[ale] Wow... Jacktrip or Jamulus KILLS Cisco Router??
neal at mnopltd.com
neal at mnopltd.com
Sun Feb 14 07:16:51 EST 2021
That's a great idea, at least for diagnosis, since I can cause this
failure any evening I want.
I can at least force an nslookup on a PC to use those and see if it
works or not.
One really really weird thing: I noticed three warnings in the Cisco
logs maybe-about the time of failure complaining that IPV6 was not
configured. Which it is not. Ever. Did the Cisco get a wild hare and
decide to NAT all the DNS traffic through IPV6?
Thanks and regards,
Neal
> Have you tried using another public DNS service instead of Comcast.
> I’ve found Comcast DNS to be extremely unreliable and I use a
> combination of OpenDNS (208.67.222.222 and 208.67.220.220) and
> Cloudfare (1.1.1.1 and 1.0.0.1). I’ve heard others use Google or
> Comodo. All of these are publicly available.
>
> Ray
On 2021-02-13 21:59, Raylynn Knight wrote:
>> On Feb 13, 2021, at 2:37 PM, Neal Rhodes via Ale <ale at ale.org> wrote:
>>
>> I will apologize in advance for not taking some of the advice given on
>> our church WAN/LAN regarding making 10.1.10.X see 192.168.x.x.
>>
>> The stock small business Comcast router setup is what they call
>> "virtual bridge mode", meaning no firewall, and being a hybrid
>> voice/data configuration any significant changes risks bringing the
>> whole house down. With no support from them to get it back up.
>>
>> I have the access we need working, retaining our Ubuntu audio server
>> on the comcast side, and letting our cisco router act as firewall, and
>> I haven't brought down questions about murky security issues. yet.
>>
>> BUT this has to be one for the record books... Configuration:
>>
>> Comcast Router <==> Cisco RV180vpn Router <==> 192.168.x.x: Virtual
>> Studio/Jambox
>> +Ubuntu Jack/Jamulus
>>
>> Comcast router, with Ubuntu server running Jacktrip and Jamulus.
>> Normal Comcast 10.X.X.X network.
>>
>> Cisco Router providing 192.168.x.x LAN behind it.
>>
>> Now comes the weird part... outside VS boxes can hit the Jacktrip or
>> Jamulus all day, for hours, no problem. JackTrip uses TCP port 4464,
>> and UCP 51002-62000. Jamulus just uses UDP 22124. Once fired up,
>> these are wailing away sending either uncompressed (jacktrip) or
>> compressed (Jamulus) audio.
>>
>> BUT, fire up the VS box on the LAN, connecting to the Jacktrip or
>> Jamulus server sitting on the Comcast box, and within 2 hours NOTHING
>> on the LAN will be able to get DNS service. Not immediately, but
>> within 2 hours. The Cisco box doesn't fake DNS; it tells clients to
>> hit 75.75.75.75, or 75.75.76.76, the standard Comcast ports. The DNS
>> failure is visible both in the Cisco router's Diagnostic tools, AND
>> from a browser, AND from nslookup on a PC. The Ubuntu box outside the
>> LAN continues to have normal DNS responses.
>>
>> We can still PING external hosts we have an IP address for. I was
>> able to ping my house router.
>>
>> This has happened three different days, and in each instance, a simple
>> reboot of the Cisco router has resolved it for days. Until Virtual
>> Studio or Jambox is started again. Today, being Saturday, there was
>> NO activity besides me.
>>
>> And on Sundays, we have been streaming video without incident.
>>
>> The Cisco RV180VPN is in fact not running latest firmware. I have
>> another coming (I hope) on Ebay and will flash that with latest and
>> try it. Beyond that, what? I guess we could buy a brand new router
>> with current support...
>>
>> From a local PC: nslookup
>> DNS request timed out.
>> timeout was 2 seconds.
>> Default Server: UnKnown
>> Address: 75.75.75.75
>>
>>> google.com
>> Server: UnKnown
>> Address: 75.75.75.75
>>
>> DNS request timed out.
>> timeout was 2 seconds.
>> DNS request timed out.
>> timeout was 2 seconds.
>> DNS request timed out.
>> timeout was 2 seconds.
>> DNS request timed out.
>> timeout was 2 seconds.
>> *** Request to UnKnown timed-out
>>
>> I also tried nslookup - 75.75.76.76 with identical results.
>>
>> My wife suggested I should run a traceroute to the DNS server when
>> it's working, and then again when it fails. I should listen to her
>> more often.
>>
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