Jay, I can't comment directly on it, but I've used the bridging setup in a RedHat 7.3 machine recently. The last Twisted Pair to BNC tranceiver we had broke, so I had to build one out of a Linux machine. Worked great on a little network (don't ask why I had to keep the BNC around, I'm still pissed about it). Never had any problems with the bridge. It's was not on a network that had managed switches, so it didn't have to do interact with any of that to ensure no network loops, but for a simple bridge it works great. Turned the machine on, let it run for 15 days no problems on the network, found a replacement tranceiver and life was good. I know I used the ancient bridging code in the 1.2 kernel and never had any problems with it (it's been re-written since then I believe). The new code is great, took 5 minutes to figure it out from the man page. The only thing that thru me was you have to ifconfig up the bridging interface. Thanks, Kirby On Mon, 2003-02-24 at 12:27, Jay Wineinger wrote: > Not really contributing to the discussion on MAC forwarding, but Im > wondering about the maturity of linux bridging. I looked at the sourceforge > page Martin posted and it seems that the last updates were made duing 2002, > nothing in 2003 yet. Does this mean that bridging is fairly stable and > complete or that development is just going slow? Just curious. > > Jay > > _______________________________________________ > LARTC mailing list / LARTC@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > http://mailman.ds9a.nl/mailman/listinfo/lartc HOWTO: http://lartc.org/ > -- Real Programmers view electronic multimedia files with a hex editor.