This is just driving me nuts trying to figure this out. Hopefully, someone here has an idea of where to look.
We have a Cisco 7206 router with two FastEthernet interfaces, and a 4-port T1 card. (It also has a T3 interface, but that's down and no longer used.) Our two T1s used to be on a 2600 router, but we moved them to the 7200 to speed things up and make management easier.
FastEthernet0/0 goes into our Pix 520. FastEthernet2/0 goes into the general network. We have four Class C blocks.
Here's the problem ... There is a Bay Networks router on the network which belongs to another provider. (It provides VPN connectivity to a client of ours.) For some very strange reason, the 7206 cannot ping or otherwise communicate with the Bay router. The 7206 has addresses in all four IP blocks, so it should be local to the Bay router no matter what. Workstations in the same IP block as the Bay router can ping it no problem. The 2600 router is able to talk to the Bay router no problem. (The 2600 has addresses in two of the four IP blocks, including the one where the Bay router lives. This is really only because we need to keep the Bay router accessible. Once we figure this problem out, the 2600 goes back offline.)
Doing a sh arp on the 7206 shows the proper MAC address for the Bay router, so there's obiously some communication somewhere. And we've cleared the arp tables on the 7206 several times, and the Bay's MAC keeps coming back. Yet the 7206 can't talk to the Bay.
I've tried a number of things to solve this, but nothing seems to work. Any ideas????
We have a Cisco 7206 router with two FastEthernet interfaces, and a 4-port T1 card. (It also has a T3 interface, but that's down and no longer used.) Our two T1s used to be on a 2600 router, but we moved them to the 7200 to speed things up and make management easier.
FastEthernet0/0 goes into our Pix 520. FastEthernet2/0 goes into the general network. We have four Class C blocks.
Here's the problem ... There is a Bay Networks router on the network which belongs to another provider. (It provides VPN connectivity to a client of ours.) For some very strange reason, the 7206 cannot ping or otherwise communicate with the Bay router. The 7206 has addresses in all four IP blocks, so it should be local to the Bay router no matter what. Workstations in the same IP block as the Bay router can ping it no problem. The 2600 router is able to talk to the Bay router no problem. (The 2600 has addresses in two of the four IP blocks, including the one where the Bay router lives. This is really only because we need to keep the Bay router accessible. Once we figure this problem out, the 2600 goes back offline.)
Doing a sh arp on the 7206 shows the proper MAC address for the Bay router, so there's obiously some communication somewhere. And we've cleared the arp tables on the 7206 several times, and the Bay's MAC keeps coming back. Yet the 7206 can't talk to the Bay.
I've tried a number of things to solve this, but nothing seems to work. Any ideas????