Henry Su wrote:
You can configure both NIC as /32. You also need proxy arp installed and
listen on both NIC. Then the traffic should be able to follow between two
NICs. Since Proxy ARP always answers its MAC to clients, so the clients can
always send traffic to em1 or em0. Based on client's mac ent
Michael Hopkins, Hopkins Research wrote:
> I keep reading that Mac OS X is very easy to get working other machines
> using open standards. This is not my current experience after two
> fruitless days messing about with NFS, but I am no network expert so maybe
> I am missing something really obviou
Eli Dart wrote:
> Careful there.one major reason I use FreeBSD is that, compared
> with the other operating systems I can use, major breakages are rare.
>
> I expect the policy that prevents you from deploying the most
> featureful OS available is there to avoid the late-night pain
> required t
Has anyone looked at kern/68110?
http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/query-pr.cgi?pr=kern/68110
Jon Noack
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covered many timing
related issues with our product. Handling modem clients gracefully was
the hardest part, and made me feel a bit nostalgic; using a simulated
modem link was just as frustrating as the real thing!
Jon Noack
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