6.12.38 (68.6.12.38): 56 data bytes
          64 bytes from 68.6.12.38: icmp_seq=0 ttl=244 time=81.579 ms
          64 bytes from 68.6.12.38: icmp_seq=1 ttl=244 time=81.943 ms
          64 bytes from 68.6.12.38: icmp_seq=2 ttl=244 time=80.031 ms

          80ms -- I am in Chicago, where are you and your see 800ms to the first hop after pfsense which I have to think is your local modem.  And would cause you to see delays talking to anything past that.

          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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          • S
            SixXxShooTeR
            last edited by

            @johnpoz:

            821ms 998ms 966ms  10.xxx.x.1

            10 address is not public, so your behind a double nat.  is that your ISP doing gobal nat or is that the device your pfsense is directly connected too.. You mention "modem" what model number - since its seems to be doing NAT.. and then your ping times to isp would be this hop

            3 73ms  926ms 1001ms 68.6.12.38

            So to me it looks like you have a problem between pfsense and whatever that 10.x devices is – your "modem"  Which would be local on your network..  and should be more like the speeds your seeing to pfsense of <1ms

            So what need to figure out what this 10.x.x is - is that your local device or something outside your location at the ISP..  I am thinking its your modem which would be local... BTW anything that starts with 10.x.x.x is a rfc1918 address and not routeable on the internet - so no reason to hide that, just like the 192.168.x.x addresses.

            edit: So your 3rd hop which I would to me be first hop to your ISP with that 10.x address as second.. I am seeing

            PING 68.6.12.38 (68.6.12.38): 56 data bytes
            64 bytes from 68.6.12.38: icmp_seq=0 ttl=244 time=81.579 ms
            64 bytes from 68.6.12.38: icmp_seq=1 ttl=244 time=81.943 ms
            64 bytes from 68.6.12.38: icmp_seq=2 ttl=244 time=80.031 ms

            80ms -- I am in Chicago, where are you and your see 800ms to the first hop after pfsense which I have to think is your local modem.  And would cause you to see delays talking to anything past that.

            I am in Southern California and my modem is a Cisco-model DPQ3212 DOCSIS 3.0.

            I don't know if my ISP is doing global NAT, first time hearing about such a thing.

            When I first installed pfSense my firewall kept blocking those 10.x addresses every minute so I turned off logging for that traffic because it looked like DHCP broadcast traffic.

            UPDATE: So I called my ISP and told them that I was getting very high latency on the gateway IP and just before he was going to transfer me to tech level 2 he reset the modem and now I am getting 7-9ms on that gateway IP. He didn't know why I was getting that 10.x address BTW.

            However, the trace route to google dns still shows that 10.x address in the hop. Is that something I need to be worried about?

            Here is the new trace route to google dns:

            1  10.x.x.x  7.748 ms  6.194 ms  5.948 ms
            2  68.6.12.38  8.211 ms  8.286 ms  7.702 ms
            3  * * *
            4  68.6.8.100  9.710 ms  9.896 ms  10.090 ms
            5  68.1.5.137  75.889 ms  15.220 ms  55.754 ms
            6  68.105.30.181  14.028 ms  14.192 ms  13.443 ms
            7  64.233.174.238  22.924 ms  14.571 ms
                216.239.46.40  17.534 ms
            8  72.14.238.0  39.652 ms
                64.233.174.188  16.144 ms
                72.14.238.0  55.597 ms
            9  72.14.239.160  40.011 ms
                72.14.239.162  40.368 ms
                72.14.239.155  39.777 ms
            10  216.239.48.165  40.960 ms
                216.239.48.167  40.724 ms
                216.239.48.165  48.806 ms
            11  * * *
            12  8.8.8.8  42.643 ms  41.818 ms  40.886 ms

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            • P
              phil.davis
              last edited by

              Good that the latency is better now. Next you probably want to understand what the 10.x.x.x address is about. As JohnPoz said, there is no need to hide those as it is private address space and no-one can find you using "10" addresses.
              What is your WAN IP and WAN gateway addresses?
              (Status->Interfaces should tell you what addresses the WAN was given)
              Most likely they are 10.x.x.x and that just means your cable modem is in router mode rather than bridge mode.

