Lines Matching full:destination
1083 bits of its destination address are equal to the route prefix at least
1145 the preferred source address when communicating with this destination).
1222 --- the destination prefix of the route. If \verb|TYPE| is omitted,
1278 --- the MTU along the path to the destination. If the modifier \verb|lock| is
1318 If the path to these destination is asymmetric, this guess may be wrong.
1323 --- \threeonly Maximal reordering on the path to this destination.
1329 --- [2.5.74+ only] Maximum number of hops on the path to this destination.
1335 this destination. Actual window size is this value multiplied by the
1342 + this destination. The actual window size is this value multiplied
1406 route to the same destination exists. Its opposite case is \verb|append|,
1627 \item \verb|mc| --- the destination is multicast.
1629 \item \verb|brd| --- the destination is broadcast.
1644 \item \verb|dst-nat| --- the destination address requires translation.
1795 \paragraph{Description:} this command gets a single route to a destination
1802 --- the destination address.
1833 to output packets towards the requested destination.
1834 This is equivalent to pinging the destination
1892 gatewayed route for a destination which is really directly connected:
1918 better path to the destination and sent us an ICMP redirect message.
1939 based only on the destination address of packets (and in theory,
1944 on destination addresses, but also on other packet fields: source address,
1956 To solve this task, the conventional destination based routing table, ordered
1967 \item packet destination address.
1979 of each rule is applied to \{source address, destination address, incoming
1990 lookups in destination-based routing tables and selecting
2079 --- select the destination prefix to match.
2331 --- the prefix selecting the destination multicast addresses to list.
2578 want to distinguish the packets not only by their destination, but
2602 classification both by source and destination becomes quite manageable.
2619 and destination realm, using the following algorithm:
2622 \item If the route has a realm, the destination realm of the packet is set to it.
2624 If the destination realm was not inherited from the route and the rule has a destination realm,
2661 summarizing traffic not only by source or destination, but
2662 by any pair of source and destination realms.
2741 address hint for this destination. The hint is set with the \verb|src| parameter
2751 with the same scope as the destination.
2754 than the scope of the destination but it prefers addresses
2756 to the destination. Unlike IPv6, the scopes of IPv4 destinations
2764 \item Otherwise, if the scope of the destination is \verb|link| or \verb|host|,
2783 the route to the requested destination does {\em not\/} go back via the same
2791 NDISC queries. It means that proxy NDISC is possible only on a per destination
2819 to the destination goes back via the interface from which the solicitation
2935 contain a route to the destination (which means that the routing