hi,
below is the situation:
my server is in 128.10.200.xxx network.
i have a solaris computer running in a subnet. this computer got 2 nic card.
1 is 172.18.198.xxx , another 1 is 10.100.xxx.11
there is a machine stick with this computer, ip is 10.100.xxx.12
so, 10.100.xxx.11 and... (3 Replies)
Does anyone know how to delete a an ip off the routing table ? i tried route delete 10.0.0.0 and gateway but it still comes back. i have 2 zones sharing one interface. help... (4 Replies)
hi all,
how do i make sure that the new routing should take effect on the os memory right away? what should i run after i add all the new "route add ....".
I have an example below:
bash-2.03# netstat -rn
Routing Table: IPv4
Destination Gateway Flags Ref Use Interface... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I got problem of Sun Solaris 8 routing.
IP of SunA is 10.16.64.164, and have routing table:
10.16.64.0 10.16.64.164 U 1 19236 bge1
10.6.0.0 10.6.0.3 U 1 16534 bge0
224.0.0.0 10.6.0.3 U 1 ... (4 Replies)
I have a SUN ultra 5 machine running Solaris 6. it has two ethernet interfaces qe0 192.168.0.111 and qe1 192.168.1.111
the two subnets are 192.168.0.111 255.255.255.0
192.168.1.111 255.255.255.0
the specified routes are
add route -net 192.168.0.0 255.255.255.0 192.168.0.111
add route... (3 Replies)
Hi everyone,
Hopefully there is someone here that can help me with the problem I got.
At my office I have 1 ubuntu firewall/gateway and several networks.
On the firewall/gateway I have three network cards, one for internet, one for network 192.168.100.0 and one for network 172.20.1.0
We... (0 Replies)
Hello All,
Problem is that redundancy doesn't work, probably a routing issue I need to get sorted out When 172.29.11.x net is down, neither node3 nor node4 is trying 172.29.12.x network,The problem lies in network 172.29.13.x
if 172.29.11.x network is down, node3/node4 should route to... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: nadeemahmed
6 Replies
LEARN ABOUT FREEBSD
tcpdrop
TCPDROP(8) BSD System Manager's Manual TCPDROP(8)NAME
tcpdrop -- drop TCP connections
SYNOPSIS
tcpdrop local-address local-port foreign-address foreign-port
tcpdrop [-l] -a
DESCRIPTION
The tcpdrop command may be used to drop TCP connections from the command line.
If -a is specified then tcpdrop will attempt to drop all active connections. The -l flag may be given to list the tcpdrop invocation to drop
all active connections one at a time.
If -a is not specified then only the connection between the given local address local-address, port local-port, and the foreign address
foreign-address, port foreign-port, will be dropped.
Addresses and ports may be specified by name or numeric value. Both IPv4 and IPv6 address formats are supported.
The addresses and ports may be separated by periods or colons instead of spaces.
EXIT STATUS
The tcpdrop utility exits 0 on success, and >0 if an error occurs.
EXAMPLES
If a connection to httpd(8) is causing congestion on a network link, one can drop the TCP session in charge:
# sockstat -c | grep httpd
www httpd 16525 3 tcp4
192.168.5.41:80 192.168.5.1:26747
The following command will drop the connection:
# tcpdrop 192.168.5.41 80 192.168.5.1 26747
The following command will drop all connections but those to or from port 22, the port used by sshd(8):
# tcpdrop -l -a | grep -vw 22 | sh
SEE ALSO netstat(1), sockstat(1)AUTHORS
Markus Friedl <markus@openbsd.org>
Juli Mallett <jmallett@FreeBSD.org>
BSD January 30, 2013 BSD