Excellent. So all everyone has to do is not buy cisco _or_ juniper. Wait a minute....
-- TTFN, patrick On Jan 15, 2014, at 19:54 , Eric Rosen <[email protected]> wrote: > Cisco PIX's used to do this if the firewall had a route and saw a ARP request > in that IP range it would proxy arp. > > ----- Original Message ----- >> >> On Jan 15, 2014, at 4:03 PM, Niels Bakker <[email protected]> wrote: >> >>> * [email protected] (Clay Fiske) [Thu 16 Jan 2014, 00:59 CET]: >>>> This is where theory diverges nicely from practice. In some cases the >>>> offender broadcast his reply, and guess what else? A lot of routers >>>> listen to unsolicited ARP replies. >>> >>> I've never seen this. Please name vendor and product, if only so other >>> subscribers to this list can avoid doing business with them. >> >> This was some time ago, but the two I was able to dig up from that case were >> both Junipers. Perhaps it’s something that only happens when proxy ARP is >> enabled? >> >> >> -c >> >> >> > > -- > Eric Rosen > CCIE Security #17821 > Information Security Analyst > Red Hat, Inc > [email protected] > 919.890.8555 x48555 > IRC erosen > > >

