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Operating Systems OS X (Apple) Cannot access UNIX.com with new cable modem Post 302443179 by Scott on Saturday 7th of August 2010 10:13:28 AM
Old 08-07-2010
Hi.

Here's the traceroute output:

Code:
$ traceroute unix.com
traceroute to unix.com (81.17.242.186), 64 hops max, 52 byte packets
 1  * * *
 2  217-168-56-77.static.cablecom.ch (217.168.56.77)  10.163 ms  7.398 ms  7.705 ms
 3  172.31.208.69 (172.31.208.69)  14.959 ms  14.678 ms  31.482 ms
 4  ch-zrh01a-si1.aorta.net (213.46.171.18)  14.610 ms  14.771 ms  25.087 ms
 5  gi9-47.ccr01.gva01.atlas.cogentco.com (130.117.14.93)  16.784 ms  18.636 ms  15.084 ms
 6  te1-4.ccr01.lys01.atlas.cogentco.com (130.117.48.213)  20.597 ms  19.923 ms  21.178 ms
 7  te0-1-0-3.mpd21.par01.atlas.cogentco.com (130.117.2.185)  40.557 ms  39.609 ms  37.704 ms
 8  te8-7.mpd02.lon01.atlas.cogentco.com (130.117.3.6)  40.867 ms  40.249 ms
    te0-0-0-7.ccr21.par01.atlas.cogentco.com (130.117.3.241)  37.173 ms
 9  te9-7.ccr01.lon01.atlas.cogentco.com (130.117.51.29)  46.326 ms
    te3-8.ccr01.lon01.atlas.cogentco.com (130.117.1.133)  40.442 ms  40.311 ms
10  te1-2.ccr01.dub01.atlas.cogentco.com (130.117.0.130)  50.647 ms  48.946 ms  50.315 ms
11  * * *
12  * * *
13  * * *
14  * * *
....
....

I've finally had time to got a new router and everything is working perfectly fine with that.

However, if I switch AirPort off and connect directly to the cable modem via ethernet, it still doesn't work.

It's obviously a problem with my Mac somewhere, but it's working with the new router, so I'm happy again Smilie

Thanks to everyone for their valuable input.
 

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LFT(8)							    BSD System Manager's Manual 						    LFT(8)

