Well, at least you're not alone: deny udp any any eq netbios-ns (5479183 matches) deny udp any any eq netbios-dgm (20345 matches) deny udp any any eq 139 (414 matches) deny tcp any any eq 139 (20446 matches) No Windoze on this side... How much garbage traffic is generated by MS products anyhow? ~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~ Charles Sprickman Internet Channel INCH System Administration Team (212)243-5200 spork@inch.com access@inch.com On Tue, 6 Jan 1998, C. Jon Larsen wrote:
Date: Tue, 6 Jan 1998 12:54:52 -0500 (EST) From: "C. Jon Larsen" <jlarsen@ford.ajtech.com> To: nanog@merit.edu Subject: UDP port 137 Question
Is there any *valid* reason to see UDP traffic directed at a unix box's port 137 coming from IP sources across the internet ? The unix servers in question are most definitely *not* running samba, and there is absolutely no NT anywhere on this customer's network (that is seeing the incoming UDP traffic directed at an IP destination address on port 137). (A couple of 95 boxes scattered across an Ethernet comprise the Micro$oft part of the network). None of the 95 boxen are running any file or print serving (sharing) resources.
I can't think of any valid reason to see this traffic, personally. Anybody out there that can present a scenario where I would expect to see these UDP packets coming back in ?
netbios-ns 137/tcp nbns netbios-ns 137/udp nbns netbios-dgm 138/tcp nbdgm netbios-dgm 138/udp nbdgm netbios-ssn 139/tcp nbssn
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- C. Jon Larsen Email: jlarsen@ford.ajtech.com Systems Engineer Voice: +1.804.353.2800 x118 A&J Technologies http://www.ajtech.com
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