              As the Greek philosopher Isosceles used to say, "There are 3 sides to every triangle."
              If I helped you, then help someone else - buy someone a gift from the INF catalog http://secure.inf.org/gifts/usd/

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              • johnpozJ
                johnpoz LAYER 8 Global Moderator
                last edited by

                Well if that is your model number, it is just a cable modem I don't see anywhere in its docs talking about NAT..  So if your seeing a 10.x.x.x as you next hop.. Your ISP is doing it..

                Again 10.x.x.x is PRIVATE its NOT routeable on the internet..

                http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Private_network

                Normally in a cable connection, I have one I have a SB6120 cable modem - my pfsense gets a public IP address 24.13.x.x – this is own by comcast.

                whois 24.13.0.0
                NetRange:      24.0.0.0 - 24.15.255.255
                CIDR:          24.0.0.0/12
                NetName:        EASTERNSHORE-1
                NetHandle:      NET-24-0-0-0-1
                Comment:        ADDRESSES WITHIN THIS BLOCK ARE NON-PORTABLE
                RegDate:        2003-10-06
                Updated:        2012-03-02
                Ref:            http://whois.arin.net/rest/net/NET-24-0-0-0-1
                OrgName:        Comcast Cable Communications, Inc.

                Look up 10.x.x.x

                whois 10.0.0.0
                NetRange:      10.0.0.0 - 10.255.255.255
                CIDR:          10.0.0.0/8
                OriginAS:
                NetType:        IANA Special Use
                NetName:        PRIVATE-ADDRESS-ABLK-RFC1918-IANA-RESERVED

                Comment:        These addresses are in use by many millions of independently operated networks, which might be as small as a single computer connected to a home gateway, and are automatically configured in hundreds of millions of devices.  They are only intended for use within a private context  and traffic that needs to cross the Internet will need to use a different, unique address.

                Comment:        These addresses can be used by anyone without any need to coordinate with IANA or an Internet registry.  The traffic from these addresses does not come from ICANN or IANA.  We are not the source of activity you may see on logs or in e-mail records.  Please refer to http://www.iana.org/abuse/answers

                So just like pfsense NATS changes your private range on your private side to normally what is a public address, pfsense is natting yours to your 10.x.x.x address, then your ISP HAS to change it again to some routeable address on the internet or sites you try to go to would not be able to talk back to you - since they can not talk to a 10.x.x.x address

                If you ISP has no idea why you have a 10.x.x.x address you should really call them back and ask to talk to someone that does know ;)  unless they are doing a 1:1 nat to what your public address is - its not possible for you to allow for unsolicited traffic behind a nat.. Port Forwards, maybe thats something your ok with?  Maybe they do 1:1 but that seems utterly pointless for them to do.

                But your connections should be much better now ;) with nice low ping time to your gateway..  Internet must be much better!

                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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                • S
                  SixXxShooTeR
                  last edited by

                  @phil.davis:

                  Good that the latency is better now. Next you probably want to understand what the 10.x.x.x address is about. As JohnPoz said, there is no need to hide those as it is private address space and no-one can find you using "10" addresses.
                  What is your WAN IP and WAN gateway addresses?
                  (Status->Interfaces should tell you what addresses the WAN was given)
                  Most likely they are 10.x.x.x and that just means your cable modem is in router mode rather than bridge mode.

                  My external IP and Gateway IP match except for the last octet, they aren't  10.x.x.x but start with 68.x.x.x

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                  • johnpozJ
                    johnpoz LAYER 8 Global Moderator
                    last edited by

                    @SixXxShooTeR:

                    My external IP and Gateway IP match except for the last octet, they aren't  10.x.x.x but start with 68.x.x.x

                    And how is that since your first hop is 10.x.x.x

                    So on pfsense what does it show for your wan interface?