NAME
lft -- display the route packets take to a network host/socket; optionally show heuristic network information in transitu SYNOPSIS
lft [-d dport] [-s sport] [-m min] [-M max] [-a ahead] [-c scatter ms] [-t timeout ms] [-l min ttl] [-q ISN] [-D device] [-H ttl] [-i] [-n] [-E] [-N] [-A] [-T] [-S] [-V] [-v] [<gateway> <...>] host:dport DESCRIPTION
The Internet is a large and complex aggregation of network hardware, connected together by gateways. Tracking the route one's packets follow (or finding the miscreant gateway that's discarding your packets) can be difficult. (from traceroute(8)) lft sends various TCP SYN and FIN probes (differing from Van Jacobson's UDP-based method) utilizing the IP protocol `time to live' field and attempts to elicit an ICMP TIME_EXCEEDED response from each gateway along the path to some host. lft also listens for various TCP and ICMP messages along the way to assist network managers in ascertaining per-protocol heuristic routing information and can optionally retrieve var- ious information about the networks it traverses. The only mandatory parameter is the destination host name or IP number. Options toggle the display of more interesting data or change the variables of the trace itself. The (-E) "smart" option tries several combinations in order to improve the chance of a successful trace. Other options are: -d dport Set dport as the destination TCP port of the probes LFT generates. Default is 80. This option is useful to see if packets follow a different route based on protocol destination, a likely scenario when load balancers or proxies are involved. This option may also bypass less sophisticated packet filter configurations. -s sport Set sport as the origin TCP port of the probes LFT generates. Default is 53. This option is useful to see if packets follow a dif- ferent route based on protocol source. This option may also bypass less sophisticated packet filter configurations. -m min Set min as the minimum number of probes to send per host. Default is 1 unless "smart" (-E) mode is used. -M max Set max as the maximum number of probes to send per host. Default is 5. -a ahead Set ahead as the number of hops forward to query before waiting for a response. Default is 5. -c scatter ms Set scatter ms as the minimum number of milliseconds to wait between sending probes. Default is 20. -t timeout ms Set timeout ms as the maximum number of milliseconds to wait before assuming a probe was lost/discarded. Default is 1000. -l min ttl Set min tll as the minimum TTL (time-to-live) on outgoing probes (essentially, the first hop in the line that you want to display). Default is 1. -q ISN Set ISN as the ISN (initial sequence number) of the first probe. If unset, one will be automatically generated. -D device Set device as the network device or IP address to be used. (e.g., "en1") If unset, one will be automagically selected by default. -H ttl Set ttl as the maximum TTL, essentially the maximum route traversal distance in hops. Default is 30. -i Disable "stop" on ICMP other than TTL expired. -n Print addresses numerically rather than symbolically and numerically. Disables use of the DNS resolver completely. -E Enable use of the "smart" engine which tries FIN/SYN/etc tables to improve the chance of a successful trace. The engine also dis- plays other useful information such as stateful inspection firewalls it finds along the way. -N Enable lookup and display of network names (e.g., [GNTY-NETBLK-4]). This option queries various registries of network address allo- cation such as ARIN. -A Enable lookup and display of of AS (autonymous system) numbers (e.g., [1]). This option queries various registries of network address allocation such as ARIN. -T Enable display of LFT's execution timer. This option places timers on the trace itself and on lookups and name resolution to show where LFT is spending its time, waiting on resolvers, or processing trace packets. -S Suppress display of the real-time status bar. This option makes LFT show its completed trace output only, no-frills. -V Verbose output. Mostly debug garbage. Likely too verbose for regular use. -v Display version information, then exit(). Any hosts listed after these options and before the final host will comprise the loose source route. Since network operators have security concerns with regard to the use of source routing, don't expect the LSRR options to do much for you in most public network environments. EXAMPLES
