|
||||||||||
That seems to make sense because the network here has a handful of unintended loop backs. DMZ is physically connected to LAN. sai wrote: >I see this sort of thing when two interfaces are plugged into the same switch. > >sai > >On 9/2/05, Chris Buechler <cbuechler at gmail dot com> wrote: > > >>On 9/2/05, Jason King <jking at informs dot com> wrote: >> >> >>>What does this entry in the logs mean: >>> >>>/kernel: arp: 192.168.1.200 is on sis0 but got reply from >>>00:11:43:d3:5c:2a on sis2 >>> >>> >>> >>what it says. Host 192.168.1.200 should be on sis0, but it's seeing >>ARP replies on sis2 for that host. >> >>Likely means something is plugged in wrong, or you have two interfaces >>on the same broadcast domain. >> >>I believe you usually see this occasionally in a bridged setup, in >>which case it's nothing to worry about. >> >>-Chris >> >>--------------------------------------------------------------------- >>To unsubscribe, e-mail: m0n0wall dash unsubscribe at lists dot m0n0 dot ch >>For additional commands, e-mail: m0n0wall dash help at lists dot m0n0 dot ch >> >> >> >> > >--------------------------------------------------------------------- >To unsubscribe, e-mail: m0n0wall dash unsubscribe at lists dot m0n0 dot ch >For additional commands, e-mail: m0n0wall dash help at lists dot m0n0 dot ch > > > |