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waht is gateway , what the use of that in networking waht is gateway , what the use of that in networking
The default gateway on host A is incorrectly configured.
The FastEthernet interface of R1 is disabled. One of the default routes is configured incorrectly. A routing protocol is not configured on both routers. The default gateway has not been configured on both routers.
If you can connect to other computers on the same network, but you can't connect outside the network, the problem is quite often that the default gateway has not been configured correctly.If you can connect to other computers on the same network, but you can't connect outside the network, the problem is quite often that the default gateway has not been configured correctly.If you can connect to other computers on the same network, but you can't connect outside the network, the problem is quite often that the default gateway has not been configured correctly.If you can connect to other computers on the same network, but you can't connect outside the network, the problem is quite often that the default gateway has not been configured correctly.
If devices on a network are properly configured, a host sending ICMP to a default gateway must receive a reply. ICMP simply means ping.
No, because without a default gateway configured the packet will never get to the router, and thus never get to the other network.
There are a few possibilities. A successful ping indicates that you have a physical connection established, that you have a data link device in working order, and you have the IP protocol installed and configured. If you are missing any one of these the ping will fail. If you fail to get a reply from the gateway, it may simply indicate that the gateway is configured not to reply to ICMP echo requests and that nothing is wrong. You can also fail to receive replies from the gateway due to an ARP conflict (or MAC address conflict) between your system or the gateway and another system on the network.
The default gateway refers to the "next-hop address"; the server or router your computer has to send packets to, to connect with the outside world. If the default gateway is not configured correctly, the usual symptoms are that your computer can connect within the local network, but it can't connect to the outside.You have to obtain the address which you should assign as the default gateway from your network administrator, or from your ISP.The default gateway refers to the "next-hop address"; the server or router your computer has to send packets to, to connect with the outside world. If the default gateway is not configured correctly, the usual symptoms are that your computer can connect within the local network, but it can't connect to the outside.You have to obtain the address which you should assign as the default gateway from your network administrator, or from your ISP.The default gateway refers to the "next-hop address"; the server or router your computer has to send packets to, to connect with the outside world. If the default gateway is not configured correctly, the usual symptoms are that your computer can connect within the local network, but it can't connect to the outside.You have to obtain the address which you should assign as the default gateway from your network administrator, or from your ISP.The default gateway refers to the "next-hop address"; the server or router your computer has to send packets to, to connect with the outside world. If the default gateway is not configured correctly, the usual symptoms are that your computer can connect within the local network, but it can't connect to the outside.You have to obtain the address which you should assign as the default gateway from your network administrator, or from your ISP.
If none of the route entries match, the router directs the message to the gateway specified by the default route if it has been configured
There isn't one. The switch only knows about MAC addresses, and the default gateway isn't one of those addresses.
If a mainframe is using TCP/IP as its protocol it is configured the same way any other system using TCP/IP would be configured: an IP address, subnet mask, and default gateway address.
Yes. You need to have an IP (either static or dynamic) You must have a subnet mask that corresponds to the IP address; and a gateway IP address that is on the same subnet.
I assume your server is a gateway... One of the reasons is that it is not configured properly or one or more services have failed require attention of network administrator.