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Date:      Sat, 9 Feb 2002 14:54:14 +0100
From:      Wilko Bulte <wkb@freebie.xs4all.nl>
To:        Terry Lambert <tlambert2@mindspring.com>
Cc:        "Vladislav V. Anikiev" <vladani@mail.spbnit.ru>, Brian Reichert <reichert@numachi.com>, freebsd-hackers@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: MAC address
Message-ID:  <20020209145414.A372@freebie.xs4all.nl>
In-Reply-To: <3C65235E.F46A40B1@mindspring.com>; from tlambert2@mindspring.com on Sat, Feb 09, 2002 at 05:25:50AM -0800
References:  <200202090052.DAA62563@neo.spbnit.ru> <3C649564.F51D18BE@mindspring.com> <20020209133738.A31278@freebie.xs4all.nl> <3C65235E.F46A40B1@mindspring.com>

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On Sat, Feb 09, 2002 at 05:25:50AM -0800, Terry Lambert wrote:
> Wilko Bulte wrote:
> > > Some NICs allow you to change the default MAC address by
> > > reflashing the BIOS in them.  There are tools to do this
> > > in software.
> > 
> > Or just reprogram it for runtime use only. DECnet comes to mind.
> > No flashing needed there.
> 
> Yes.  The LANCE based DEQNA's from the MicroVAX II were
> really strange in supporting that.  It wasn't until I
> realized that the MAC address was the DEC assigned
> address block prefix plus an internal prefix, plus the
> DECNet node number, that I realized why I could not
> talk to DECNet with my raw EtherLink I drivers, even
> though the packets were formatted correctly.  8-).

Cool huh? We once had that when we wanted to isolate a part of the
network using a programmable bridge. The network folks programmed
it for us, then a colleague put DECnet on it. And nuked another DECnet
node on the network because the bridge happily forwarded the new
MAC-address' packets. The fact that we picked an arbitrary DECnet 
address which proved a main node on the DEC internal Easynet left us
pretty impopulair for a considerable time ;-)

-- 
|   / o / /_  _   		wilko@FreeBSD.org
|/|/ / / /(  (_)  Bulte		Arnhem, the Netherlands

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