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Date:      Sun, 17 Mar 1996 12:08:46 -0800 (PST)
From:      Robert Du Gaue <rdugaue@calweb.com>
To:        questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   netstat -nr
Message-ID:  <Pine.BSF.3.91.960317120633.4154A-100000@web1.calweb.com>

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Here's a snippet of my netstat -nr :

165.90.138.27    0:c0:5:1:1e:48     UHLW        8     5768       de0   1164
165.90.138.28    0:c0:5:1:2e:f6     UHLW       26  1562712       de0   1195
165.90.138.29    0:c0:5:1:2a:d2     UHLW        2   187352       de0  1198 =>
165.90.138.29    0:c0:5:1:2a:d2     ULS2c       0        0       de0

---
What's up with .29? How can I have learned an ARP address like this? Is 
something broadcast proxy arps that would cause a machine to learn two of 
them? However, this is the only machine that is showing 2 arps like this. 
Others are missing arps from directly connected equipment, so maybe this 
is related. (see previous post regarding my ARP routing problems..)




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