On Sat July 8 2006 07:11, Boniforti Flavio wrote: > 2006/7/8, Guenther Fuchs <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > > > So you meant to discover, on which machine you reside, when not having > > main host access but knowing some of their details, right? > > Genau! :-) > > > BF> Now, I tried following approach: > > BF> pinging localhost gives me 0.0 ms times > > BF> pinging SERVER1 gives me 0.0 ms times > > BF> pinging SERVER2 gives me times form 0.1 to 0.4... > > > > BF> Is it correct if I assume (without any definite certainty) that my > > BF> VServer resides on SERVER1? > > > > This assumption looks correct to me, although it's not certain. Look > > into ARP tables and MAC adresses for more certainity. > > Well, looking at ARP tables I can't get anything about the "real" IPs > of the hosts. Is it correct, when I assume that *all* the IPs bound to > the real interface have THE SAME MAC Address? If yes, is there any way > to get the MAC address from "outside"? >
man arping > _______________________________________________ > Vserver mailing list > Vserver@list.linux-vserver.org > http://list.linux-vserver.org/mailman/listinfo/vserver > > _______________________________________________ Vserver mailing list Vserver@list.linux-vserver.org http://list.linux-vserver.org/mailman/listinfo/vserver