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Full Discussion: What arp -s is good for
The Lounge War Stories What arp -s is good for Post 302719647 by Corona688 on Monday 22nd of October 2012 07:11:36 PM
Old 10-22-2012
What arp -s is good for

A customer appears to have drastically misunderstood our instructions for connecting to our WAN. He set his PC IP address to the same as one of the bridges. Smilie Smilie This caused much confusion on the network, to put it mildly. He called to complain about the poor performance of the network he ruined, then made himself unavailable for phone calls so it couldn't be fixed.

Even blocking his MAC address didn't help. The bridging problem happens in midair, nowhere the server can control. If I could at least get into the bridge, I could reconfigure it to a different IP and allow traffic again...

So, on the server, I tried this:

Code:
arp -d 192.168.6.101 ; arp -s 192.168.6.101 00:60:b3:07:0e:8e

This succeeded in forcing the server to talk to the bridge, not to him. I was then able to get into the bridge's web interface and change its IP from there. From there it was easy.
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BRIDGE(4)						   BSD Kernel Interfaces Manual 						 BRIDGE(4)

NAME
bridge -- network bridge device SYNOPSIS
pseudo-device bridge DESCRIPTION
The bridge driver creates a logical link between two or more IEEE 802 networks that use the same (or ``similar enough'') framing format. For example, it is possible to bridge Ethernet and 802.11 networks together, but it is not possible to bridge Ethernet and Token Ring together. To use bridge, the administrator must first create the interface and configure the bridge parameters. The bridge is created using the ifconfig(8) create subcommand. The learning and forwarding behavior and other parameters of a bridge are configured by the brconfig(8) util- ity. A bridge can be used to provide several services, such as a simple 802.11-to-Ethernet bridge for wireless hosts, and traffic isolation. A bridge works like a switch, forwarding traffic from one interface to another. Multicast and broadcast packets are always forwarded to all interfaces that are part of the bridge. For unicast traffic, the bridge learns which MAC addresses are associated with which interfaces and will forward the traffic selectively. The bridge driver implements the IEEE 802.1D Spanning Tree protocol (STP). Spanning Tree is used to detect and remove loops in a network topology. Transparent filtering for IP and IPv6 packets can be added with the kernel configuration option options BRIDGE_IPF. When filtering is enabled, bridged packets will pass through the filter inbound on the originating interface and outbound on the appropriate interfaces. ARP and REVARP packets are forwarded without being filtered and others that are not IP nor IPv6 packets are not forwarded when filtering is enabled. Note that packets to and from the bridging host will be seen by the filter on the interface with the appropriate address configured as well as on the interface on which the packet arrives or departs. SEE ALSO
etherip(4), options(4), brconfig(8), ipf(8) HISTORY
The bridge driver first appeared in NetBSD 1.6. AUTHORS
The bridge driver was originally written by Jason L. Wright <jason@thought.net> as part of an undergraduate independent study at the Univer- sity of North Carolina at Greensboro. This version of the bridge driver has been heavily modified from the original version by Jason R. Thorpe <thorpej@wasabisystems.com>. BUGS
The bridge driver currently supports only Ethernet and Ethernet-like (e.g. 802.11) network devices, with exactly the same interface MTU size as the bridge device. The bridge driver currently does not support snooping via bpf(4). BSD
January 9, 2010 BSD
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