From: Bill Carter (bcarter@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Mon Aug 16 1999 - 11:38:47 GMT-3
This is exactly right. When I pinged from a router behind the tunnel, it
succeded.
Thanks everyone.
the EEEEE was because it was not possible to bring with the source address of
the tunnel.
Blankenship Mr Gary C wrote:
> All:
>
> Look where he learned the route from:
>
> > A Net 12-12 [1/G] via 0.0, 981 sec, Tunnel0, zone 12ether
>
> He learned it via an AURP tunnel! You cannot ping through an AURP tunnel
> interface if you are the source or the destination of the tunnel (my
> experience). Change your source Appletalk address to something on the
> ethernet segment and you should have no problems with Appletalk ping.
>
> Gary
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: Chad Marsh [mailto:chad@wa.net]
> > Sent: Monday, August 16, 1999 10:14 AM
> > Cc: CCIE Lab group
> > Subject: Re: Appletalk Ping
> >
> >
> > Yes, but talk about vague.
> > 'E - Transmission of the echo packet to the target address failed'.
> > So what exactly does that mean I wonder? In what way did it
> > fail? I got
> > this response in a lab scenario I was doing earlier, I forget what I
> > changed to correct the problem, but I thought it had something to do
> > with not having a route to the destination. However if that were the
> > case, I should have gotten: RRRRR
> > Fred, could you or anyone else shed more light on this?
> >
> > Chad Marsh
> >
> >
> > Fred Ingham wrote:
> > >
> > > The basic meanings are on the CD:
> > > Table 2: AppleTalk Ping Characters
> > > Character
> > > Meaning
> > > !
> > > Each exclamation point indicates the receipt of a reply
> > > (echo) from the target
> > > address.
> > > .
> > > Each period indicates the network server timed out while
> > > waiting for a reply from
> > > the target address.
> > > B
> > > The echo received from the target address was bad or
> > > malformed.
> > > C
> > > An echo with a bad DDP checksum was received.
> > > E
> > > Transmission of an echo packet to the target
> > address failed.
> > > R
> > > Transmission of the echo packet to the target
> > address failed
> > > because of lack of a
> > > route to the target address.
> > >
> > > Check for tunnel protocol, etc.
> > >
> > > Bill Carter wrote:
> > > >
> > > > What does the EEEEE response mean in an Appletalk Ping.
> > I have multiple
> > > > paths to the 12-12 network. 1 through EIGRP and 1
> > through the Tunnel.
> > > >
> > > > R4#ping appl 12.2
> > > >
> > > > Type escape sequence to abort.
> > > > Sending 5, 100-byte AppleTalk Echos to 12.2, timeout is 2 seconds:
> > > > EEEEE
> > > > Success rate is 0 percent (0/5)
> > > >
> > > > R4#sho appl route
> > > > Codes: R - RTMP derived, E - EIGRP derived, C -
> > connected, A - AURP
> > > > S - static P - proxy
> > > > 4 routes in internet
> > > >
> > > > The first zone listed for each entry is its default
> > (primary) zone.
> > > >
> > > > A Net 12-12 [1/G] via 0.0, 981 sec, Tunnel0, zone 12ether
> > > > C Net 43-43 directly connected, Ethernet0/0, zone r4r3ether
> > > > C Net 45-45 directly connected, Serial0/0.5, zone 45frame
> > > > E Net 56-56 [31/B] via 45.5, 932 sec, zone 56ether
> > > >
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