Mark & Routerman
Routerman Routerman
Hey Mark, I've got this old routing table that keeps sending packets into a black hole. It's like the routes are on a coffee break and the gateway just won't respond. Think you can help me pin down why it's refusing to handshake?
Mark Mark
Sounds like a classic ARP hiccup or a mis‑set route. First, check that the next‑hop IP actually has a reachable MAC on the LAN – ping the gateway, then run arp -a to see if it resolves. If the ARP entry is stale, flush it or reset the interface. Next, run traceroute to that destination; if it stops at the gateway, the gateway’s routing table might be missing the route for that subnet. Make sure the gateway’s default route points back to your router. If it’s a subnet you own, double‑check that the subnet mask matches on both ends. Finally, verify the interface on the gateway isn’t in a down state or overloaded – sometimes a NIC stuck in half‑duplex will drop packets. Once those are all good, the handshakes should happen again.
Routerman Routerman
Sounds good, just be patient when you scrub the ARP table. Those stale entries can be real ninjas. If the traceroute still stops at the gateway, double‑check that metric or administrative distance isn’t skewing it. And remember, a half‑duplex NIC is like a bad handshake—just refuses to commit. Once you clean those up, the packets should flow smoother than a well‑tuned router. Good luck!
Mark Mark
Thanks, I’ll keep an eye on the ARP table and the half‑duplex vibe. If anything else decides to play hide‑and‑seek, let me know. Happy routing.