On 17/04/16 16:53, Andrew Pam via luv-main wrote:
> On 17/04/16 16:44, Russell Coker via luv-main wrote:
>> How is eth0 getting it's address?  If it's by DHCP then that would be the 
>> cause of it.  The router involved is probably to blame.
>>
>> To keep your maching usable you could write a script that looks for such a 
>> route and if it exists removes it and logs the problem.  A script like that 
>> running from cron can keep it accessible.
> 
> If you can set your eth0 to statically configured, that should also
> prevent it from accepting routes via DHCP.  If necessary, you could also
> add firewall rules to drop DHCP packets arriving via eth0.

eth0 is a static IP already,  not dhcp.  eth0 also connects to a device
(ipcam) - so can't block it.

Daniel.

> 
> Hope that helps,
>               Andrew
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