Isn't this present by default in the routing table on w2k? I remember
having to configure this manually on linux 2.0 in order to get dhcp-server
to work, but that is long ago ...

Here is my routing-table (that I have not altered, use `route print` to see yours):

<snip>

===========================================================================
Interface List
0x1 ........................... MS TCP Loopback interface
0x2 ...00 50 04 29 8d 9c ...... FE575 Ethernet Adapter
===========================================================================
===========================================================================
Active Routes:
Network Destination        Netmask          Gateway       Interface  Metric
          0.0.0.0          0.0.0.0       172.16.2.1     172.16.3.30       1
        127.0.0.0        255.0.0.0        127.0.0.1       127.0.0.1       1
       172.16.2.0    255.255.254.0      172.16.3.30     172.16.3.30       1
      172.16.3.30  255.255.255.255        127.0.0.1       127.0.0.1       1
   172.16.255.255  255.255.255.255      172.16.3.30     172.16.3.30       1
        224.0.0.0        224.0.0.0      172.16.3.30     172.16.3.30       1
  255.255.255.255  255.255.255.255      172.16.3.30     172.16.3.30       1
Default Gateway:        172.16.2.1
===========================================================================
Persistent Routes:
  None

</snip>

I think the entry

       172.16.2.0    255.255.254.0      172.16.3.30     172.16.3.30       1

would be the result after applying a w2k-version of the example route add -net
linux-command in your post. My IP is 172.16.3.30 and netmask 255.255.254.0, so
I could add this route with the command

route add 172.16.2.0 MASK 255.255.254.0 172.16.3.30 metric 1 if 0x2

but it's already there, so ...

The "173.16.3.30"-part is actually the gateway address for my network. My
PC is it's own gateway to the network it's on. The linux-variant of the
route command uses the -net option and a local device (like eth0) 
as gateway-specification for the route. As the gateway-ip is specified,
it seems w2k is smart enough that you can skip the device "if 0x2"-part.

Hence

        `route add 224.0.0.0 MASK 240.0.0.0 224.50.50.50 metric 1`

should do the trick, if your IP is 224.50.50.50. 

Still no clustering, though ...

-- 
Best Regards,
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


-----Original Message-----
From: Bill Burke [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Wednesday, June 12, 2002 4:31 PM
To: JBoss 2; Jboss-Dev
Subject: [JBoss-user] adding multicast route on Win2k


Anybody know how to add a multicast route on Win2k/XP?

Here's a similar command on Linux:

$ route add -net 224.0.0.0 netmask 240.0.0.0 dev eth0

I need this for the Clustering Troubleshooting guide.

Thanks,

Bill

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