From owner-freebsd-questions Thu Feb 23 19:10:02 1995 Return-Path: questions-owner Received: (from majordom@localhost) by freefall.cdrom.com (8.6.9/8.6.6) id TAA23232 for questions-outgoing; Thu, 23 Feb 1995 19:10:02 -0800 Received: from flash.tss.com (splash.tss.com [192.216.111.239]) by freefall.cdrom.com (8.6.9/8.6.6) with SMTP id TAA23223 for ; Thu, 23 Feb 1995 19:09:52 -0800 Received: from tekbspa.tss.com ([160.101.100.22]) by flash.tss.com (4.1/1.37) id AA13604; Thu, 23 Feb 95 19:07:13 PST Received: from sprite.93net by tekbspa.tss.com (4.1/SMI-4.1) id AA02891; Thu, 23 Feb 95 19:12:49 PST Received: by sprite.93net (5.0/SMI-SVR4) id AA00400; Thu, 23 Feb 1995 19:07:05 -0800 Date: Thu, 23 Feb 1995 19:07:05 -0800 From: tyeh@tss.com (Thomas Yeh) Message-Id: <9502240307.AA00400@sprite.93net> To: questions@FreeBSD.org Subject: Does FreeBSD really support IP multicast? X-Sun-Charset: US-ASCII Content-Length: 780 Sender: questions-owner@FreeBSD.org Precedence: bulk I tried to plug my FreeBSD 2.0 notebook to a multicast LAN. It does not seem to work. When I did "netstat -g", it said "this isn't supported yet". Then I ping this notebook from a Solaris 2.3 Sparc machine by "/usr/sbin/ping -s 224.0.0.1", I got no reply from the portible. All the unicast and broadcast features are functioning. Am I missing something? My routing table looks like this: (by "netstat -r") Internet: Destination Gateway Flags Refs Use Interface default 160.101.93.2 UGS 0 3 ze0 localhost localhost UH 0 1210 lo0 160.101.93 link#2 UC 0 0 ze0 160.101.93.2 0:0:c:7:a0:c0 UHL 1 0 ze0 224 link#2 UCS 0 0 ze0