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Old October 22nd, 2003, 11:48 PM
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Katchoo Katchoo is offline
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Default Re: OT - this is creepy.

Quote:
Originally posted by narf poit chez BOOM:
well, my current plan is to use the IP address of a non-responsive site to find the blocked server. your plan, and thanks for it, requires a responsive one. unfortunatly, a responsive site is probably not using the theoretical non-responsive server.
Hmmm.... So you need the full traceroute path to a website that you can't get a response out of in order to see which server along the traceroute is the one causing the problem?

Well, you'll likely need access to a ping or traceroute program not on your ISPs network (since almost everyone on your ISPs network should be experiencing the same problem as you're seeing). You could call your ISPs Tech Support Helpdesk and get them to run a few traceroutes for you and either mail you the results or read some of the server IPs to you over the phone.

Or, you could try an Online ping & traceroute site. Try this one out: network-tools.com . Just enter in your IP/Domain Name in the field in the middle, and hit the radio button next to the type of scan you want to do (ping/trace/dns lookup) and it'll give you back a response.

Doing a search for "Online ping traceroute" on Yahoo or Google will get you other sites too.

What you'll want to do is run a Traceroute on your end first, then the same one Online, and then compare the 2 to see which server the connection stops at.

I'm not sure you'll be able to bypass servers though. Unless you've got something that you can plug IPs into to specifiy a path to use to get to a site, then your other alternative would be to get yourself temporary access onto another network/ISP which would hopefully use a different path to get to the site you want.

Narf, if you're looking for an Everest of a Project to kill time, you're probably on the right path

If it's a case of dead/non-responsive server's on the path to a certain website, then your ISP may be helpless in fixing it. Once a problem is diagnosed outside your ISPs network, the ISP tends to "pass the buck" back onto you to notify whoever it is that runs the dead server. You might aswell start dropping anvils on your own head since you'll get futher that way than trying to track down/contact the operator of a routing server
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