A sample use and output might be: [edge.lax]$ lft -S 4.2.2.2 Hop LFT trace to vnsc-bak.sys.gtei.net (4.2.2.2):80/tcp 1 ln-gateway.centergate.com (206.117.161.1) 0.5ms 2 isi-acg.ln.net (130.152.136.1) 2.3ms 3 isi-1-lngw2-atm.ln.net (130.152.180.21) 2.5ms 4 gigabitethernet5-0.lsanca1-cr3.bbnplanet.net (4.24.4.249) 3.0ms 5 p6-0.lsanca1-cr6.bbnplanet.net (4.24.4.2) 3.4ms 6 p6-0.lsanca2-br1.bbnplanet.net (4.24.5.49) 3.3ms 7 p15-0.snjpca1-br1.bbnplanet.net (4.24.5.58) 10.9ms 8 so-3-0-0.mtvwca1-br1.bbnplanet.net (4.24.7.33) 11.1ms 9 p7-0.mtvwca1-dc-dbe1.bbnplanet.net (4.24.9.166) 11.0ms 10 vlan40.mtvwca1-dc1-dfa1-rc1.bbnplanet.net (128.11.193.67) 11.1ms ** [neglected] no reply packets received from TTLs 11 through 20 ** [4.2-3 BSD bug] the next gateway may errantly reply with reused TTLs 21 [target] vnsc-bak.sys.gtei.net (4.2.2.2) 11.2ms The (-S) option was used to suppress the real-time status bar for clean output. LFT's "**" notifiers in between hops 10 and 21 represent additional useful information: the first is a "[neglected]" indicator that lets us know that none of the probes sent with the TTLs indicated elicited responses. This could be for a variety of reasons, but the cause of this specific occurrence is described in the next informative message which indicates that this is likely the result of a bug in the 4.[23] BSD network code (and its derivatives): BSD 4.x (x < 3) sends an unreachable message using whatever TTL remains in the original datagram. Since, for gateways, the remaining TTL is zero, the ICMP "time exceeded" is guaranteed to not make it back to us. LFT does its best to identify this condition rather than print lots and lots of hops that don't exist (trying to reach a high enough TTL). Now, using the smart engine option: [edge.lax]$ lft -E -S 4.2.2.1 Hop LFT trace to vnsc-pri.sys.gtei.net (4.2.2.1):80/tcp 1 ln-gateway.centergate.com (206.117.161.1) 0.5/0.5ms 2 isi-acg.ln.net (130.152.136.1) 2.1/2.3ms 3 isi-1-lngw2-atm.ln.net (130.152.180.21) 2.6/7.1ms 4 gigabitethernet5-0.lsanca1-cr3.bbnplanet.net (4.24.4.249) 6.1/3.9ms ** [firewall] the next gateway may statefully inspect packets 5 p0-0-0.lsanca1-csr1.bbnplanet.net (4.24.4.10) 155.4/3.7ms 6 [target] vnsc-pri.sys.gtei.net (4.2.2.1) 22.6/3.7/*/*/*/*/*ms In the scenario above, the smart engine was able to identify a stateful, packet-inspecting firewall in the path. Another example with more options: [edge.lax]$ lft -S -A -T -m 2 -d 80 -s 53 www.yahoo.com Hop LFT trace to w9.scd.yahoo.com (66.218.71.88):80/tcp 1 [AS226] ln-gateway.centergate.com (206.117.161.1) 1 ms 2 [AS226] isi-acg.ln.net (130.152.136.1) 2 ms 3 [AS226] isi-1-lngw2-atm.ln.net (130.152.180.21) 3 ms 4 [AS1] gigether5-0.lsanca1-cr3.bbnplanet.net (4.24.4.249) 3 ms 5 [AS1] p6-0.lsanca1-cr6.bbnplanet.net (4.24.4.2) 5 ms 6 [AS1] p6-0.lsanca2-br1.bbnplanet.net (4.24.5.49) 3 ms 7 [AS1] p1-0.lsanca2-cr2.bbnplanet.net (4.25.112.1) 3 ms 8 [AS16852] pos4-0.core1.LosAngeles1.Level3.net (209.0.227.57) 3 ms 9 [AS3356] so-4-0-0.mp1.LosAngeles1.Level3.net (209.247.10.193) 3 ms 10 [AS3356] so-3-0-0.mp2.SanJose1.Level3.net (64.159.1.130) 11 ms 11 [AS3356] gige10-0.ipcolo4.SanJose1.Level3.net (64.159.2.42) 11 ms 12 [AS3356] cust-int.level3.net (64.152.81.62) 52 ms 13 [AS10310] vl17.bas2.scd.yahoo.com (66.218.64.150) 53 ms 14 [AS10310] w9.scd.yahoo.com (66.218.71.88) [target] 54 ms LFT's trace took 5.23 seconds. Resolution required 3.58 seconds. And why not request netblock lookups? [edge.lax]$ lft -S -N www.microsoft.com Hop LFT trace to www.us.microsoft.com (207.46.197.113):80/tcp 1 [LOS-NETTOS-BLK4] ln-gateway.centergate.com (206.117.161.1) 2 ms 2 [LOS-NETTOS] isi-acg.ln.net (130.152.136.1) 3 ms 3 [LOS-NETTOS] isi-1-lngw2-pos.ln.net (130.152.80.30) 5 ms 4 [GNTY-4-0] gigether5-0.lsanca1-cr3.bbnplanet.net (4.24.4.249) 4 ms 5 [GNTY-4-0] p6-0.lsanca1-cr6.bbnplanet.net (4.24.4.2) 3 ms 6 [GNTY-4-0] p6-0.lsanca2-br1.bbnplanet.net (4.24.5.49) 3 ms 7 [GNTY-4-0] p15-0.snjpca1-br1.bbnplanet.net (4.24.5.58) 10 ms 8 [GNTY-4-0] p9-0.snjpca1-br2.bbnplanet.net (4.24.9.130) 11 ms 9 [GNTY-4-0] so-1-0-0.sttlwa2-br1.bbnplanet.net (4.0.3.229) 27 ms 10 [GNTY-4-0] so-0-0-0.sttlwa1-hcr1.bbnplanet.net (4.24.11.202) 28 ms 11 [GNTY-4-0] so-7-0-0.sttlwa1-hcr2.bbnplanet.net (4.24.10.234) 28 ms 12 [GNTY-4-0] p1-0.sttlwa1-cr2.bbnplanet.net (4.24.10.241) 29 ms 13 [GNTY-4-0] p2-0.msseattle.bbnplanet.net (4.25.89.6) 32 ms 14 [MICROSOFT-GLOBAL-NET] 207.46.154.9 32 ms 15 [MICROSOFT-GLOBAL-NET] 207.46.155.17 33 ms 16 [MICROSOFT-GLOBAL-NET] 207.46.129.51 [prohibited] 35 ms Running LFT as a non-root user As distributed by Debian, lft can only be run by the root user. To allow regular users to run lft, the sysadmin needs to read the file /usr/share/doc/lft/HOWTO-UsersLFT.txt and follow the instructions in that file. AUTHOR
Nils McCarthy, Victor Oppleman, Ugen Antsilevitch, and other helpers around the world. The source is currently maintained and administered by MainNerve, Inc. REPORTING BUGS
To report bugs, send e-mail to <lft-bugs@mainnerve.com> SEE ALSO
traceroute(8), netstat(1), whois(1) HISTORY
The lft command first appeared in 1998 as 'fft'. Renamed as a result of confusion with fast fourier transforms, lft stands for 'layer four trace.' LFT
August 17, 2002 LFT
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