Well, your phone definitely supports mac filtering -- it's y, not no. And it doesn't need modprobe -- it's y, not m. So you shouldn't need to load anything special to get it to work. Which is very good since it's probably not feasible for you to change it... config.gz is a list of options that particular kernel was built with.
Please try the script I suggested (slightly changing to make it match the syntax your app seems to need )
The FORWARD table may be necessary depending on how the phone uses its internet connection; packets might make it to the FORWARD chain instead of the INPUT chain first. It'd end up in INPUT eventually, but after it passes through FORWARD, it loses its MAC address.
I don't think REJECT makes sense in all contexts, and DROP definitely works on my systems.
Oh... Which MAC address are you putting in there? The router's, right?
Last edited by Corona688; 02-27-2014 at 02:18 PM..
Generally, most people, I guess, go from 5.3 ML4 Directly to TL 7. So they may never run into this issue.
For the rest of us, here is the resolution of my problem in going from ML6 to TL7.
Apparently with the change from ML to TL IBM added a "BuildDate Verification" routine into... (1 Reply)
Hello,
I'm having problem with an iptables rule. It seems that on one of two systems on the nat table, the INPUT chain doesn't exist for some strange reason.
I get the error below:
# iptables -t nat -A INPUT -j ACCEPT
iptables: No chain/target/match by that name.
Here is my kernel on... (0 Replies)
Hi,
I am using below script to get the below given output. But i am wondering how to pick the names from below output.
Script:
echo "dis ql(*) cluster(CT.CL.RIBRSBT3)"| runmqsc CT.QM.701t8|egrep QUEUE|sed -e 's/QUEUE(/ /'|sed -e 's/)/ /'
Output:
... (10 Replies)
Hi, I am trying to permutate each column (Except for IDS).
file.txt
FID IID TOAST1 TOAST2 TOAST3
ID3 ID3 1 -9 2
ID4 ID4 2 1 1
ID1 ID1 -9 -9 1
ID8 ID8 1 1 -9
ID12 ID12 1 2 2
for toast1 column, there are two 1's, two 2's and one -9. Having the same number of denominations,... (2 Replies)
Hi all,
I have two doms on my machine. I boot my machine from an rfs in one dom1 and mount the other rfs in the other dom2 at /media. Now I wanted to restrict access of users on dom2 to only their home directories. I do not want them to access any other directories on dom1 or dom2. So I mounted... (2 Replies)
Hello,
This is really breaking my head. I request you help to solve this problem.
I have a list of files at the source directory (/tmp) as below,
NewTransfer_20131202_APAC.dat
NewTransferFile_20131202_APAC.dat
NewTransfer_20131203_APAC.dat
NewTransferFile_20131203_APAC.dat... (3 Replies)
Hi,
One of our old Digital Alpha Server has died (CPU Failure). I want to recover a file from that server. Backups were done via Networker, however, cross platform recovery is not supported and I don't have any other TRU64 server available.
Is there a VM or Emulator available which can get... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Mack1982
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
net::arp
ARP(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation ARP(3pm)NAME
ARP - Perl extension for creating ARP packets
SYNOPSIS
use Net::ARP;
Net::ARP::send_packet('lo', # Device
'127.0.0.1', # Source IP
'127.0.0.1', # Destination IP
'aa:bb:cc:aa:bb:cc', # Source MAC
'aa:bb:cc:aa:bb:cc', # Destinaton MAC
'reply'); # ARP operation
$mac = Net::ARP::get_mac("eth0");
print "$mac
";
$mac = Net::ARP::arp_lookup($dev,"192.168.1.1");
print "192.168.1.1 has got mac $mac
";
IMPORTANT
Version 1.0 will break with the API of PRE-1.0 versions, because the return value of arp_lookup() and get_mac() will no longer be passed as
parameter, but returned! I hope this decision is ok as long as we get a cleaner and more perlish API.
DESCRIPTION
This module can be used to create and send ARP packets and to get the mac address of an ethernet interface or ip address.
send_packet()
Net::ARP::send_packet('lo', # Device
'127.0.0.1', # Source IP
'127.0.0.1', # Destination IP
'aa:bb:cc:aa:bb:cc', # Source MAC
'aa:bb:cc:aa:bb:cc', # Destinaton MAC
'reply'); # ARP operation
I think this is self documentating.
ARP operation can be one of the following values:
request, reply, revrequest, revreply, invrequest, invreply.
The default ARP operation is reply.
get_mac()
$mac = Net::ARP::get_mac("eth0");
This gets the MAC address of the eth0 interface and stores
it in the variable $mac. The return value is "unknown" if
the mac cannot be looked up.
arp_lookup()
$mac = Net::ARP::arp_lookup($dev,"192.168.1.1");
This looks up the MAC address for the ip address 192.168.1.1
and stores it in the variable $mac. The return value is
"unknown" if the mac cannot be looked up.
SEE ALSO
man -a arp
AUTHOR
Bastian Ballmann [ Balle@chaostal.de ]
http://www.datenterrorist.de
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright (C) 2004-2007 by Bastian Ballmann
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.8.1 or,
at your option, any later version of Perl 5 you may have available.
perl v5.14.2 2009-04-24 ARP(3pm)