Re: kernel: NAT: 0 dropping untracked packet c1aa2300 1 10.20.30.132 -> 62.142.131.12
I think he's right ... Also, 169.254.x.x is indicative of a windows
machine that is looking for DHCP but doesn't get it. So, it's probably
NAT's outside of your network.
-rishi
On Sat, 31 Mar 2001, Aaron Dewell wrote:
>
> I assume that is on the ethernet side facing the ISP? Or that you have one
> ethernet card and all traffic is going there? Cable modem? (read: shared
> media)
>
> My bet would be that someone else is doing NAT as well, and you are seeing
> their packets too (probably because they are using only one card as well),
> but your box doesn't know about their NATd box, so it complains.
>
> You could add a rule to PREROUTING that drops anything from 10/8 that you
> aren't using, then you probably wouldn't see those messages anymore.
>
> Aaron
>
> On Sat, 31 Mar 2001, Martin Fluch wrote:
> > Hello,
> >
> > I have the following problem. A few days before I compiled my 2.4.2 kernel
> > with support for NAT in order to get a computer of a friend of mine
> > connected to the internet (we had to masquerade his computer since my ISP
> > has fixed the internet connection to the MAC address of my network card,
> > but that's an other story). The whole thing went ok, but there is one
> > thing which puzzles me.
> >
> > >From the begining I got ever once in a while a message of the following
> > type in my logs:
> >
> > Mar 31 13:50:17 seneca kernel: NAT: 0 dropping untracked packet c1ecc980 1
> > 10.20.30.132 -> 62.142.131.12
> >
> > Ok, that might happen I thought (and I am anything else but a expert in
> > this NAT stuff, so I realy don't know, what this message means, but as
> > long as it happend only seldom I didn't care much about it). But yesterday
> > the appareance of these messages started to increase and today its realy
> > anoying. So I'm realy wondering, what's going on here? Especialy offten
> > the source address 10.20.30.132 is mentioned, once in a while (but
> > seldom) there are other addresses outside the local network, for example
> > 169.254.27.17 (About my network: My IP is 62.142.131.26, the gateway is
> > 62.142.131.1)
> >
> > I've attached the gnuziped part of kern.log from the last reboot on (45
> > min containing about 300 messages). Perhaps somebody has a clue, what is
> > going on here in the network?
> >
> > Thank you in advance,
> > Martin
> >
>
>
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