The past few days, I've been noticing packet loss, apparently at the points where Sprint and C&W exchange traffic. Today, I emailed a note about this including the output from a few mtr's in each direction to noc@sprint.net, and though I got no reply, an hour or so later, I noticed packets were taking a slightly different route (apparently going through a different peering connection in a different city if you believe the hostnames) and the packet loss was gone and round trip times much better. I left the office for a bit, and now that I'm back, I see the packets are back to using the old peering connection that I can only assume must be overloaded. Anyone know what the deal is? Matt's traceroute [v0.42] orldfl-ns-1.atlantic.net Fri Jan 19 18:58:51 2001 Keys: D - Display mode R - Restart statistics Q - Quit Packets Pings Hostname %Loss Rcv Snt Last Best Avg Worst 1. orldflwcom-br-1-fe0-0.atlantic.net 0% 30 30 0 0 0 1 2. sl-gw8-orl-3-0-TS11.sprintlink.net 0% 30 30 1 0 1 1 3. sl-bb11-orl-5-2.sprintlink.net 0% 30 30 1 1 1 2 4. sl-bb21-atl-9-1.sprintlink.net 0% 30 30 11 11 11 12 5. sl-bb2-atl-0-0-0.sprintlink.net 0% 30 30 12 11 30 190 6. core3-serial2-0-0.Atlanta.cw.net 20% 24 30 37 33 37 41 7. corerouter1.Atlanta.cw.net 27% 22 30 34 33 36 50 8. acr1-loopback.Atlantaald.cw.net 20% 24 30 36 32 37 39 9. bar7-loopback.Atlantaald.cw.net 27% 22 30 48 33 37 48 10. ??? Hop 10 is a router with some packet filtering...no response is expected there. -- ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Jon Lewis *jlewis@lewis.org*| I route System Administrator | therefore you are Atlantic Net | _________ http://www.lewis.org/~jlewis/pgp for PGP public key_________