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Date:      Mon, 29 Nov 1999 20:20:11 -0700
From:      Davec <Davec@unforgettable.com>
To:        "O'Shaughnessy Evans" <oevans@acm.org>, ipfilter@coombs.anu.edu.au, current@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: IP Filter 3.3.3 in FreeBSD -CURRENT [LONG]
Message-ID:  <99112920284300.76175@Amber.XtremeDev.com>
In-Reply-To: <19991129172520.M6038@zero.wumpus.org>
References:  <99112814445100.78810@Amber.XtremeDev.com> <19991130032407.A68259@demos.su> <19991129172520.M6038@zero.wumpus.org>

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On Mon, 29 Nov 1999, O'Shaughnessy Evans wrote:
> "Mikhail A. Sokolov" <mishania@demos.net> wrote:
> > No, it can't. He was refering to ipf -V; I managed to reproduce the
> > behaviour several days ago, but since I remade the devices it's ok in
> > my case, but in his.  Again, no other rules/whatever is being used in
> > the test, just ipf -V.
> 
> Makes sense.  I get the same message, BTW, on my Solaris 7 box when the
> ipf kernel module isn't loaded and I run "ipf -V".
> 
> -- 
> O'Shaughnessy Evans

But I'm not using a loadable kernel module. I compiled IPFilter in my
kernel from the FreeBSD source tree with:

options         IPFILTER
options         IPFILTER_LOG
#options                IPFILTER_LKM

And bootup did show:

Nov 28 20:02:34 /kernel: IP Filter: initialized.  Default = pass all, Logging = enabled
Nov 28 20:02:34 /kernel: IP Filter: v3.3.3

Unfortunately I've only been using FreeBSD for about a year and a half now
(excellent platform for program development btw) so I still do not know all the
internal workings. But how would I know, aside from /var/log/messages, that
IPFilter is loaded and running when not existing as a lkm?

 -- 
Davec@unforgettable.com


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