Originally posted by REP0MAN
I agree Skuzzy. Tracing from my home network to yank's IP, I get smooth sailing up to his local Proxy. Of course their is an absence of one particular company....
traceroute to 73.180.246.1 (73.180.246.1), 64 hops max, 40 byte packets
1 192.168.1.1 (192.168.1.1) 1.206 ms 0.835 ms 0.763 ms
2 ip70-176-8-1.ph.ph.cox.net (70.176.8.1) 13.780 ms 11.177 ms 11.632 ms
3 ip68-2-6-69.ph.ph.cox.net (68.2.6.69) 9.805 ms 17.931 ms 8.862 ms
4 68.2.13.94 (68.2.13.94) 9.282 ms 8.301 ms 9.397 ms
5 68.2.13.9 (68.2.13.9) 9.997 ms 13.589 ms 30.431 ms
6 68.2.13.5 (68.2.13.5) 11.381 ms 15.025 ms 13.527 ms
7 68.2.13.1 (68.2.13.1) 14.330 ms 11.942 ms 12.541 ms
8 chnddsrj01-ae2.0.rd.ph.cox.net (68.2.14.9) 22.047 ms 7.418 ms 9.635 ms
9 langbbrj02-as0.r2.la.cox.net (68.1.1.231) 27.534 ms 24.455 ms 28.735 ms
10 te-0-7-0-4-cr01.losangeles.ca.ibone.comcast.net (68.86.84.53) 22.899 ms 25.202 ms 24.702 ms
11 te-0-7-0-0-cr01.stratford.tx.ibone.comcast.net (68.86.84.57) 51.370 ms 53.840 ms 49.492 ms
12 te-0-7-0-0-cr01.dallas.tx.ibone.comcast.net (68.86.84.61) 61.507 ms 73.486 ms 61.973 ms
13 68.86.85.65 (68.86.85.65) 81.235 ms 82.514 ms 79.100 ms
14 68.86.85.73 (68.86.85.73) 88.415 ms 82.686 ms 101.531 ms
15 68.86.85.5 (68.86.85.5) 79.414 ms 81.671 ms 80.071 ms
16 te-0-4-0-6-cr01.philadelphia.pa.ibone.comcast.net (68.86.90.9) 83.524 ms 86.026 ms 84.749 ms
17 po-90-ar01.401nbroadst.pa.panjde.comcast.net (68.86.208.29) 88.163 ms 89.703 ms 88.636 ms
18 po-80-ar01.wallingford.pa.panjde.comcast.net (68.86.208.30) 92.787 ms 89.170 ms 87.168 ms
19 te-2-3-ar01.audubon.nj.panjde.comcast.net (68.86.210.97) 90.181 ms 89.658 ms 91.431 ms
20 te-1-1-ur01.woodbury.nj.panjde.comcast.net (68.86.210.98) 91.304 ms 89.799 ms 89.658 ms
21 te-1-1-ur02.woodbury.nj.panjde.comcast.net (68.86.210.102) 92.934 ms 90.616 ms 93.465 ms
22 te-1-1-ur01.swedesboro.nj.panjde.comcast.net (68.86.210.106) 92.472 ms 89.453 ms 89.490 ms
23 te-1-1-ur01.franklinvill.nj.panjde.comcast.net (68.86.210.110) 90.860 ms 88.307 ms 89.650 ms
Good Luck Yanks!
Yeah, but that company (Level 3) should be there.
That route Cox is using is going from Phoenix to LA to Tx .. to NJ.
Cox has Level 3 in Phnx, MCI, WV Fiber and a few other transits in that location.
The Level 3 path is 20 ms shorter than that one currently in your routing tables.
Now about your ping plot though.
Keeping in mind it was still only ran for 2 minutes.
Couple thing you should be corrected about that.
1) That is Level 3's problem
Skuzzy is correct that this is the meet point between Level 3 and Comcast.
To be more specific, that router with the IP 4.71.186.14 is Comcasts. The IP is owned by Level 3 but it is provisioned on Comcasts router. When just 2 routers are directly connected, in this case for Paid Transit, only 2 usable IPs are needed so a /30 block is cut out.
4.71.186.12 = Network ID (non usable)
4.71.186.13 = Usable Level 3 side
4.71.186.14 = Usable Comcast Side
4.71.186.15 = Brodcast IP
Now the 2 interconnected routers can communicate unicast. If this was a Peer pool or the like, a bigger block would be needed.
2) That hop 9 is the problem (IP 4.71.186.14)
It's actually not. I'll explain where the problem is down the line, but first I think I have to correct why this is not the problem.
First thing about packet loss you have to alway remember is:
If it's true packet loss, every hop passed that router would be affected including the destination network. (special cases withstanding, but this is not one of them)
So if there was 10 % packet loss on hop 9, then 10 -22 would look just as bad. But as you can see it is only occuring in 2 places, hop 9 and 21. From with in AT&T's network only, I can reproduce that 10% packet loss that is showing up on hop, but it will not show on hop 22. That tells me that hop 21 is not an actual problem. A packet is not like cars that speed back up.
If it is slowed down and 10 seconds is added to the journey, then that is an extra 10 seconds from that point on till it reaches it destenation. It may have better luck on that next packet though. And when you lose a packet on router's interface card, it doesn't matter where it is going to.
OK, now with that in mind, I do see a problem. But from what is shown here, it's in hop 11, 12 or 13. Again keep in mind this was only ran for 2 minutes and sampled 10 times. So it's hard to tell which it is. But most likely it's the peering cross connect between Level 3 and AT&T on that OC 192
I would recomending do the test for longer and reposting it.
The last thign you want to happen is the typical:
You call Tech Support and show them the route
Tech Support who does fully under stand what they are looking at
a) Dismisses it yet promises some one will look into it.
b) Blinding sends it up to NOC as "Packet Loss" or "Problem here ..."
And when it gets to some one like me:
a) Ignor it as I can glance at it and see what the tech put in was wrong (Guilty of that) And no one calls you back. Or from then on blames it on you or something you are doing.
b) Belittle the tech and the supervisor who aproved that ticket and putting the fear of God in them when it comes to making tickets to me. (Guilty of that too)
c) Belittle the tech and supervisor yet catches that there may actually be a problem just not where any one says it was, and looks into it to see if it can be corrected or rerouted for lower latency, or rerouted till the problem is identified, confirmed and being corrected.
As you can see that is why some of people's complaints towards routing don't get adressed. But by large, alot of times there is no problem. Least not on the routing side.