Searched hist:"3 df7fad0" (Results 1 – 4 of 4) sorted by relevance
/freebsd/sbin/ifconfig/ |
H A D | ifbridge.c | 3df7fad0 Thu Nov 09 06:32:38 GMT 2006 Andrew Thompson <thompsa@FreeBSD.org> Add a new address cache type called sticky. On an interface marked sticky any address learned by the bridge is made permanent, the address will not age out and most importantly will not migrate to another interface.
This can be used to stop mac address poisoning or clients roaming in much the same way as static entries without the hassle of preloading the table. 3df7fad0 Thu Nov 09 06:32:38 GMT 2006 Andrew Thompson <thompsa@FreeBSD.org> Add a new address cache type called sticky. On an interface marked sticky any address learned by the bridge is made permanent, the address will not age out and most importantly will not migrate to another interface.
This can be used to stop mac address poisoning or clients roaming in much the same way as static entries without the hassle of preloading the table. 3df7fad0 Thu Nov 09 06:32:38 GMT 2006 Andrew Thompson <thompsa@FreeBSD.org> Add a new address cache type called sticky. On an interface marked sticky any address learned by the bridge is made permanent, the address will not age out and most importantly will not migrate to another interface.
This can be used to stop mac address poisoning or clients roaming in much the same way as static entries without the hassle of preloading the table. 3df7fad0 Thu Nov 09 06:32:38 GMT 2006 Andrew Thompson <thompsa@FreeBSD.org> Add a new address cache type called sticky. On an interface marked sticky any address learned by the bridge is made permanent, the address will not age out and most importantly will not migrate to another interface.
This can be used to stop mac address poisoning or clients roaming in much the same way as static entries without the hassle of preloading the table. 3df7fad0 Thu Nov 09 06:32:38 GMT 2006 Andrew Thompson <thompsa@FreeBSD.org> Add a new address cache type called sticky. On an interface marked sticky any address learned by the bridge is made permanent, the address will not age out and most importantly will not migrate to another interface.
This can be used to stop mac address poisoning or clients roaming in much the same way as static entries without the hassle of preloading the table. 3df7fad0 Thu Nov 09 06:32:38 GMT 2006 Andrew Thompson <thompsa@FreeBSD.org> Add a new address cache type called sticky. On an interface marked sticky any address learned by the bridge is made permanent, the address will not age out and most importantly will not migrate to another interface.
This can be used to stop mac address poisoning or clients roaming in much the same way as static entries without the hassle of preloading the table. 3df7fad0 Thu Nov 09 06:32:38 GMT 2006 Andrew Thompson <thompsa@FreeBSD.org> Add a new address cache type called sticky. On an interface marked sticky any address learned by the bridge is made permanent, the address will not age out and most importantly will not migrate to another interface.
This can be used to stop mac address poisoning or clients roaming in much the same way as static entries without the hassle of preloading the table. 3df7fad0 Thu Nov 09 06:32:38 GMT 2006 Andrew Thompson <thompsa@FreeBSD.org> Add a new address cache type called sticky. On an interface marked sticky any address learned by the bridge is made permanent, the address will not age out and most importantly will not migrate to another interface.
This can be used to stop mac address poisoning or clients roaming in much the same way as static entries without the hassle of preloading the table.
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H A D | ifconfig.8 | 3df7fad0 Thu Nov 09 06:32:38 GMT 2006 Andrew Thompson <thompsa@FreeBSD.org> Add a new address cache type called sticky. On an interface marked sticky any address learned by the bridge is made permanent, the address will not age out and most importantly will not migrate to another interface.
This can be used to stop mac address poisoning or clients roaming in much the same way as static entries without the hassle of preloading the table.
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/freebsd/sys/net/ |
H A D | if_bridgevar.h | 3df7fad0 Thu Nov 09 06:32:38 GMT 2006 Andrew Thompson <thompsa@FreeBSD.org> Add a new address cache type called sticky. On an interface marked sticky any address learned by the bridge is made permanent, the address will not age out and most importantly will not migrate to another interface.
This can be used to stop mac address poisoning or clients roaming in much the same way as static entries without the hassle of preloading the table. 3df7fad0 Thu Nov 09 06:32:38 GMT 2006 Andrew Thompson <thompsa@FreeBSD.org> Add a new address cache type called sticky. On an interface marked sticky any address learned by the bridge is made permanent, the address will not age out and most importantly will not migrate to another interface.
This can be used to stop mac address poisoning or clients roaming in much the same way as static entries without the hassle of preloading the table. 3df7fad0 Thu Nov 09 06:32:38 GMT 2006 Andrew Thompson <thompsa@FreeBSD.org> Add a new address cache type called sticky. On an interface marked sticky any address learned by the bridge is made permanent, the address will not age out and most importantly will not migrate to another interface.
