I understand that the routes change dynamically, what I'm asking is if there isn't a way to force it to consider finding a different path, since I know there IS a path between these points that works properly? From what I understand, the last router that my trace hits should be responsible for finding a path to the next one, so if I were to hit it with a request that it CAN find on the path I need, it should update its routing table right? Or am I totally missing the train here? RE: TraceRt problem. Before, I had the VPN Router here and I could NOT tunnel to it from my house, so I took the router home for troubleshooting since my pings and traces weren't getting through either. Right now my VPN router is sitting at my house and I can tunnel TO it from here. By default, the path from home to work is not valid. ICMP (the protocol used by traceroute) is of the lowest priority and, when higher. ![]() The tracert ICMP would probably be the lowest priority so the routers are likely ignoring / dropping it. ![]() If the first 9 show response times then its not you, and not likely to be your ISP either unless they have many routers involved in the transport. A friend said maybe a routing loop I have a small router. might try extending the timeout with -w switch (default is 4000 ms) -please don't forget to Accept as answer if the reply is helpful. 1.traceroute results dont necessarily indicates a problem. It is likely that the 10th hop is dropping ICMP packets and they are not being passed on. Once I establish the tunnel, I can communicate both ways, which I assume is because both computers are using the same (working) path. There are a something I dont understand in this case, Ill just list what I think. The VPN works one direction that is, I can initiate it from only one side, the office side. Here is the trace from work to home:ฤก home)? RE: TraceRt problem. I can do a tracert from the office to my home computer no problem, but whenever I try to do it from home to work, it times out at the same place every time. This all started when I was trying to set up a VPN, which I eventually did, but this problem is still bugging me. If the first 9 show response times then it's not you, and not likely to be your ISP either unless they have many routers involved in the transport. ![]() I've been having an issue between my home and office computers. It is likely that the 10th hop is dropping ICMP packets and they are not being passed on.
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