Index: [Article Count Order] [Thread]

Date: Tue, 12 Feb 2008 12:44:45 +0900
From: Yukiyo Akisada <akisada@tahi.org>
Subject: [users:00583] Re: definition of frames
To: "Anthony Coon" <acoon@vmware.com>
Cc: users@tahi.org
Message-Id: <20080212124445.e4a12da7.akisada@tahi.org>
In-Reply-To: <96B1AAC4C39E684DA09AA17042B1C09A0EF259@PA-EXCH23.vmware.com>
References: <96B1AAC4C39E684DA09AA17042B1C09A0EF259@PA-EXCH23.vmware.com>
X-Mail-Count: 00583

Hi, Tony.

Please just grep it!

You can find it in "*.def" files.

"u_ns_g2l_wo" and "ns_l2l" are just the local name of packet definition.
pktsend and pktrecv can access the packet image (generate/expected) through such a parameter.

Thanks,


On Mon, 11 Feb 2008 16:36:18 -0800
"Anthony Coon" <acoon@vmware.com> wrote:

> Greetings,
>  
> Can someone point me to the definition of the frames parameter that is passed
> to pktsend/pktrecv?  For example what is "u_ns_g2l_wo" or "ns_l2l".
>  
> Thanks,
> Tony
> 


------------------------------------------------------------------------
Yukiyo Akisada <akisada@tahi.org>