Which doesn't stop Linux from building such a table.  My Slack/390 systems
that are hosted by OSDL at Marist College all use HiperSocket interfaces on
the Guest LAN, and qetharp works just fine for me:
# qetharp -n -q hsi0
Address                                 HWaddress           HWType    Iface
148.100.x.x                             02:00:0f:00:00:08   ether     hsi0
148.100.x.x                             02:00:0f:00:00:09   ether     hsi0
148.100.x.x                             02:00:0f:00:00:0a   ether     hsi0
148.100.x.x                             02:00:0f:00:20:00   ether     hsi0
-snip-


Mark Post

-----Original Message-----
From: Linux on 390 Port [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of
Alan Altmark
Sent: Friday, January 12, 2007 6:22 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Dump Hipersockets ARP table?


On Friday, 01/12/2007 at 10:58 EST, David Kreuter
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I don't think there is an ARP table. Hipersockets are internally
handled.

You're right, David.  Hipersockets are addressed directly by IP address,
so ARPs aren't required.  A broadcast is simply delivered to all adapters
since the h/w knows who is connected!

Alan Altmark
z/VM Development
IBM Endicott

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