Date: Thu, 3 May 2001 07:02:05 -0400 From: Jamie Norwood <mistwolf@mushhaven.net> To: freebsd-stable@freebsd.org Subject: Re: Arplookup Message-ID: <20010503070205.B43143@mushhaven.net> In-Reply-To: <20010503113828.A18347@walton.maths.tcd.ie>; from dwmalone@maths.tcd.ie on Thu, May 03, 2001 at 11:38:28AM %2B0100 References: <20010502231803.A40482@mushhaven.net> <20010503113828.A18347@walton.maths.tcd.ie>
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On Thu, May 03, 2001 at 11:38:28AM +0100, David Malone wrote:
> I think this message means is that according to the netmask set
> on your interfaces the machine doesn't fall into the local network
> addresses for any interface. If you are seeing the address alot that
> probably means that your machine is trying to route traffic through
> this machine (maybe because of routing updates?).
It shouldn't, though. My machine is on 209.16.107.11, it's in a /24,
and the gateway is .1. The error IP is on 209.16.96.1.
The IP isn't in my arp tables, and route -n shows:
diarmadhi:/home/mistwolf> route -n get 209.16.96.1
route to: 209.16.96.1
destination: 209.16.96.1
gateway: 209.16.107.1
interface: fxp0
flags: <UP,GATEWAY,HOST,DONE,WASCLONED>
recvpipe sendpipe ssthresh rtt,msec rttvar hopcount mtu expire
0 0 0 0 0 0 1500 0
This IP, AFAIK, has nothing to do with my machine. :/
Jamie
>
> You could use netstat -nr and ifconfig -a to investigate fruther.
>
> David.
>
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