B) I supose that you have already check properly the config. and router is
working properly. This means that someone has assigned an invalid MAC
address to another system! isolate it and disconnect it from the lan, until
mac-address is corrected!
But how can the invalid MAC be permanent in the router?
So I think that is still a configuration problem.
'clear arp-cache' doesn't affect permanent arp entries.
Try to use 'no arp 10.10.1.15' in configuration mode.
Regards,
Wang Xianzhu
regards,
j0rge card0s0
-----Original Message-----
From: Hagop Karaoghlanian
[mailto:hkaraoghlanian(_at_)corp(_dot_)attcanada(_dot_)ca]
Sent: Sexta-feira, 1 de Junho de 2001 18:46
To: 'ietf(_at_)ietf(_dot_)org'
Cc: Mason Livingston
Subject: Cisco 2610 ARP table problem
Hello All, I have alittle problem, my cisco 2610, which is in a production
environment, is running NAT on ISDN, this router only has one thernet
interface, and its address has been assigned 10.10.1.1 255.255.255.0, and
when I do a show arp on it, it thinks that has 10.10.1.1 and 10.10.1.15?????
why is this. I have tried to clear the arp table, and the nat table, but to
o avail..heres what I get from show arp...
Protocol Address Age (min) Hardware Addr Type Interface
Internet 10.10.1.1 - 00d0.c0fc.81c0 ARPA Ethernet0/0
Internet 10.10.1.15 - 00d0.c0fc.81c0 ARPA Ethernet0/0
Internet 10.10.1.100 3 00b0.d0c1.e9f2 ARPA Ethernet0/0
Internet 10.10.1.103 3 00b0.d0f0.f21f ARPA Ethernet0/0
<snip>
thanks everyone....
---------------
Hagop R. Karaoghlanian, CCNP
Network Specialist
AT&T Canada IES
905 King St West
416-341-5876
hkaraoghlanian(_at_)corp(_dot_)attcanada(_dot_)ca
"Gold leads into gold, then into restlessness, and finally into crushing
misery." Kahlil Gibran