Thanks for the answer! There is nothing similar to ip_loopback_bypass in Solaris.
When I run netstat -i, I do see packets that are "passed through" the localhost interface. Is there a real entity in the kernel which is the loopback interface, may it be a driver (seems not to be one), STREAMS module, anything? Does it contain anything beyond statistics ? --ury --- rick jones <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > The Solaris and HP-UX 11.X stacks are "cousins" so > this may help, it > may not... > > Under HP-UX, if the traffic is to a machine-local IP > address, it gets > looped-back in IP and never gets through DLPI into a > driver and so > cannot be traced with tcpdump. However, there is an > "unsupported" ndd > tunable called ip_loopback_bypass, which if set to 1 > will no longer > loopback those local IPs in the IP module and the > last time I remember > trying (long ago) allowed tracing with tcpdump. > > Now, I'm not sure if/how one wold be able to get > that to work with > "localhost" as long as "localhost" pointed to > 127.0.0.1, but perhaps > some creative use of the route command could get > 127.0.0.1 traffic > routed to a machine local IP address and then if > Solaris has something > akin to the ip_loopback_bypass (check ndd /dev/ip \? > output... > > hth, > > rick jones > > PS - anyone tried taking a tcpdump trace where TCP > Multi-Data Transmit > was enbled on Solaris (9 or 10 IIRC)? > > Wisdom teeth are impacted, people are affected by > the effects of events > > - > This is the tcpdump-workers list. > Visit https://lists.sandelman.ca/ to unsubscribe. > ===== --ury - This is the tcpdump-workers list. Visit https://lists.sandelman.ca/ to unsubscribe.