Proxy arp enabled by default is the silliest thing Cisco ever did. On Aug 16, 2018, at 5:14 PM, Andrew Hoyos <hoyosa@GMAIL.COM<mailto:hoyosa@GMAIL.COM>> wrote: Yeah, was just writing this. Your router should see that it’s not a directly connected IP, and back up to routing table/FIB. It may ARP for next hop depending on path. For those with this issue, what say your routing tables for this subnet? And do *you* have proxy arp turned off? — Andrew Hoyos hoyosa@gmail.com<mailto:hoyosa@gmail.com> On Aug 16, 2018, at 3:11 PM, Jeremy Lumby <jlumby@MNVOIP.COM<mailto:jlumby@MNVOIP.COM>> wrote: Why would your router ARP for an address that is not on the same subnet as any of your interfaces? From: MICE Discuss [mailto:MICE-DISCUSS@LISTS.IPHOUSE.NET] On Behalf Of Matthew Beckwell Sent: Thursday, August 16, 2018 5:01 PM To: MICE-DISCUSS@LISTS.IPHOUSE.NET<mailto:MICE-DISCUSS@LISTS.IPHOUSE.NET> Subject: Re: [MICE-DISCUSS] Routing of non-IX traffic I'm getting similar behavior as Frank. Like Doug, I only have 45.60.73.0/24<http://45.60.73.0/24> from transit connections. So a traceroute from my MICE interface should ARP and die (I would think).... When I traceroute to 45.60.73.16-- my router sends out an ARP request, as expected. But...I get ARP replies for 45.60.73.16 from these Cisco MACs (in the order they came into my interface): 00:23:33:c6:a0:c0 206.108.255.50 Cooperative Network Services (CNS) 32609 e4:aa:5d:83:73:06 206.108.255.47 IVDesk 393639 88:43:e1:00:f2:10 206.108.255.18 Consolidated Communications 12042 b0:aa:77:33:7b:03 206.108.255.79 Gigamonster, LLC 31939 3c:08:f6:81:6e:a5 206.108.255.46 OneNetUSA 46131 00:1d:e5:c0:78:c3 206.108.255.5 Implex 21709 54:75:d0:e6:08:30 206.108.255.106 Nuvera Communications 23465 00:11:5d:82:6c:00 206.108.255.80 Future Technologies 26451 Proxy ARP (or something like it)? CNS seems to be consistently coming in first place when I clear my ARP entry. ~Matthew matthewb@aitech.net<mailto:matthewb@aitech.net> AS13746 On Thu, Aug 16, 2018 at 3:25 PM, Frank Bulk <fbulk@mypremieronline.com<mailto:fbulk@mypremieronline.com>> wrote: When I force a traceroute to originate from our MICE-facing connection, the first hop is 206.108.255.50 (AS32609 aka CNS). Any reason why? To making things more interesting, Incapsula-destined traffic goes via Paul Bunyan. Here's just one example: traceroute to www.yamaha-dealers.com<http://www.yamaha-dealers.com/> (45.60.73.16), 30 hops max, 60 byte packets 1 AS32609.micemn.net<http://as32609.micemn.net/> (206.108.255.50) 14.059 ms 14.084 ms 14.076 ms 2 cns70.cnsllc.net<http://cns70.cnsllc.net/> (205.149.150.9) 18.484 ms 18.434 ms 18.507 ms 3 fg30.ips.cnsllc.net<http://fg30.ips.cnsllc.net/> (205.149.150.30) 20.254 ms 20.346 ms 20.267 ms 4 crss2.PaulBunyan.net<http://crss2.paulbunyan.net/> (205.149.159.197) 20.527 ms 20.562 ms 20.619 ms 5 cra.PaulBunyan.net<http://cra.paulbunyan.net/> (205.149.159.181) 23.398 ms fp233.ips.PaulBunyan.net<http://fp233.ips.paulbunyan.net/> (205.149.159.233) 22.669 ms cra.PaulBunyan.net<http://cra.paulbunyan.net/> (205.149.159.181) 23.393 ms 6 * * * 7 * * * 8 * * * 9 * * * 10 * * * 11 * * * 12 * * * 13 * * * 14 * * * 15 * * * 16 * * * 17 * * * 18 * * * 19 * * * 20 * * * 21 * * * 22 * * * 23 * * * 24 * * * 25 * * * 26 * * * 27 * * * 28 * * * 29 * * * 30 * * * SiouxCenter-Arista-North(s1) The reason I stumbled across this is because we've had more than a dozen customers over the last month complain about access to Incapsula-protected sites. Packet captures show TCP RSTs coming from the far side. Regards, Frank Bulk AS53347 ________________________________ To unsubscribe from the MICE-DISCUSS list, click the following link: http://lists.iphouse.net/cgi-bin/wa?SUBED1=MICE-DISCUSS&A=1 ________________________________ To unsubscribe from the MICE-DISCUSS list, click the following link: http://lists.iphouse.net/cgi-bin/wa?SUBED1=MICE-DISCUSS&A=1 ________________________________ To unsubscribe from the MICE-DISCUSS list, click the following link: http://lists.iphouse.net/cgi-bin/wa?SUBED1=MICE-DISCUSS&A=1