                    Sorry your hop shows you talking to a 10 address.. its not possible for a 68.x.x.x address to talk to a 10 address directly.. If you have a 68 address on pfsense, I am at a complete loss to how a 10 address would show up in your trace.

                    wanipaddress.png
                    wanipaddress.png_thumb

                    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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                    • S
                      SixXxShooTeR
                      last edited by

                      @johnpoz:

                      @SixXxShooTeR:

                      My external IP and Gateway IP match except for the last octet, they aren't  10.x.x.x but start with 68.x.x.x

                      And how is that since your first hop is 10.x.x.x

                      So on pfsense what does it show for your wan interface?

                      Sorry your hop shows you talking to a 10 address.. its not possible for a 68.x.x.x address to talk to a 10 address directly.. If you have a 68 address on pfsense, I am at a complete loss to how a 10 address would show up in your trace.

                      This is what mine is showing.

                      WAN.png
                      WAN.png_thumb

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                      • P
                        phil.davis
                        last edited by

                        Well, that is completely wacky. If you are still getting 10.x.x.x appearing early in your traceroute (from pfSense and/or a LAN client) then look in config.xml:
                        Diagnostics->Edit
                        /cf/conf/config.xml
                        Search for "10."
                        and Diagnostics->Routes - what is the default route?
                        Is there some VPN server and client that connects to itself and routes around in a loop to make that bonus hop, or what???

                        As the Greek philosopher Isosceles used to say, "There are 3 sides to every triangle."
                        If I helped you, then help someone else - buy someone a gift from the INF catalog http://secure.inf.org/gifts/usd/

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                        • S
                          SixXxShooTeR
                          last edited by

                          @phil.davis:

                          Well, that is completely wacky. If you are still getting 10.x.x.x appearing early in your traceroute (from pfSense and/or a LAN client) then look in config.xml:
                          Diagnostics->Edit
                          /cf/conf/config.xml
                          Search for "10."
                          and Diagnostics->Routes - what is the default route?
                          Is there some VPN server and client that connects to itself and routes around in a loop to make that bonus hop, or what???

                          Hey Phil,

                          I did as you asked and looked in the config.xml file, I pasted it into Word and ran a search for anything matching "10".. It didn't come back with any 10.x.x.x. I also looked through the file without the search function and didn't notice anything.

                          The IPv4 routing tables don't have any 10.x.x.x addresses listed. The default Gateway is 68.105.x.1, as it is for 8.8.4.4 and 8.8.8.8

                          Ran traceroute again, its still showing the 10.x.x.x as the first hop.

                          I have Private Internet Access configured on my PC but that is the only VPN I use and it is almost always disconnected. Running traceroute on my PC the first hop is 192.168.1.1 and the 2nd is 10.x.x.x

                          I do appreciate the help from both you and John, if nothing else I am learning a lot from this!

                          traceroute.png
                          traceroute.png_thumb

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                          • johnpozJ
                            johnpoz LAYER 8 Global Moderator
                            last edited by

                            I don't recall ever seeing anything like this before.

                            On pfsense check the mac of that 10 address if you can – we should then be able to figure out what hardware it is, maybe its your "modem" device..  Very strange!!

                            So in pfsense ping that hop directly 10.175.0.1 and then look in your arp table on pfsense with arp -a, do you see it listed..  What are the first 3 numbers at least and we can look them up via websites like this

                            http://www.coffer.com/mac_find/

                            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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                            • swinnS
                              swinn
                              last edited by

                              The 10.x.x.x IP is his cable company's CMTS.

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                              • S
                                SixXxShooTeR
                                last edited by

                                @johnpoz:

                                I don't recall ever seeing anything like this before.

                                On pfsense check the mac of that 10 address if you can – we should then be able to figure out what hardware it is, maybe its your "modem" device..  Very strange!!

