Those boxes only give you access to view, not write the config - it's part of the docsis standard to disallow client-side mucking with the cable interface or addressing, and probably subsequently the internal addressing as well via nat unless the gui lets you somehow.

It shouldn't nat you to the 10.x interfaces, those are just for the modem to register on, and also the 172.x as Todd said for the modem or some such.

I think with those you can make them a dumb bridge, setting them to become nothing more than a modem, which case just use your own router behind it, like a nice dd-wrt|tomato run unit.  You're much better off this way than using it, I've never anything but bad about the integrated modem/routers.

-mb


On 02/28/2015 07:37 PM, David Demland wrote:

Todd,

 

Thank you for the information, the Level 2 support guy never mention that I could do that. I will check on it.

 

David

 

From: plug-discuss-bounces@lists.phxlinux.org [mailto:plug-discuss-bounces@lists.phxlinux.org] On Behalf Of Todd Cole
Sent: Saturday, February 28, 2015 6:21 PM
To: Main PLUG discussion list
Subject: Re: Problems with Cisco DPQ3212 Cable Modem and NAT

 

I tried to do that a while ago and failed due to it had a voip that needed NAT internal for the phone part I also learned that it would not reboot to apply new settings till the battery was removed for a while. I called Cox and they swapped it for a separate phone and separate modem. no problem:)

 

On Sat, Feb 28, 2015 at 5:33 PM, David Demland <demland@cox.net> wrote:

Does anyone know much about a Cisco DPQ3212 Cable Modem? Cox put it in a few months ago and I did not think much about it since every was working on my network. However recently I had to log onto a VPN for a customer and I could not. I started doing some checking and here is what I have found:

 

Doing a traceroute from my PC shows the following:

  1    <1 ms    <1 ms    <1 ms  881WRouter.42.168.192.in-addr.arpa [192.168.42.254]

  2     8 ms     8 ms     7 ms  10.32.4.1

  3     7 ms     7 ms     7 ms  172.21.1.224

  4    18 ms    19 ms    29 ms  70.169.74.52

  5    21 ms    21 ms    22 ms  langbprj02-ae14.0.rd.la.cox.net [68.1.0.151]

  6    20 ms    21 ms    21 ms  72.14.215.221

  7    20 ms    21 ms    21 ms  209.85.248.185

  8   111 ms    32 ms    22 ms  209.85.142.91

  9    21 ms    21 ms    21 ms  lax02s21-in-f4.1e100.net [216.58.216.4]

 

Trace complete.

 

Doing a traceroute from the router show:

 

DemlandRouter#traceroute 216.58.216.4

Type escape sequence to abort.

Tracing the route to 216.58.216.4

VRF info: (vrf in name/id, vrf out name/id)

  1 10.32.4.1 12 msec 8 msec 8 msec

  2 172.21.1.224 8 msec 8 msec 8 msec

  3 70.169.74.52 32 msec 24 msec 32 msec

  4 68.1.1.19 20 msec

    68.1.5.139 20 msec 20 msec

  5 72.14.215.221 24 msec 24 msec 20 msec

  6 209.85.248.185 24 msec 24 msec 24 msec

  7 209.85.142.91 24 msec 20 msec 24 msec

  8 216.58.216.4 24 msec 20 msec 24 msec

 

The router’s routing table looks like:

 

DemlandRouter#show route

route-map COX_NAT, permit, sequence 10

  Match clauses:

    ip address (access-lists): 110

    interface FastEthernet4

  Set clauses:

  Policy routing matches: 0 packets, 0 bytes

DemlandRouter#show ip route

Codes: L - local, C - connected, S - static, R - RIP, M - mobile, B - BGP

       D - EIGRP, EX - EIGRP external, O - OSPF, IA - OSPF inter area

       N1 - OSPF NSSA external type 1, N2 - OSPF NSSA external type 2

       E1 - OSPF external type 1, E2 - OSPF external type 2

       i - IS-IS, su - IS-IS summary, L1 - IS-IS level-1, L2 - IS-IS level-2

       ia - IS-IS inter area, * - candidate default, U - per-user static route

       o - ODR, P - periodic downloaded static route, H - NHRP, l - LISP

       + - replicated route, % - next hop override

 

Gateway of last resort is 98.165.177.1 to network 0.0.0.0

 

S*    0.0.0.0/0 [1/0] via 98.165.177.1

      10.0.0.0/8 is variably subnetted, 4 subnets, 2 masks

C        10.0.42.0/24 is directly connected, Vlan20

L        10.0.42.254/32 is directly connected, Vlan20

C        10.42.0.0/24 is directly connected, Vlan1

L        10.42.0.1/32 is directly connected, Vlan1

      98.0.0.0/8 is variably subnetted, 2 subnets, 2 masks

C        98.165.177.0/24 is directly connected, FastEthernet4

L        98.165.177.11/32 is directly connected, FastEthernet4

      172.16.0.0/16 is variably subnetted, 2 subnets, 2 masks

C        172.16.42.0/24 is directly connected, Vlan30

L        172.16.42.254/32 is directly connected, Vlan30

      172.19.0.0/32 is subnetted, 1 subnets

S        172.19.73.61 [254/0] via 98.165.177.1, FastEthernet4

      192.168.42.0/24 is variably subnetted, 2 subnets, 2 masks

C        192.168.42.0/24 is directly connected, Vlan10

L        192.168.42.254/32 is directly connected, Vlan10

 

The modem’s IP is 192.168.100.1, seems rather standard, and I can http to the modem but all I get a status screen when I login. There is no username and password to get to the status screen; but the I cannot find an administrator login for the modem.

 

Looking at all the output it seems clear that the modem is doing a NAT,  of private IP space 10.32.4.1, which would be a problem. I need to turn off the NAT so that everything works. That is the issue, I can find nothing on line about this and I have talk to Cox level two support and they have no idea.

 

The think that confuses me most is that I am getting a valid public IP on my Router (I can even VPN in into my home network), but the traceroute never shows my packets going through the public IP. Does any know how to login into this modem and turn off NAT?

 

Thank You,

 

David


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Todd Cole
Ubuntu Arizona Team
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