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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Vm versus physical linux server Post 302821483 by Scott on Friday 14th of June 2013 02:53:28 PM
Old 06-14-2013
Are you suggesting that every Linux VM has a network interface whose MAC address contains "00:50"?
 

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XENNET(4)						 BSD/xen Kernel Interfaces Manual						 XENNET(4)

NAME
xennet -- Xen frontend paravirtualized network interface SYNOPSIS
xennet* at xenbus? DESCRIPTION
The xennet interface forms the frontend part of the paravirtualized drivers used by Xen guest domains to have network connectivity. When the host domain is NetBSD, the endpoint of the xennet interface is a xvif(4) interface. In the XenStore, xvif and xennet are identified by ``vif'' (virtual interface) entries. Conceptually, frontends and backends drivers are similar to two Ethernet cards connected via a crossover cable. DIAGNOSTICS
xennet%d: can't read mac address, err %d The MAC address for this interface could not be read from XenStore. xennet%d: %s is not a valid mac address The MAC address specified in the configuration file of the newly created guest domain is invalid. xennet%d: using event channel %d The Xen event channel (virtual interrupt) ID associated to this xennet. xennet%d: using RX copy mode The xennet and its associated endpoint use copy mode for communication: packets are copied from one domain's memory to another. xennet%d: using RX flip mode The xennet and its associated endpoint use flip mode for communication: packets are passed by remapping memory pages between domains. SEE ALSO
ifmedia(4), xenbus(4), xvif(4), ifconfig(8) HISTORY
The xennet driver first appeared in NetBSD 3.0. AUTHORS
The xennet driver was written by Manuel Bouyer <bouyer@NetBSD.org> and Christian Limpach <chris@pin.lu>. BSD
January 8, 2011 BSD
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