Sponsored Content
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"?
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

CTRL+H versus ^? versus BACKSPACE

Hi Gurus! I recently got my shell account (HP UX v11) created by our sysadmin and am having problem deleting with the backspace key. After doing some reading, I believe I need to enter a custom "STTY..." statement in my profile. Can someone please help me with the correct "STTY" sequence... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: alan
3 Replies

2. Solaris

List all resources on physical host LDOM server

Hello, I have a SUN T5240 running Solaris 10 with Logical Domain Manager (v 1.0.3). You can use the "ldm" command to display current resources on the box. Is there away to display all the "physical resources" on the box(i.e.,used and unused). For example, "ldm ls" will tell me what the... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: stephanpitts
5 Replies

3. IP Networking

I can't get access by physical name to server

Hi all I have connected new server to LAN but when I use rlogin command by server name it dose not work but by IP adderss it works. can any one tell the reason? (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: bintaleb
4 Replies

4. Emergency UNIX and Linux Support

sed on Mac OS versus Linux

I'm trying to replace space with inderscore on Mac OS X 10.6.3 sed -i 's/ /_/g' somefile sed: 1: "hsa_mirbase.fa": extra characters at the end of h command This works perfectly fine on Linux. Thank you Joseph Dhahbi (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: jdhahbi
3 Replies

5. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Server is virtual or physical?

Hi All, How can I know whether the server I am connecting to is a virtual or physical one? The server might be having any Unix OS (Linux/Solaris/HP-UX etc.). Is there any system files / commands which can show these concrete information? Thanks in advance for the replies. sanzee (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: sanzee007
1 Replies

6. Solaris

Physical and virual server difference

Hi, i am trying to find whether any particular solaris server is physical or virtual....are there any commands or set of commands which only runs (or provide specific pattern ) on physical machines and provides different pattern or error on virtual one... Is this the correct approach to... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: omkar.jadhav
7 Replies

7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

VM v Physical Server Speeds

HI We have been asked by our IT department to move from our current physical solution to a VM environment. I am not that clued up on VM. I looked from some benchmark tests to run so i can see a comparison between our live and new VM we have been presented. Please see below for results. To me the... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: treds
3 Replies

8. Red Hat

Redhat versus Ubuntu Linux distribution

I am being asked to use RHEL red hat instead of ubuntu. Are the basic commands the same? I know the licensing is different, but are the package mangers/repositories the same? That is will sudo apt-get still be used? I have been using ubuntu for 4 years and have never used red hat so any... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: cmccabe
5 Replies

9. Solaris

Run level process when Physical server goes down

Need inputs when physical server is coming down (ex- init 0) . We have a physical server in that there are couple of LDOM's and in LDOM's there are couple of Zones . In zones there are applications running . Physical Server (T4 Server) -> LDOM -> ZONES -> applications There are scripts... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: ajayram_arya
1 Replies
ARPD(8) 						    BSD System Manager's Manual 						   ARPD(8)

NAME
farpd -- ARP reply daemon SYNOPSIS
farpd [-d] [-i interface] [net ...] DESCRIPTION
farpd replies to any ARP request for an IP address matching the specified destination net with the hardware MAC address of the specified interface, but only after determining if another host already claims it. Any IP address claimed by farpd is eventually forgotten after a period of inactivity or after a hard timeout, and is relinquished if the real owner shows up. This enables a single host to claim all unassigned addresses on a LAN for network monitoring or simulation. farpd exits on an interrupt or termination signal. Note: The program name farpd has been changed in Debian GNU/Linux from the original name (arpd) to avoid name clash with other ARP daemons. The options are as follows: -d Do not daemonize, and enable verbose debugging messages. -i interface Listen on interface. If unspecified, farpd searches the system interface list for the lowest numbered, configured ``up'' interface (excluding loopback). net The IP address or network (specified in CIDR notation) or IP address ranges to claim (e.g. ``10.0.0.3'', ``10.0.0.0/16'' or ``10.0.0.5-10.0.0.15''). If unspecified, farpd will attempt to claim any IP address it sees an ARP request for. Mutiple addresses may be specified. FILES
/var/run/farpd.pid SEE ALSO
pcapd(8), synackd(8) BUGS
farpd will respond too slowly to ARP requests for some applications. In order to ensure that it does not claim existing IP addresses it will send two ARP request and wait for a reply. This slowness affects the nmap network scanning tool, and possibly others, which uses by default ARP when scanning local networks. The answers from farpd will come after the tool has timeout waiting for the ARP replies and, consequently, IP addresses claimed by farpd will not be discovered. Additionally, farpd sends the ARP replies to the broadcast address of the network and not to the host that send the ARP request. Some systems and applications (notably nmap) will not handled these requests and expect directed ARP replies (i.e. targeted specifically to the host that sent the request and not to the network) AUTHORS
Dug Song <dugsong@monkey.org>, Niels Provos <provos@citi.umich.edu> August 4, 2001
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:30 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy