HP 2910AL User Manual

Page 555

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Troubleshooting

Diagnostic Tools

If A Network Condition Prevents Traceroute from Reaching the
Destination.

Common reasons for Traceroute failing to reach a destination

include:

Timeouts (indicated by one asterisk per probe, per hop; refer to Figure
C-23, above.)

Unreachable hosts

Unreachable networks

Interference from firewalls

Hosts configured to avoid responding

Executing traceroute where the route becomes blocked or otherwise fails
results in an output marked by timeouts for all probes beyond the last detected
hop. For example with a maximum hop count of 7 (

maxttl = 7), where the route

becomes blocked or otherwise fails, the output appears similar to this:

At hop 3, the first and
third probes timed out
but the second probe
reached the router.

All further probes
within the maxttl
timed-out without
finding a router or the
destination IP
address.

An asterisk indicates a timeout
without finding the next hop.

Figure C-24. Example of Traceroute Failing to Reach the Destination Address

C-67

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