On Jun 14, 2008, at 12:26 AM, Mike Lewinski wrote:
David Hubbard wrote:
I remember back in the day of old hardware and operating
systems we'd intentionally avoid using .255 IP addresses
for anything even when the netmask on our side would have
made it fine, so I just thought I'd try it out for kicks
today. From two of four ISP's it worked fine, from Verizon
FIOS and Road Runner commercial, it didn't. So I guess
that old problem still lingers?
The TCP/IP stack in Windows XP is broken in this regard, possibly in
Vista as well, though I've yet to have the displeasure of finding
out. I have a router with a .255 loopback IP on it. My Windows XP
hosts cannot SSH to it. The specific error that Putty throws is
"Network error: Cannot assign requested address".
At least if I ever need to completely protect a device from access
by Windows users, I have a good option :)
Mike
From what I recall, Microsoft's stack was based on the only free one
they could afford back in the Trumpet/Winsock days, namely BSD's.
It is either dependent on how the stack is integrated, or it simply
implies that BSD's stack is(was) also broken (I'd tend to doubt that).
Also, Vista's stack was supposed to have been re-developed from
scratch, never checked it.
Greg VILLAIN