>The behavior the comment is talking about is that if you try to send >a packet and there is no route (or it is on the local network and not >answering ARP's, or...), then you will get an error on the syscall where >you send the packet.
Fair enough. The original context to this message was Jeff Altman asked the original poster if there was a firewall was returning ICMP messages, or was it silently dropping the packets, _that's_ why I said, "Hey, I don't think this matters for OpenAFS". BTW, don't most operating systems return ENETUNREACH if there is no route to it, or not answering an arp? Should that really be in a Linux-only #ifdef? --Ken _______________________________________________ OpenAFS-devel mailing list [email protected] https://lists.openafs.org/mailman/listinfo/openafs-devel
