On Tue, 11 Jan 2000, Forrest W. Christian wrote:
When you buy wholesale dialup how does the internet-destined traffic get routed from your customer to the internet.
If it goes from the dialup through the wholesaler's network to yours and to the internet, this will not cause breakage (I doubt this is the case).
Nope, but even if it did and the wholesaler was routing those well known addresses to their own servers, that traffic wouldn't end up on my network or my SMTP servers unless there was some ugly VPN stuff going on.
If it goes from the dialup through the wholesaler's network and directly to the internet, this WILL cause breakage.
Yup.
I do understand that there is going to be some breakage. Especially when your customers don't dial into you. That's when having them hard-configure their software for your servers and having them use POP before SMTP auth makes since.
I think my point here is that most dialup users today are in this situation. Most of largest dialup providers out there use wholesalers for dialup. If I had to guess, I'd say that users in this situation probably amount to over half of the population in the US. I'm not saying I have the right answer, just that whatever the answer is should support at least a majority of the current base. Brandon Ross Network Engineering 404-815-0770 800-719-4664 Director, Network Engineering, MindSpring Ent., Inc. info@mindspring.com ICQ: 2269442 Read RFC 2644! Stop Smurf attacks! Configure your router interfaces to block directed broadcasts. See http://www.quadrunner.com/~chuegen/smurf.cgi for details.