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Full Discussion: Dhcp
Special Forums IP Networking Dhcp Post 3764 by Neo on Wednesday 11th of July 2001 12:29:13 AM
Old 07-11-2001
Solaris is sometimes tricky with broadcast addresses and configurable MAC addresses. I have spent hours on misconfigured Solaris ethernet interfaces. Sounds like you did a great job troubleshooting from your note. Please feel free to post again!
 

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ETHERS(5)						      BSD File Formats Manual							 ETHERS(5)

NAME
ethers -- Ethernet host name data base DESCRIPTION
The ethers file maps Ethernet MAC addresses to host names. Lines consist of an address and a host name, separated by any number of blanks and/or tab characters. A '#' character indicates the beginning of a comment; characters up to the end of the line are not interpreted by routines which search the file. Each line in ethers has the format: ethernet-MAC-address hostname-or-IP Ethernet MAC addresses are expressed as six hexadecimal numbers separated by colons, e.g. "08:00:20:00:5a:bc". The functions described in ethers(3) and ether_aton(3) can read and produce this format. The traditional use of ethers involved using hostnames for the second argument. This may not be suitable for machines that don't have a com- mon MAC address for all interfaces (i.e., just about every non Sun machine). There should be no problem in using an IP address as the second field if you wish to differentiate between different interfaces on a system. FILES
/etc/ethers The ethers file resides in /etc. SEE ALSO
ethers(3) HISTORY
The ethers file format was adopted from SunOS and appeared in NetBSD 1.0. BUGS
A name server should be used instead of a static file. BSD
November 7, 2000 BSD
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