Ethernet address question

2001-03-23 Thread Janne Kettunen
This may be trivial, but I can't find answer from www.iana.org or www.ieee.org or www.cisco.com. What kind of Ethernet address is this: 00:00:00:00:00:01 Layer-3 protocol type in frame is 0x0800 (IP) -- Regards Janne Kettunen CCNA, CFFE _ FAQ, list archives,

Re: Ethernet address question

2001-03-23 Thread Ryan O'Connell
On Fri, Mar 23, 2001 at 12:06:49PM +0200, Janne Kettunen wrote: > > This may be trivial, but I can't find answer from www.iana.org or > www.ieee.org or www.cisco.com. > > What kind of Ethernet address is this: > > 00:00:00:00:00:01 > > Layer-3 protocol type in frame is 0x0800 (IP) It's a loca

Re: Ethernet address question

2001-03-23 Thread AABAN34
I found the answer to your question? what is ..0001 ? it a default IPX address that Netware gives it's servers. You can change this , if you want to. _ FAQ, list archives, and subscription info: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/cisco.html Report miscondu

Re: Ethernet address question

2001-03-23 Thread Priscilla Oppenheimer
At 09:53 AM 3/23/01, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > I found the answer to your question? what is ..0001 ? it a default >IPX address that Netware gives it's servers. That's a network-layer address. I've never seen ..0001 at the MAC layer, which I'm pretty sure he was asking about.

Re: Ethernet address question

2001-03-24 Thread Priscilla Oppenheimer
At 10:09 PM 3/23/01, you wrote: >Are you sure that the LAA bit applies to Ethernet? I've never seen >that defined as such in any doc. Only for Token Ring. >- Marty It's in IEEE 802.3. I just checked. And I bet you have seen it used! How about in DECnet networks? The MAC address gets changed t

Ethernet address question (long)

2001-03-25 Thread Janne Kettunen
First. Thank you very much answering my question. Let me clarify some background about this MAC-address case. We have many different IP-subnets at same side of router. Please don't ask me why, it's too long story to tell here :-) Some of traffic which goes to router and back is targeted at l

Re: Ethernet address question ...

2001-03-25 Thread Priscilla Oppenheimer
I don't recognize the packets. Maybe someone else will. You could look up the TCP port numbers for a clue. Port 1389, for example, claims to be for Document Management. TCP port numbers are in the Assigned Numbers RFC 1700. Also, check the IP source. Determine if it's a server, end station, or

Re: Ethernet address question

2001-03-25 Thread Marty Adkins
Priscilla Oppenheimer wrote: > > At 10:09 PM 3/23/01, you wrote: > > >Are you sure that the LAA bit applies to Ethernet? I've never seen > >that defined as such in any doc. Only for Token Ring. > >- Marty > > It's in IEEE 802.3. I just checked. And I bet you have seen it used! How > about in

Re: Ethernet address question

2001-03-29 Thread Debbie Becker
>From a NetWare Connection article by Laura Chappell: Node Address 1 (6 bytes) -- This field contains the MAC address of the network interface board that is attached to the network with the address defined above. (Node address 0x00-00-00-00-00-01 always belongs to the internal IPX network.) De

Re: Ethernet address question (long)

2001-03-25 Thread Priscilla Oppenheimer
The router should get the MAC address by ARPing. Try to capture the ARPs. If the router is fast-switching, then you wouldn't catch the ARPs unless you clear the ARP table on the router first, (which it sounds like you can't do since you don't have access to the router.) But this may not be a p