Forgot to say about my router. My router is in the same network with the
other computers,
it is working only as firewall to the internet. So for the multicasting
inside my network this is the usual workstation.
Mike Mestnik wrote:
>--- Oleg Butorin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
&
u can read
from sources:
/usr/src/linux/Documentation/networking/multicast.txt
Mike Mestnik wrote:
--- Oleg Butorin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Mike Mestnik wrote:
I'm not an expert on MC, but I'd think 224.0.0.1 would be routed to
your
default
Mike Mestnik wrote:
I'm not an expert on MC, but I'd think 224.0.0.1 would be routed to
your
default route. Then the pkt would get multicasted and you would receve
multiple responces.
Yes, but I received responces from the systems where multicasting
disabled in the kernel.
Mike Mestnik wrote:
I'm not an expert on MC, but I'd think 224.0.0.1 would be routed to your
default route. Then the pkt would get multicasted and you would receve
multiple responces.
Yes, but I received responces from the systems where multicasting
disabled in the kernel.
IIRC kernel level M
Theodore Knab wrote:
Actually, this set of find commands will work better:
find /proc/net -name '*cast* -print -exec cat {} ';'
find /proc/sys -name '*cast* -print -exec cat {} ';'
Thank you for the answer.
I didn't find anything. And the question is: why it is working, when it
is disabled in the
Hello all,
I have two linux debian systems, one with kernel 2.2.18, another with 2.4.20.
Both kernels have option "IP: multicasting" DISABLED. However
multicasting is working and both systems answered if I ping 224.0.0.1,
and multicast programs are working! The question is: why this option
"IP: mul
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