On Thu, 2005-10-06 at 19:50 -0500, Tarun Siripurapu wrote: > Hi, > > I guess I misunderstood the meaning of being separated by a bridge / > router. So consider the following topology: > > So, lets say the topology is like this: > > A, B and C are 3 machines connected to a single router. The router is > connected to the Internet. > You're almost certainly connected to a switch (which is marketing-speak for a bridge), but the principle is the same. > Say I am A. Can I sniff packets going from B and C to the internet? > Are A, B, and C considered to be separated by a router? The three are separated by a switch. You can't sniff B's or C's traffic for anything in the world except what they send you. Some time with Google for the search phrase 'ethernet switch' will help with the basics of switches. The bottom-line answer is that you can't do what you want. Breen -- Breen Mullins 408-435-8401x123 SQA Engineer 0xde05499b Asante Technologies, Inc.
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