"Bjoern A. Zeeb" wrote
in <3a46b5fe-93e3-40c8-99ea-76f3e03d5...@lists.zabbadoz.net>:
bz> On 3 Sep 2020, at 12:48, Hans Petter Selasky wrote:
bz>
bz> > On 2020-09-03 14:34, Cristian Cardoso wrote:
bz> >> Hi
bz> >> Would anyone know if there is any limit in the FreeBSD kernel for IPv6
bz> >> neig
On 3 Sep 2020, at 12:48, Hans Petter Selasky wrote:
> On 2020-09-03 14:34, Cristian Cardoso wrote:
>> Hi
>> Would anyone know if there is any limit in the FreeBSD kernel for IPv6
>> neighbors? I checked the ndp documentation and found nothing, looking
>> at the return of the sysctl command I also
On 03.09.2020 16:02, Cristian Cardoso wrote:
> Hi
> I don't know if that is it. I am trying to find out if there are any
> limits for ipv6 neighbors in the kernel, as soon I will go over 4000
> servers below my IPv6 router.
> In Juniper (which is a FreeBSD) I can set ndp6-max-cache, for example,
>
Hi
I don't know if that is it. I am trying to find out if there are any
limits for ipv6 neighbors in the kernel, as soon I will go over 4000
servers below my IPv6 router.
In Juniper (which is a FreeBSD) I can set ndp6-max-cache, for example,
to support more ipv6 neighbors.
Em qui., 3 de set. de 20
On 2020-09-03 14:34, Cristian Cardoso wrote:
Hi
Would anyone know if there is any limit in the FreeBSD kernel for IPv6
neighbors? I checked the ndp documentation and found nothing, looking
at the return of the sysctl command I also did not find anything
explicit.
Hi,
There is something called
Hi
Would anyone know if there is any limit in the FreeBSD kernel for IPv6
neighbors? I checked the ndp documentation and found nothing, looking
at the return of the sysctl command I also did not find anything
explicit.
Best regards
___
freebsd-net@freebs