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Originally Posted by
Blunder49
Thanks Corona688 for replying me continuously. I was afraid I messed up the system. From your reply I understand arp -d might not have caused the issue.
Do you think if system had instantly throwed me out, arp -d is the problem ?
And in that case what could we do to recover the system so that we can login again.
If arp -d had caused the problem, a reboot may have fixed it. Whatever custom ARP entries you deleted must have been in config files somewhere, or you'd need to type them in every boot.
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Getting back to my old question, will rebooting the machine solve the issue ?
We have a complete and total lack of information now. It could be frozen, thrashing, hard-drive crashing, firewalled out, asking to set the time&date, on fire, stolen, or just plain
turned off. I can't offer any advice. Go and look at the machine if you can.