05-24-2016
It can also change if you did network restructuring specifically you changed the route from A to B somehow, As jgt said this one is a no-brainer. Get rid of the one line of hex characters in the known_hosts. It will automatically be recreated correctly the first time you connect to the remote host.
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LEARN ABOUT REDHAT
networks
NETWORKS(5) Linux System Administration NETWORKS(5)
NAME
networks - network name information
DESCRIPTION
The file /etc/networks is a plain ASCII file that describes known DARPA networks and symbolic names for these networks. Each line repre-
sents a network and has the following structure:
name number aliases ...
where the fields are delimited by spaces or tabs. Empty lines are ignored. The hash character (#) indicates the start of a comment: this
character, and the remaining characters up to the end of the current line, are ignored by library functions that process the file.
The field descriptions are:
name The symbolic name for the network. Network names can contain any printable characters except white-space characters or the comment
character.
number The official number for this network in numbers-and-dots notation (see inet(3)). The trailing ".0" (for the host component of the
network address) may be omitted.
aliases
Optional aliases for the network.
This file is read by the route(8) and netstat(8) utilities. Only Class A, B or C networks are supported, partitioned networks (i.e., net-
work/26 or network/28) are not supported by this facility.
FILES
/etc/networks
The networks definition file.
SEE ALSO
getnetbyaddr(3), getnetbyname(3), getnetent(3), netstat(8), route(8)
COLOPHON
This page is part of release 4.15 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, information about reporting bugs, and the
latest version of this page, can be found at https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.
GNU
/Linux 2008-09-04 NETWORKS(5)