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Lines Matching refs:packet

382 the maximal size of data which can be sent as a single packet over this interface.
1004 \item\verb|delay| --- a packet has been sent to the stale neighbour and the kernel is waiting
1082 optionally, the TOS value. An IP packet matches the route if the highest
1085 the TOS of the packet.
1087 If several routes match the packet, the following pruning rules
1094 of the packet, the routes with different TOS are dropped.
1185 as the source address of any packet.
1234 of the route and of the packet. If they are not equal, then the packet
1395 --- allow packet by packet randomization on multipath routes.
1642 \item \verb|equalize| --- make packet by packet randomization
1780 --- the device from which this packet is expected to arrive.
1784 --- force the output device on which this packet will be routed.
1797 is equivalent to sending a packet along this path.
1803 that a packet arrived from this interface and searches for
1804 a path to forward the packet.
1848 deliver) the packet to local IP listeners. In this case the router
1879 5 packets transmitted, 5 packets received, 0% packet loss
1910 on destination addresses, but also on other packet fields: source address,
1911 IP protocol, transport protocol ports or even packet payload.
1929 RPDB explicitly allows matching a few packet fields:
1932 \item packet source address.
1933 \item packet destination address.
1935 \item incoming interface (which is packet metadata, rather than a packet field).
1946 interface, tos, fwmark\} and, if the selector matches the packet,
1984 post-processing if no previous default rules selected the packet.
2010 \item \verb|blackhole| --- the rule prescribes to silently drop the packet.
2016 of the IP packet into some other value. More about NAT is
2114 \item Translate packet source address 193.233.7.83 into 192.203.80.144
2584 For each packet the kernel calculates a tuple of realms: source realm
2588 \item If the route has a realm, the destination realm of the packet is set to it.
2589 \item If the rule has a source realm, the source realm of the packet is set to it.
2593 the reversed route to the source of the packet.
2599 After this procedure is completed we know what realm the packet
2609 A much simpler but still very useful application is incoming packet
2610 accounting by realms. The kernel gathers a packet statistics summary
2680 When a host creates an IP packet, it must select some source
2820 The second feature: it does not touch packet payload,
2855 receives a packet destined for 192.203.80.144, it replaces
2857 host and forwards the packet. If you need to remap
2891 when a packet does not leave this network. Let us return to the