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lordy wrote: First thing coming to my mind: Does the PC have a default route ?
2lazybutsmart wrote: You won't be able to ping s1 of router2 unless you enable routing on both routers. Routing isn't enabled by default just because the machines are called routers. You gotta turn them (RIP, IGRP, etc...) on. 2lbs.
2lazybutsmart wrote: Well that's why it's important to really understand what a router does when it recieves a packet destined for a remote network: 1- It checks the network address and determines that it's for a remote network (meaning not local). 2- It looks up the routing for an entry for that network, if it doesn't find one, it will drop the packet. That's when you'll get the "Destination Unreachable" message. 3- If there is an entry for the network, it frames it and sends it out the interface for that network. 4- When the packet comes to it's destination at the remote network, (if your packet was a ping, suppose..) then the reply will have to come back from the destination host/router. This is where most of the confusion arises. If Router B, in your scenario, doesn't have an entry for the network that's connected on E0 of routerA (which it won't by default), then it will drop the packet on it's way back and send you a "Request timed out" message. A router can ping (reach) everybody "directly" connected. In your case, routerA doesn't have a problem, it's RouterB that doesn't have RouterA's E0 interface directly connected. 2lbs.
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