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Full Discussion: source address woes
Special Forums IP Networking source address woes Post 33180 by Perderabo on Wednesday 18th of December 2002 03:29:42 PM
Old 12-18-2002
If the subnet mask on hme0 is correct so that 172.19.12.4 and 172.19.12.58 are in the same subnet, then the routing table looks good to me.

I don't have access to Solaris 7 box, but I have access to a Solaris 8 box. Looking at the -interface option, I think it would specify that the address is local and an ethernet address can be obtained via arp. That is clearly not your situation.

There is some interesting language on the ifconfig man page: "IP uses an interface group to rotate source address selection when the source address is unspecified." I don't see where it says how long each source address is used, but there may be a way to induce the behavior you're seeing via complex options to the ifconfig command.

The fact that running a firewall on this box really introduces a wrinkle here. Firewalls do strange things with tcp/ip. Can you reproduce the problem without the firewall softwae?

This patch is for Solaris 8, but it claims to fix an interesting bug: "4333995 IPv4 source address should be obtained from the destination route."
 

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ARP(8)							    BSD System Manager's Manual 						    ARP(8)

NAME
arp -- address resolution display and control SYNOPSIS
arp [-n] [-i interface] hostname arp [-n] [-i interface] -a arp -d hostname [pub] arp -d [-i interface] -a arp -s hostname ether_addr [temp] [blackhole | reject] [pub] arp -S hostname ether_addr [temp] [blackhole | reject] [pub] arp -f filename DESCRIPTION
The arp utility displays and modifies the Internet-to-Ethernet address translation tables used by the address resolution protocol (arp(4)). With no flags, the program displays the current ARP entry for hostname. The host may be specified by name or by number, using Internet dot notation. Available options: -a The program displays or deletes all of the current ARP entries. -d A super-user may delete an entry for the host called hostname with the -d flag. If the pub keyword is specified, only the ``published'' ARP entry for this host will be deleted. Alternatively, the -d flag may be combined with the -a flag to delete all entries. -i interface Limit the operation scope to the ARP entries on interface. Applicable only to the following operations: display one, display all, delete all. -n Show network addresses as numbers (normally arp attempts to display addresses symbolically). -s hostname ether_addr Create an ARP entry for the host called hostname with the Ethernet address ether_addr. The Ethernet address is given as six hex bytes separated by colons. The entry will be permanent unless the word temp is given in the command. If the word pub is given, the entry will be ``published''; i.e., this system will act as an ARP server, responding to requests for hostname even though the host address is not its own. In this case the ether_addr can be given as auto in which case the interfaces on this host will be examined, and if one of them is found to occupy the same subnet, its Ethernet address will be used. If the reject keyword is specified the entry will be marked so that traffic to the host will be discarded and the sender will be notified the host is unreachable. The blackhole keyword is similar in that traffic is discarded but the sender is not notified. These can be used to block external traffic to a host without using a firewall. -S hostname ether_addr Is just like -s except any existing ARP entry for this host will be deleted first. -f filename Cause the file filename to be read and multiple entries to be set in the ARP tables. Entries in the file should be of the form hostname ether_addr [temp] [blackhole | reject] [pub] with argument meanings as given above. Leading whitespace and empty lines are ignored. A '#' character will mark the rest of the line as a comment. SEE ALSO
inet(3), arp(4), ifconfig(8), ndp(8) HISTORY
The arp utility appeared in 4.3BSD. BSD
January 31, 2013 BSD
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