Diagnosing connection issue

Bill Bogstad bogstad-e+AXbWqSrlAAvxtiuMwx3w at public.gmane.org
Tue Feb 15 11:37:29 EST 2011


On Tue, Feb 15, 2011 at 6:22 AM,  <edwardp-jjFNsPSvq+iXDw4h08c5KA at public.gmane.org> wrote:
> I have not as yet tried a traceroute when this occurs, but will do so the next time.   I have not experienced this same issue on my laptop using a wireless connection.
>
> But even when this occurs, /if/ the problem is further downstream, past the cable modem, at least the modem and router status pages should have no trouble coming into the browsers and they are not even doing that when this problem occurs, yet they ping fine during all this.

You didn't say that before.  So if you ping the modem and router they
are "fine"; but accessing their web pages fails?  Try doing a simple
"telnet ipofdevice 80" to bypass DNS or web browser issues and see if
you can get a connection to the devices web pages.   You can even try
sending HTTP commands to the device via telnet and see if you get
results.   If this works, but your web browser can't connect to the
devices web pages then it is beginning to sound like it is a problem
with
your local system software.

Bill Bogstad

P.S. What do  you mean by fine for ping by the way?   Try a ping flood
"ping -f" as well.  Also you might try getting Matt's traceroute
(mtr).  It's a screen based version
of traceroute can be very nice for diagnosing network connectivity
issues (which it might not be in this case).




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