On 28. nov. 2016 21:18, Eric Van Tol wrote:
'no route to host' normally means 'did not get an
arp reply, could not deliver packet'.
"no route to host" normally indicates that the route does not exist in the
routing table, not that an ARP response isn't coming back.
On a local network the two statements are identical.
You don't have a "route" to the host, as you expect it to be directly
connected, hence the reply "no route to host" when you don't get an
arp-reply.
Rgds.
Ola Thoresen
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