                                So in pfsense ping that hop directly 10.175.0.1 and then look in your arp table on pfsense with arp -a, do you see it listed..  What are the first 3 numbers at least and we can look them up via websites like this

                                http://www.coffer.com/mac_find/

                                I pinged 10.175.0.1 and got a response but under Diagnostics -> ARP Table, or when using arp -a, I don't see any 10.x.x.x

                                $ arp -a
                                pfsense.localdomain (192.168.1.1) at 54:be:f7:X:X:72 on em1 permanent [ethernet]
                                ? (192.168.1.152) at 6c:f0:49:ce:8a:8d on em1 expires in 1195 seconds [ethernet]
                                ? (192.168.1.120) at 54:26:96:35:d8:ef on em1 expires in 1158 seconds [ethernet]
                                ? (192.168.1.125) at 00:11:32:1a:a0:6e on em1 expires in 1039 seconds [ethernet]
                                ? (192.168.1.188) at d4:3d:7e:18:94:ad on em1 expires in 1038 seconds [ethernet]
                                ip68-105-X-X.cox.net (68.105.X.X) at 54:be:f7:X:X:71 on em0 permanent [ethernet]
                                ip68-105-X-1.cox.net (68.105.X.1) at 00:26:99:X:X:X on em0 expires in 1199 seconds [ethernet]

                                I did search the MAC address belonging to the Gateway IP with the site you linked and it returned 2 results:

                                Cisco Systems
                                Prefix: 00:26:99

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                                • johnpozJ
                                  johnpoz LAYER 8 Global Moderator
                                  last edited by

                                  Can you run a under diag, on pfsense a capture on your wan interface and then ping it and capture the traffic.  Then we can see its mac in the wirecapture..  Then compare its mac to mac of your isp router at the 68.

                                  Once you have the capture you can download into wireshark and see the mac.. Maybe its the same as your isp router?  Very odd how you get a hop between pfsense and its gateway that reports a 10.x.x.x address.

                                  I can honestly say I don't believe I have ever seen such a thing.

                                  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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                                  • swinnS
                                    swinn
                                    last edited by

                                    Again, this is the cable company CMTS: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cable_modem_termination_system

                                    It's not that rare. Doing a traceroute over a Charter or Comcast connection will show a 10.x.x.x IP as well.

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                                    • johnpozJ
                                      johnpoz LAYER 8 Global Moderator
                                      last edited by

                                      "Doing a traceroute over a Charter or Comcast connection will show a 10.x.x.x IP as well."

                                      No not really - I am on comcast, and as you see there is no 10.x in my trace.

                                      See hop 2, next hop after my pfsense box

                                      ;; ANSWER SECTION:
                                      xx.xx.13.24.in-addr.arpa. 7194  IN      PTR    c-24-13-xx-xx.hsd1.il.comcast.net.

                                      NetRange:      24.0.0.0 - 24.15.255.255
                                      CIDR:          24.0.0.0/12
                                      OrgName:        Comcast Cable Communications, Inc.

                                      tracecomcast.png
                                      tracecomcast.png_thumb

                                      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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                                      • swinnS
                                        swinn
                                        last edited by

                                        I've seen it on some Comcast connections in the past. Here is mine (Charter):

                                        Tracing route to 8.8.8.8 over a maximum of 30 hops
                                        
                                          1    <1 ms    <1 ms    <1 ms  10.1.16.1
                                          2     8 ms     7 ms     8 ms  10.216.96.1
                                          3    11 ms    10 ms     9 ms  96.34.70.34
                                          4    13 ms    10 ms     9 ms  96.34.70.116
                                        ...
                                        
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                                        • johnpozJ
                                          johnpoz LAYER 8 Global Moderator
                                          last edited by

                                          Your first hop is 10, which is local with that <1ms response time, and then your second hop is also 10..

                                          So your saying your router (pfsense/other) shows a public IP on it like his and mine, 68.x and my 24.x or does yours have a 10.x.x.x something on where the mask puts in in the same network as your hop 3 10.216.96.1

                                          What your showing makes sense where nat to public happening between hop 2 and 3.

                                          What doesn't make sense in his setup is he has a public showing a public gateway – but a 10.x in the middle.  Your trace looks like a typical double nat setup to me..

                                          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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                                          • swinnS
                                            swinn
                                            last edited by

                                            My router (pfSense) is 10.1.16.1. My first hop outside of my network is 10.216.96.1 which is the CMTS interface (Charter).

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