I decided to take a conservative approach, since no one understands how rx works. So what I'm checking in only fixes the obvious bugs.
rxi_FindIfnet will now return NULL if it can't find a match, instead of returning the first interface on the list. My testing on OpenBSD shows that the first interface is always wrong. I think sometimes it's even the loopback interface, which has an mtu of 32K. You might make a case for choosing the interface of the default route, but I'm not sure that's right and I don't know how to find it. rxi_FindIfnet still checks the (in my opinion) useless net and subnet. On some systems this is ok because these are set to the actual subnet. Maybe it's time to bring back the dreaded subnetsAreLocal. But I don't care, because I also changed the #ifdefs around the alternate version of rxi_FindIfnet. This alternate version was only being used for Darwin 60, but now is used by XBSD. It calls ifa_ifwithnet(), which does the right thing. I also removed a surprising amount of dead code and unused args. I decided not to pursue path mtu, at least for now. Please test this, especially on Sun, SGI, and Darwin. Report problems to me. _______________________________________________ OpenAFS-devel mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://lists.openafs.org/mailman/listinfo/openafs-devel
