Hi, I mean that I am in his Tx range but him not (in mine). Although, your answer is convenient. Thanks a lot
Nahr Elk 2008/7/16 Omprakash Gnawali <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > On Wed, Jul 16, 2008 at 5:40 AM, Nahr ... <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Hi all. > > > > I remarked in CTP protocol that a node discovers its neighbors from > received > > messages. > > But there is a case in which my neighbor could see me so I can receive > his > > messages but him not so he can't receive msg from me > > consequently, why should I put him in my neighbor table? > > This description of the scenario is unclear - your neighbor could see > you so you can receive his messages? That does not make sense. If your > neighbor could see you, that means your neighbor could receive your > message. > > If you are talking about a scenario in which there is no > bi-directional link, although such links are not useful for CTP, the > only way to determine that a link is not bi-directional is by > maintaining some state about the link. So you have to insert the > neighbor into the table. > > - om_p >
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