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cause of ping responce
If you do the pathping, it will do a ping and tracert together which can sometimes be interesting.
(i think PathPing was introduced in Windows 2000 and above)
Cheers
Wayne
Wayne Murphy
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I have noticed high ping response times along with decent response times, but with dropped packets. Do you assume the route is the problem or the hardware within the LAN. Packet loss will vary from 40% to 50% when doing an infinite ping.
I have a feeling the problem is the switch. No matter what port I use on the switch, I get the 40% to 50% packet loss. The switch has 48 ports (10/100) but it also has 4 (10/100/1000) ports labeled G1 - G4. It also has 2 fiber channels. When I plug into any of the G1 - G4 ports the packet loss stops. Would you agree that the ports on the 10/100 are going bad? I can't find any other explanation of why packet loss stops when I plug into the giga ports.
Cheers,
ZiPPy
ZiPPy
Now we can also say that the packet will always take the best known route (fastest route) possible each time, respectively. Correct?
Yes, but not always. For example when using a primitive routing protocol like RIP. The path cost depends only on the hop count regardless of the link speeds. As Smurf mentioned, links can have varying speeds, so a route with say three 100Mps links can be faster than a route with only one 10Mps link. Still dumb RIP doesn't see this, it will always take the 10Mps one link route.
I have noticed high ping response times along with decent response times, but with dropped packets. Do you assume the route is the problem or the hardware within the LAN. Packet loss will vary from 40% to 50% when doing an infinite ping.
I have a feeling the problem is the switch. No matter what port I use on the switch, I get the 40% to 50% packet loss. The switch has 48 ports (10/100) but it also has 4 (10/100/1000) ports labeled G1 - G4. It also has 2 fiber channels. When I plug into any of the G1 - G4 ports the packet loss stops. Would you agree that the ports on the 10/100 are going bad? I can't find any other explanation of why packet loss stops when I plug into the giga ports.
40% to 50% is extremely high!!. Whats the "duplex" setting on your switch's ports? Duplex mismatch can some times cause such problems. PCs (windows) are set to "Auto" by default. Set both PC and switch to the same. Still, your case is a little odd with the Gig ports working OK!!! . Does it happen even when you ping a host/router directly connected to your switch? Or is it specific to a remote host/router?
Studying CCNP...
Ammar Muqaddas
Forum Moderator
www.firewall.cx
Now the giga ports G1 and G2 are both shared with the fibre channels. This is labeled on the front of the switch. I don't quite understand how that works. But if they are shared with the fibre channel I would think a setting is different for those G ports that would possibly eliminate the dropped packet issue.
But I still don't think that would be accurate either, BECAUSE the switch has been working just fine up until now. I honestly must say this is one of those odd switching issues, OR simply a switching dying very slowly.
ZiPPy
ZiPPy
By default NICs on PCs are set to "auto" (auto-negotiation). Unless you have changed this in the "Device Manager", the other side (switch) should be on "auto" too.
Studying CCNP...
Ammar Muqaddas
Forum Moderator
www.firewall.cx