[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
Re: [xymon] Brief red alarms
- To: xymon (at) xymon.com
- Subject: Re: [xymon] Brief red alarms
- From: Tom Kauffman <tommyk66 (at) newsguy.com>
- Date: Thu, 18 Nov 2010 14:17:36 -0400
- References: <AANLkTi=MLp5MT4ZOAKOrsqU0o5MNdVwsN4JgSHm1eCi= (at) mail.gmail.com> <AANLkTik4zJ9rX84GkfDHbV0Bg_u=V6kUo1y4xnD8zvyD (at) mail.gmail.com> <AANLkTi=COq_DsrvwvDmAneFTmAGxQ013hRE1k8MatP_- (at) mail.gmail.com>
- User-agent: KMail/1.10.3 (Linux/2.6.27.48-0.3-default; KDE/4.1.3; x86_64; ; )
On Thursday 18 November 2010 01:00:59 pm Jaime Kikpole wrote:
> On Thu, Nov 18, 2010 at 12:53 PM, Jaime Kikpole
>
> <jkikpole (at) cairodurham.org> wrote:
> > I'm running a extended ping test to 10.1.0.73 now to see if we have
> > intermittent issues with network traffic.
>
> For what its worth:
>
> ^C
> --- 10.1.0.73 ping statistics ---
> 528 packets transmitted, 528 packets received, 0% packet loss
> round-trip min/avg/max/stddev = 0.621/2.458/52.160/5.032 ms
>
>
> Any thoughts?
>
> Jaime
Check your DNS server(s). Chances are that one or more systems has an entry
for the old IP addresses. A continuous ping won't show this, as address
resolution occurs just once.
Tom