pinging [192.x.x.xx]
with 32 bytes of data:
Reply from
192.x.x.11: TTL expired in transit.
Reply from
192.x.x.11: TTL expired in transit.
Reply from
192.x.x.11: TTL expired in transit.
Reply from 192.x.x.11:
TTL expired in transit.
Ping statistics for 192.x.x.xx:
Packets: Sent = 4, Received =
4, Lost = 0 (0% loss),
The TTL value determines the
maximum amount of time an IP packet may live in the network without reaching
its destination. It is effectively a bound on the number of routers an IP
packet may pass through before being discarded. This message indicates that the
TTL expired in transit.
Many routers will not answer
ICMP, they will ignore ping requests..
TTL values do not always start
at 255. Many hosts start at lower values. TTL does not count
"seconds" but hop count. It decrements by 1 for each hop between
hosts.
That
wouldn't cause the issue we see where yours gets stuck in the private IP loop
though
Conclusion of the problem
Increase
the TTL value using the -i parameter with the ping command. For example see the
belowping 192.168.XX.XX -t -i 120
If the problem is still persist
restart the client and destination client.
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