Nikolay Kalev wrote:
Where can i find a more advanced schema on how PF is doing filtering
on each packet ?
Something like : interface -- in -- nat -- pf rules ... (
grapfical presentation of where and how each rule PF is acting on each
packet )
Thanks alot !
Try:
Travis H. wrote:
set skip on interface
Skip all PF processing on interface. This can be useful on loopback
interfaces where filtering, normalization, queueing, etc, are not
required. This option can be used multiple times. By default this option
is not set.
I tried various ways of
Hi,
a friend of mine said he had stumbled over a commit message about PF
allowing for other applications to inspect packets on the fly. Can
someone confirm this, or is he completely wrong?
Magne
On Thu, 2005-10-20 at 12:23 +0200, Stanislaw Halik wrote:
Travis H. [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Queuing doesn't make sense inbound anyway; once you've received the
packet, it has already consumed your bandwidth, and thus queuing won't
change anything.
queueing could delay ACK reply being