Quoting JD <jd1008@xxxxxxxxx>: >> Usually, firewalls don't inhibit ARP entries. To test this theory, >> try "ping 192.168.1.70" from your 192.168.1.108 box. Directly after >> that, issue the command "arp -a". If ARP works, you should see >> something like this. >> >> ? (10.1.1.1) at 00:30:ab:13:9e:3d [ether] on eth0 >> >> (On my net, 10.1.1.1 is my gateway.) If it doesn't work, you'll see >> something like this: >> >> ? (10.1.1.253) at<incomplete> on eth0 >> >> where 10.1.1.253 is a non-existent machine on my network. And you'll >> see ping responses such as these: >> >> PING 10.1.1.253 (10.1.1.253) 56(84) bytes of data. >> From 10.1.1.21 icmp_seq=2 Destination Host Unreachable >> From 10.1.1.21 icmp_seq=3 Destination Host Unreachable >> From 10.1.1.21 icmp_seq=4 Destination Host Unreachable >> >> You've already posted something like this, so it's a good bet ARPs >> aren't working. So the wireless router is a good bet at this point. >> >> Shane > On the Fedora Machine: > # arp -a > ? (192.168.1.254) at 0:1d:1a:00:91:c1 [ether] on wlan0 > > On the PowerBook Machine: > # arp -na > ? (192.168.1.1) at 0:28:fe:6:ef:7 on en1 [ethernet] > ? (192.168.1.108) at (incomplete) on en1 [ethernet] > ? (192.168.1.254) at 0:1d:1a:00:91:c1 on en1 [ethernet] > ? (192.168.1.255) at ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff on en1 [ethernet] > > Now this is really strange! > Fedora's arp reports only the gateway! > Whereas PowerBooks arp reports the gateway, the wired machine > 192.168.1.1 and even the Fedora machine it cannot ping: 192.168.1.108 > Keep in mind that the table shown above from the powerbook doesn't say it is reporting the Fedora machine. The powerbook is reporting that it attempted to obtain the MAC address for the host at 192.168.1.108, but it didn't receive a reply. A classic indication of a broken layer-2 LAN path. Since both machines are wireless, it lends credence to the theory that the router is blocking inter-host communication. (Nothing more effective than not passing ARP broadcasts to isolate hosts.) Start looking at the wireless config on the wireless router; particularly it's client hiding. Surely that can be turned off. But don't pursue static or default route issues until you can ping between LAN-connected hosts. As far as ad-hoc; I don't know. I use infrastructure mode if for nothing else than deterministic operation. Having everybody connect with everybody else in the air just sounds massively chaotic ... and networks are chaotic enough at times. Shane -- users mailing list users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines