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Hi, I was checking out the config on my ASA and noticed a bunch of static routes configured when I did a show route. With the exception of two that I expect to be there, the remainder point traffic destined for specific internal hosts to the outside interface, i.e. S private_ip 255.255.255.255 25/12/2008 · Then, right click on Static Routes and select Show IP Routing Table from the context menu. The entries in the routing table are displayed in the right pane of the Routing And Remote Access console. The output or the routing table looks something similar with table below: To display the routing table (both IPv4 and IPv6) in Windows, use the route print command. In Unix/Linux, you can just use route without any command line switches. The output displayed by the Windows and Unix/Linux commands are similar. Here’s an example from a typical Windows client computer: 3/07/2017 · View the Windows Routing Table Before you get started adding routes, it may be helpful to view the routing table first. Fire up Command Prompt by hitting Windows+X and then selecting “Command Prompt (Admin)” on the Power Users menu. Windows has a command-line tool for view the routing table. It is called "route." To view the routing table (this is universal on all recent Windows versions) open a command prompt. The easiest way to do that is to go to Start->Run and type in "cmd" then click "OK."

Jul 03, 2017

NT/2000/XP: Display or View the Windows Routing Table Jun 15, 2004 Windows command line networking: route - YouTube Sep 01, 2009

The route get commands the original posted mentions perform a lookup in the local routing table and return the result. For example, you can ask ip route get 192.168.1.32/28 to find which routing table entry will be used for that network, but you can't ask tracert about network blocks. – larsks Nov 4 '12 at 3:31 1

Persistent static routes are lost after reboot Jul 28, 2017 How to display the routing table in Windows and Linux