Hi,
- Original Message -
From: "Bill Moran <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>"
To: To Peter Pauly
Date: Fri, 25 Jun, 2004 15:21 BST
Subject: Re: ARP / Cisco Router Wierdness
> Peter Pauly <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > This morning while attempting to replace a serv
This behavior is consistent with most IOS based routers I've worked
around, they typically hold onto an ARP entry for about 20 minutes before
expiring it. On linux I've used a network utility called send_arp that
can shoot a user specified gratuitous arp packet at another host on the
same layer2 n
Peter Pauly <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> This morning while attempting to replace a server with a new machine
> (same IP address, the old machine was unplugged), The Cisco 2600
> router's arp table continued to point to the old DNS server's MAC
> address.
>
> Even after rebooting the new server (
This morning while attempting to replace a server with a new machine
(same IP address, the old machine was unplugged), The Cisco 2600
router's arp table continued to point to the old DNS server's MAC
address.
Even after rebooting the new server (Freebsd 5.2.1), the MAC address
remained unchanged i