Ray Olszewski wrote:

At 07:35 PM 7/12/2004 -0500, Charles Steinkuehler wrote:
Ray Olszewski wrote:

No matter how the pings themselves turn out, now check the arp table on the host you've ping'ed from. How you do this is OS specific; in Linux. you'd "cat /proc/net/arp". If both Ip addresses are present and show the same associated MAC address, then proxy arp is working as it should.

Or using iproute2 (I like sticking to the ip command, and to the man with a hammer...):


ip neighbor show

Wimp.

I once saw Linus doing a presentation about the early days of Linux. He said something like: "Well, at that point we had a kernel, a shell, and a compiler working. And that's all we really needed." Someone asked, "What about an editor?" He responded, "Real men use cat."

Been there...not in the early linux days unfortunately, but when debugging initrd code (for LEAF, debian, and other distos) with limited or non-existant shells.


If you know why you'd ever want to "echo *" instead of "ls", you've probably been there too. :-)

--
Charles Steinkuehler
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


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