Further, be a bit careful with DHCP relays in this environment. While the
MAC addresses generated by VM are in the 00-04-AC range allocated to IBM,
they aren't guaranteed to be unique (hey, they're generated out of thin
air!) in the network universe. If y'all think that's a Real Problem,
If y'all think that's a
Real Problem, and
not just an academic oddity, let us know and we'll take it under
advisement. (For extra credit: Devise an algorithm which constructs
world-unique virtual MAC addresses. Answers will be graded based on
originality and legibility.)
QD method
Hi David,
You are correct... the capabilities flags for the QDIO simulation indicate
the adapter has
broadcast capabilities... and the qdio driver already knows what to do
about that.
From David Boyes:
Good. Do we need new versions of the drivers to enable support for the new
device
On Thursday, 05/02/2002 at 08:58ZE10, Vic Cross [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
On 02.05.2002 at 04:56:58, John Summerfield [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
I was about to suggest that. It's how ARP works - I've looked at
tcpdump
reports and seen it sending a message 'who is 192.168.1.5 and getting
the
On Thursday 02 May 2002 11:06 am, you wrote:
Further, be a bit careful with DHCP relays in this environment. While the
MAC addresses generated by VM are in the 00-04-AC range allocated to IBM,
they aren't guaranteed to be unique (hey, they're generated out of thin
air!) in the network
Duh, well I obviously ciphered something wrongly :)
On Thursday 02 May 2002 07:14 pm, you wrote:
That's a good start, but unfortunately 6 hex digits for the 'manufacturer
ID' and six digits for the serial number already fills up our 12 hex digit
MAC address, and we're still not unique
On Wed, May 01, 2002 at 08:34:21AM -0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'd expect DHCP to work within a guest LAN, but not to work to any
other guest LAN or to the outside world without some more development
to happen in terms of repeater tools and/or hardware.
Another thought on the subject of
On 01.05.2002 at 23:55:40, Dennis Musselwhite [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
snip
The guest LAN acts as a hub and delivers a copy of the broadcast packet
to the data connection of every virtual adapter (NIC) coupled to that LAN
regardless of the destination IP Address or the subnet mask.
Ok, let's
On 01.05.2002 at 23:55:40, Dennis Musselwhite [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
snip
The guest LAN acts as a hub and delivers a copy of the broadcast packet
to the data connection of every virtual adapter (NIC) coupled to that LAN
regardless of the destination IP Address or the subnet mask.
Ok,
On 02.05.2002 at 04:56:58, John Summerfield [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I was about to suggest that. It's how ARP works - I've looked at tcpdump
reports and seen it sending a message 'who is 192.168.1.5 and getting the
reply I am 192.168.1.5.
Yep. ARP sends a broadcast, which everyone (on the
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