2010/6/22 Adam Maas <[email protected]>: > > Do a show arp on that switch or the router and you'll usually see the > AP's MAC for all IP's on the wireless segment, the AP itself segments > the network as that's the simplest way to implement an AP. > > A good example of something with single MAC and MAC cloning capability > would be Broadcom's SoC Access Point chips. > > Most laptop implementations today get 2 MAC's because they use > separate silicon for the Ethernet PHY and the Wifi controller, with > the Ethernet being onboard and the WiFi being a mini-PCI card (this is > the setup in the ipconfig dump you posted earlier), you see the > single-silicon implementations in AP's and such and that's the only > time you'll usually see a single MAC across WiFi and Ethernet unless > someone's been mucking with MAC cloning.
Thank you, Adam, actually I wasn't aware of some of that. I'll take a closer look and hopefully learn another thing or two Cheers Ecke -- PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List [email protected] http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net to UNSUBSCRIBE from the PDML, please visit the link directly above and follow the directions.

