4. back-door bridge (Q47) ipX Novell IPX: Client Cannot Connect to Server on Remote LAN Back-door bridge between segments exists. 1). Use the show ipx traffic exec command on intermediate routers. Determine whether the bad hop count field is incrementing. 2). If the bad hop count counter is incrementing, use a network analyzer to look for packet loops on suspect segments. Look for RIP3 and SAP updates as well. If a back-door bridge exists, you are likely to see hop counts that increment to 16, at which time the route disappears and reappears unPRedictably. 3). Look for packets from known remote network numbers that appear on the local network. Look for packets whose source address is the MAC4 address of the remote node instead of the MAC address of the router. 4). Examine packets on each segment. A back door is present on the segment if packets appear whose source address is the MAC address of a remote node instead of that of the router. 5). Remove the back-door bridge to close the loop.
bad hop count Number of packets discarded because their hop count exceeded 16.
checksum errors Number of packets containing a checksum error. This number should always be 0, because IPX rarely uses a checksum.
5. format errors (228) IPX Number of bad packets discarded (for example, packets with a corrupted header). Includes IPX packets received in an encapsulation that this interface is not configured for.