This can be used to stop mac address poisoning or clients roaming in much the same way as static entries without the hassle of preloading the table. 3df7fad0 Thu Nov 09 06:32:38 GMT 2006 Andrew Thompson <thompsa@FreeBSD.org> Add a new address cache type called sticky. On an interface marked sticky any address learned by the bridge is made permanent, the address will not age out and most importantly will not migrate to another interface.
This can be used to stop mac address poisoning or clients roaming in much the same way as static entries without the hassle of preloading the table. 3df7fad0 Thu Nov 09 06:32:38 GMT 2006 Andrew Thompson <thompsa@FreeBSD.org> Add a new address cache type called sticky. On an interface marked sticky any address learned by the bridge is made permanent, the address will not age out and most importantly will not migrate to another interface.
This can be used to stop mac address poisoning or clients roaming in much the same way as static entries without the hassle of preloading the table. 3df7fad0 Thu Nov 09 06:32:38 GMT 2006 Andrew Thompson <thompsa@FreeBSD.org> Add a new address cache type called sticky. On an interface marked sticky any address learned by the bridge is made permanent, the address will not age out and most importantly will not migrate to another interface.
This can be used to stop mac address poisoning or clients roaming in much the same way as static entries without the hassle of preloading the table. 3df7fad0 Thu Nov 09 06:32:38 GMT 2006 Andrew Thompson <thompsa@FreeBSD.org> Add a new address cache type called sticky. On an interface marked sticky any address learned by the bridge is made permanent, the address will not age out and most importantly will not migrate to another interface.
This can be used to stop mac address poisoning or clients roaming in much the same way as static entries without the hassle of preloading the table. 3df7fad0 Thu Nov 09 06:32:38 GMT 2006 Andrew Thompson <thompsa@FreeBSD.org> Add a new address cache type called sticky. On an interface marked sticky any address learned by the bridge is made permanent, the address will not age out and most importantly will not migrate to another interface.
This can be used to stop mac address poisoning or clients roaming in much the same way as static entries without the hassle of preloading the table.
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H A D | if_bridge.c | 3df7fad0 Thu Nov 09 06:32:38 GMT 2006 Andrew Thompson <thompsa@FreeBSD.org> Add a new address cache type called sticky. On an interface marked sticky any address learned by the bridge is made permanent, the address will not age out and most importantly will not migrate to another interface.
This can be used to stop mac address poisoning or clients roaming in much the same way as static entries without the hassle of preloading the table. 3df7fad0 Thu Nov 09 06:32:38 GMT 2006 Andrew Thompson <thompsa@FreeBSD.org> Add a new address cache type called sticky. On an interface marked sticky any address learned by the bridge is made permanent, the address will not age out and most importantly will not migrate to another interface.
This can be used to stop mac address poisoning or clients roaming in much the same way as static entries without the hassle of preloading the table. 3df7fad0 Thu Nov 09 06:32:38 GMT 2006 Andrew Thompson <thompsa@FreeBSD.org> Add a new address cache type called sticky. On an interface marked sticky any address learned by the bridge is made permanent, the address will not age out and most importantly will not migrate to another interface.
This can be used to stop mac address poisoning or clients roaming in much the same way as static entries without the hassle of preloading the table. 3df7fad0 Thu Nov 09 06:32:38 GMT 2006 Andrew Thompson <thompsa@FreeBSD.org> Add a new address cache type called sticky. On an interface marked sticky any address learned by the bridge is made permanent, the address will not age out and most importantly will not migrate to another interface.
This can be used to stop mac address poisoning or clients roaming in much the same way as static entries without the hassle of preloading the table. 3df7fad0 Thu Nov 09 06:32:38 GMT 2006 Andrew Thompson <thompsa@FreeBSD.org> Add a new address cache type called sticky. On an interface marked sticky any address learned by the bridge is made permanent, the address will not age out and most importantly will not migrate to another interface.
This can be used to stop mac address poisoning or clients roaming in much the same way as static entries without the hassle of preloading the table. 3df7fad0 Thu Nov 09 06:32:38 GMT 2006 Andrew Thompson <thompsa@FreeBSD.org> Add a new address cache type called sticky. On an interface marked sticky any address learned by the bridge is made permanent, the address will not age out and most importantly will not migrate to another interface.
This can be used to stop mac address poisoning or clients roaming in much the same way as static entries without the hassle of preloading the table. 3df7fad0 Thu Nov 09 06:32:38 GMT 2006 Andrew Thompson <thompsa@FreeBSD.org> Add a new address cache type called sticky. On an interface marked sticky any address learned by the bridge is made permanent, the address will not age out and most importantly will not migrate to another interface.
This can be used to stop mac address poisoning or clients roaming in much the same way as static entries without the hassle of preloading the table. 3df7fad0 Thu Nov 09 06:32:38 GMT 2006 Andrew Thompson <thompsa@FreeBSD.org> Add a new address cache type called sticky. On an interface marked sticky any address learned by the bridge is made permanent, the address will not age out and most importantly will not migrate to another interface.
This can be used to stop mac address poisoning or clients roaming in much the same way as static entries without the hassle of preloading the table.
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