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12-15-2007 01:55 PM
12-15-2007 01:55 PM
could you tell me what i have to do according to the following request? i mean, how can i verify that one?
While testing the migration to the new firewall we have found a lot of printer traffic being blocked coming from California and NewJersey going to 111.222.69.243. The source IP addresses are 111.222.80.64 (port 9100) and 111.222.65.139 (port 515). The traffic is hitting the firewall and being blocked, Can you look at the print queues and let me know what device you are expecting at 111.222.69.243? This traffic has been blocked for a long time, it is not related to the firewall migration, but we identified it because we were looking for odd dropped traffic today.
I do not know what device the requester refers.
could you please let me know what i have to do?
Thanks.
Solved! Go to Solution.
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12-15-2007 02:10 PM
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12-15-2007 02:23 PM
12-15-2007 02:23 PM
Re: Printer Traffic
This guy wants to know the following:
what device you are expecting at 111.222.69.243?
what do i have to check to let him know that one?
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12-15-2007 02:27 PM
12-15-2007 02:27 PM
Re: Printer Traffic
> This guy wants to know the following:
what device you are expecting at 111.222.69.243?
I think that he is asking about the expected protocol at the port assigned. For example, port 515 is the standard port for LPR/LPD (so-called "remote" or Line-Printer-Remote/Line-Printer-Daemon) implementations.
Regards!
...JRF...
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12-15-2007 03:48 PM
12-15-2007 03:48 PM
Re: Printer Traffic
it is a printer ip address ...
thanks.
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12-15-2007 08:04 PM
12-15-2007 08:04 PM
Re: Printer Traffic
The source of the blocked traffic is where you start looking. If you are not expecting the traffic, someone has a badly configured system that needs to be fixed. If you are indeed expecting the printer traffic, I would leave it blocked until your security department evaluates what is happening and makes a decision on whether to shutdown the printing traffic or allow it through the firewall.
Of course this all assumes that there is a printer located at the two IP addresses. Note that 9100 can only be a printer, most likely an HP model, while the port 515 machine might be a computer acting as a print server.
Bill Hassell, sysadmin
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12-16-2007 07:05 PM
12-16-2007 07:05 PM