OK, Thanks for the clarification. Just wonder if there is any way to get the MAC address of bat0 on other end.
For example: I got node A and node C. I want to send data packet from node A to node C. The MAC address of bat0 in nodeA is the source. Just wandering if there is a way to get the MAC address of bat0 in node C without physically show up in front of node C and run these commands.
Thank you so much
On Wed, Nov 28, 2012 at 6:09 PM, liu muye lmy19901031@gmail.com wrote:
Besides, when do batctl ping. I am using the MAC address of ah0. I can ping other node. If the MAC address is wrong, I think I cannot even ping another node, or traceroute to another node.
Thanks
On Wed, Nov 28, 2012 at 6:02 PM, liu muye lmy19901031@gmail.com wrote:
One follow up question:
When I do batctl o. It shows the MAC address of my network interface. In my case, is ah0. Not sure what to do in order to show the MAC address of the bat0.
Thanks Muye Liu
On Tue, Nov 27, 2012 at 11:15 PM, liu muye lmy19901031@gmail.com wrote:
Hello:
This is Muye again. I have encountered another problem recently when I am using B.A.T.M.A.N to do the socket programming.
Currently, I have three nodes. Namely, node A, node B, and node C. The testing environment is a hall way in our department.
I put node A in one end of the hall way, node C in another end of the hall way. Node B is in the middle of the hall way.
I can ping node C from node A and vice versa. In node A, I can traceroute to node C. The traceroute shows it needs to go through node B.
However, when I send packet from node A to node C. Node C does not receive anything. But if I send packet from node A to node B, node B can receive that packet. Not sure what happened. The link shown below is the program I used to send packet. Both source and destination are MAC address.
https://lists.open-mesh.org/pipermail/b.a.t.m.a.n/attachments/20111206/52f06...
I greatly appreciate any suggestion, comment, and help.
Thanks