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тАО04-28-2007 05:13 PM
тАО04-28-2007 05:13 PM
Hi
I am using proxy server in RHEL AS3.My external IP is 192.168.0.10 in eth0. A broadcast message like " IN= eth0 out =MAC=src=192.168.0.10 DST 192.168.0.255 LN=96 Tos=0X00 PREC =0X00 TTL=0...." apear 150/200 times in a minute.
I can do nothing cusing to brastcast.
How can i stop this types of bradcast?
Please help me
Your regards
amzad
I am using proxy server in RHEL AS3.My external IP is 192.168.0.10 in eth0. A broadcast message like " IN= eth0 out =MAC=src=192.168.0.10 DST 192.168.0.255 LN=96 Tos=0X00 PREC =0X00 TTL=0...." apear 150/200 times in a minute.
I can do nothing cusing to brastcast.
How can i stop this types of bradcast?
Please help me
Your regards
amzad
Solved! Go to Solution.
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тАО04-28-2007 07:30 PM
тАО04-28-2007 07:30 PM
Re: how to stop bradcast message
Shalom,
I would suggest you change kernel logging level in /etc/syslog.conf
Also, iptables configuration can trigger this behavior.
iptables -L
SEP
I would suggest you change kernel logging level in /etc/syslog.conf
Also, iptables configuration can trigger this behavior.
iptables -L
SEP
Steven E Protter
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тАО04-29-2007 02:12 AM
тАО04-29-2007 02:12 AM
Re: how to stop bradcast message
Hello,
this message is generated by the kernel, and kernel messages with a specific priority will be printed on the console. You can fix this if you configure you syslog server in the right way. Please post the complete broadcast message and the output of the command "iptables -L -v -n".
Kind regards,
Patrick
this message is generated by the kernel, and kernel messages with a specific priority will be printed on the console. You can fix this if you configure you syslog server in the right way. Please post the complete broadcast message and the output of the command "iptables -L -v -n".
Kind regards,
Patrick
Best regards,
Patrick
Patrick
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тАО04-29-2007 10:18 PM
тАО04-29-2007 10:18 PM
Solution
This is a kernel message, created by the iptables firewall code. There is a firewall rule that is configured to LOG packets like this for some reason. You can either remove the logging rule from the firewall rules, or you could change the way the kernel messages are delivered.
There are two ways for kernel messages like this to appear.
If they are visible only on the console, they might be generated by the kernel directly. This can be stopped by using the "-c" option of the klogd daemon. This option can be added to the KLOGD_OPTIONS variable in the /etc/sysconfig/syslog file.
If you set "-c 0", kernel will print no messages directly on the console: all messages will be sent to klogd, which forwards them to syslogd, which then does whatever it is configured to do to kernel messages.
If the messages appear in all sessions, not only on the console, the problem is in the syslog configuration. Read /etc/syslog.conf and check the lines that are applicable to kernel messages. Read "man syslog.conf" to understand the syntax.
MK
There are two ways for kernel messages like this to appear.
If they are visible only on the console, they might be generated by the kernel directly. This can be stopped by using the "-c
If you set "-c 0", kernel will print no messages directly on the console: all messages will be sent to klogd, which forwards them to syslogd, which then does whatever it is configured to do to kernel messages.
If the messages appear in all sessions, not only on the console, the problem is in the syslog configuration. Read /etc/syslog.conf and check the lines that are applicable to kernel messages. Read "man syslog.conf" to understand the syntax.
MK
MK
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