On Tue, Oct 21, 2014 at 1:25 PM, System Administrator <ad...@bitwise.net> wrote: > The answer to your question is right there in the very manpage > paragraph you quoted below.
Yes, I should have clarified that I did see that. (That is why I quoted it) It just does not seem to make a lot of sense that one would have to manually intervene in order to cut over to the fallback. So I guess that is my question behind my question. Why start the fallback table as disabled? Would it not make a lot more sense to start it enabled so if <service> was down it would automatically cut over to <fallback> without manual intervention? Or is there somehow a danger that it will go to <fallback> when <service> is not down? Is that why <fallback> is started disabled? -- "Don't eat anything you've ever seen advertised on TV" - Michael Pollan, author of "In Defense of Food"