Jesse,
Take a look at my startup script at
http://44.60.44.13/startampr
It seems you have a similar setup, although one line of your
configuration seems incorrect:
ip route add 44/8 via 169.228.66.251 dev tunl0 onlink src 44.64.192.253
You should remove this route, it's invalid inside AMPR. You should not
reach 44.0.0.0/8 via AMPRGW (169.228.66.251), you should reach each
subnet via its gateway WAN IP address, as populated by rip44d. The
return packet would come in the same manner, via their 44GW that has a
route configured for you.
My router:
@kb3vwg-001:~# ip route get 44.64.192.253
44.64.192.253 via 24.229.88.252 dev tunl0 src 172.31.255.254
My route table shows:
44.64.192.0/24 via 24.229.88.252 dev tunl0 onlink window 840
73,
Lynwood
KB3VWG
What about someone wanting to setup a dynamic DNS, with rather short
lived record TTL's?
For many gateway's they rely on an external service (dyndns, no-ip,
etc) and many other ham applications (IRLP has it's own dynamic DNS
etc)
I have often wished the ARRL or QTH/QSL,net would offer a Dyn-DNS
service for hams.
------------
>> How can one establish one or more NS records in the ampr.org hierarchy such
>> that dns for *.mycallsign.ampr.org could be self managed?
>Generally I prefer not to delegate zones in the "forward" lookup;
>we're hoping to obviate the need for that with the self-management
>of DNS records that the portal will provide. That will also solve the
>issues of the 44.in-addr zone being kept in sync.
>- Brian
Must a block of 44net IP space be assigned to an individual or could it be
assigned to a club or other group? Say a club station had the callsign
w6xyz assigned. could w6xyz then be assigned a /24 block to build out a
lan serving a given geographic area?
Eric
AF6EP
I have followed the instructions on the wiki pages to the exact detail, and
am having issues with the setup. I am at the point where I can receive
routing updates but cannot send any data over the tunnel. I am not the best
when it comes to Linux but have a better understanding of networking,
routers, and routing (Cisco).
I have eth0 on a public address.
I have eth1 on 44.64.192.253/24
I have tunl0 on 44.64.192.254/8
I am running Ubuntu 10.04 on VMWare.
1. When I create the tunl0 interface with the class A netmask, how is
rip44d using this and where does the tunnel "endpoint" get defined? (remote
endpoint address?)
2. I have the Linux machine running rip44d and another linux machine
on the same assigned 44.64.192.x subnet. I can ping between them until I
bring up the tunl0 interface. If I down and up the tunl0 interface, I can
ping as expected. Can anyone explain this behavior?
3. The tunl0 interface is registering collisions equal to the number
of packets transmitted. I cannot find a reason why this is happening.
Thanks in advance,
Jesse
Jesse,
Here are my notes:
http://www.qsl.net/k/kb9mwr//wapr/tcpip/rip44d.html
The endpoints are populated by the RIP routes that are received. You
can run the dameon in verbose mode, and periodically check how the
route table is being manipulated with the command "route"
As for why you can ping two machines on the same subnet, it sounds
like a conflicting route. Again what does "route" show you?
Steve, KB9MWR
Hello,
Been curious and just wanted to give a try running rip44d...
Downloaded: https://github.com/hessu/rip44d
Followed exactly procedure decribed here:
http://wiki.ampr.org/index.php/Rip44d
Executed:
linux~/rip44d$sudo ./rip44d -v
found local address: 192.168.0.101
found local address: 44.165.2.1
found local address: 127.0.0.1
found local address: 44.165.2.2
found local address: 44.165.2.2
found local address: 44.165.2.2
found local address: 44.165.2.2
found local address: 44.165.2.2
opening UDP socket 520...
entering main loop, waiting for RIPv2 datagrams
Waited more than half an hour and... nothing happend at all.
According to a/m source, “Amprgw transmits the RIP routing table updates
every 5 minutes”
Does Amprgw still broadcasts RIPv2 info?
Best regards
Tom - sp2lob
Hi,
what is the official resource of 44net allocations?
http://noh.ucsd.edu/~brian/amprnets.txt disappeared and as my
understanding http://portal.ampr.org/networks.php is the new source.
Are former allocations completely removed? Archive from 2007:
http://www.eastnetpacket.net/files/amprnets.txt
Even http://portal.ampr.org/networks.php seems not to be the place with
latest changes. At least I'm aware of an allocation of 44.188.128.0/20
(Russia D-Star) and 44.168.0.0/16 (France HAMNET).
How can we keep track of latest allocations?
Thank you,
73,
Jann
DG8NGN
--
Jann Traschewski, Lenbachstr. 6, D-90489 Nuernberg, Germany
Tel.: +49-911-696971, Mobile: +49-170-1045937, E-Mail: jann(a)gmx.de
Ham: DG8NGN / DB0VOX, http://www.qsl.net/dg8ngn