WLC4402 sends strange ethernet address in snmp reply
Hello,
I got a very strange thing with 7.0.250.0 on a WLC 4402 controler. My snmp query receives this entry for one particular wifi client:
.1.3.6.1.4.1.14179.2.1.4.1.1.68.116.108.115.51.42 "Dtls3*" as ethernet address.
It is the ascii representation of 44:74:6c:73:33:2a. The expected snmp string is "44:74:6c:73:33:2a".
Have you already seen this kind of bugs?
Yes, you are right. Thanks.
"MAC address entries need to be queried with the SNMP option -O x so that they only return results in HEX."
Similar Messages
-
I running the software setup from the HP website for windows 7 x64 and I keep getting stuck at SNMP reply Officejet 6310 ip_address.
I have a few questions that will help me help you.
How are you connecting the printer to the network (USB cable/Ethernet cable/wireless)?
Did you try downloading the software to your local computer then running the install?
Did you setup the printer from its front panel display?
Please mark the post that solves your problem as "Accepted Solution"
Sometimes it takes several posts back and forth to get to a solution - please be patient.
I am employed by HP -
Reply address: is it possible to use another reply address other than the pop address used in my account. I have a special work account and would like to send emails with that address as my reply address...or sent from address
i found out how to do this finally!
1) set up google gmail account to forward your emails to (from the [email protected])
2) go to your gmail account
3) go to settings (cog in right hand corner)
4) go to 'accounts and import'
5) go to 'send mail as'
6) click 'Add another email address you own' - add your [email protected] address
7) google will send a verification email with code to that email address.
8) enter code
9) go back to gmail account >'send mail as' and select 'make default'
10) close mac 'mail' program and reopen it.
as long as you have gmail account selected as the primary account in MAIL - mail will now come throught as being sent from that [email protected] address!! -
I am trying to reply or send a email to a email address that has a full stop in the username ie [email protected] When the email sends it drops the surname ie [email protected] I have checked the address from the reply and it is correct even if I type it in it still has the same issue. Does anybody have an idea of what I can do. Thanks
The Addons support forum is over here:
https://forums.addons.mozilla.org/
Separate forums with separate login credentials. Unfortunately each forum under mozilla.org was started at a separate time ''[years apart]'', by a different project group, and user credentials weren't centralized. About a year ago the plan was to have [https://login.persona.org/ Mozilla Persona] ''[a centralized login system]'' "consolidate" all the different Mozilla domain login credentials for users, but I haven't seen that even start to happen yet. -
How to prevent duplicate of orginal mail (with original sender's name, address) being "attached" when forwarded?
Maybe I am mis-understanding what you are seeing.
When I forward a message, the receiver will see the original mail (unless I edit it, such as removing any previous sender's information) and the length will be the same as the message was before forwarding except for the added line "Begin forwarded message" (again, unless I edit bits out), and there will be no attached copy of the original message.
So when you say in your reply above "The orginal email with the sender's name and address was also sent with my forwarded email." do you mean:
a) that it is still visible at the head of the text of the message (which I was saying does not happen for me because "after hitting delete, the previous sender's information disappears." [and since] "it has disappeared, it cannot be in your forwarded mail." Disappeared means it is not there.
b) another copy of the original message is attached to the forwarded email at the end, either as an included file or as repeated text.
c) some other situation.
Sorry about the previous mis-spellings! I hope that we can get to the bottom of this. -
Server version: Windows server 2008 R2 Ent.
Structure of DHCP scopes: Two DHCP server 50% to 50% all allocation for per scopes.
Question: Sometimes the DHCP server
allocate the IP address at the same time to the a strange MAC address per IP address, the type is "DHCP/BOOT", it cause DHCP scopes out of space at some time point. We need clear up them manually.
I found strange MAC address in HEX is the IP address which the server allocated.
Someone meet the issues before, any solution for this ?
Thanks !
Client IP Address
Name
Lease Expiration
Type
Unique ID
10.199.190.0
10.199.190.0
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e3000
10.199.190.46
10.199.190.46
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e343600
10.199.190.59
10.199.190.59
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e353900
10.199.190.69
10.199.190.69
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e363900
10.199.190.74
10.199.190.74
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e373400
10.199.190.90
10.199.190.90
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e393000
10.199.190.101
10.199.190.101
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e31303100
10.199.190.104
10.199.190.104
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e31303400
10.199.190.110
10.199.190.110
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e31313000
10.199.190.114
10.199.190.114
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e31313400
10.199.190.117
10.199.190.117
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e31313700
10.199.190.121
10.199.190.121
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e31323100
10.199.190.138
10.199.190.138
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e31333800
10.199.190.144
10.199.190.144
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e31343400
10.199.190.153
10.199.190.153
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e31353300
10.199.190.156
10.199.190.156
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e31353600
10.199.190.157
10.199.190.157
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e31353700
10.199.190.163
10.199.190.163
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e31363300
10.199.190.165
10.199.190.165
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e31363500
10.199.190.168
10.199.190.168
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e31363800
10.199.190.169
10.199.190.169
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e31363900
10.199.190.174
10.199.190.174
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e31373400
10.199.190.177
10.199.190.177
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e31373700
10.199.190.184
10.199.190.184
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e31383400
10.199.190.188
10.199.190.188
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e31383800
10.199.190.189
10.199.190.189
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e31383900
10.199.190.192
10.199.190.192
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e31393200
10.199.190.197
10.199.190.197
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e31393700
10.199.190.201
10.199.190.201
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e32303100
10.199.190.202
10.199.190.202
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e32303200
10.199.190.209
10.199.190.209
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e32303900
10.199.190.210
10.199.190.210
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e32313000
10.199.190.211
10.199.190.211
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e32313100
10.199.190.212
10.199.190.212
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e32313200
10.199.190.213
10.199.190.213
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e32313300
10.199.190.216
10.199.190.216
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e32313600
10.199.190.219
10.199.190.219
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e32313900
10.199.190.222
10.199.190.222
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e32323200
10.199.190.225
10.199.190.225
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e32323500
10.199.190.226
10.199.190.226
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e32323600
10.199.190.229
10.199.190.229
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e32323900
10.199.190.233
10.199.190.233
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e32333300
10.199.190.235
10.199.190.235
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e32333500
10.199.190.238
10.199.190.238
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e32333800
10.199.190.240
10.199.190.240
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e32343000
10.199.190.242
10.199.190.242
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e32343200
10.199.190.243
10.199.190.243
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e32343300
10.199.190.246
10.199.190.246
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e32343600
10.199.190.249
10.199.190.249
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e32343900
10.199.190.251
10.199.190.251
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e32353100
10.199.190.252
10.199.190.252
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e32353200
10.199.190.255
10.199.190.255
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139302e32353500
10.199.191.1
10.199.191.1
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e3100
10.199.191.2
10.199.191.2
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e3200
10.199.191.5
10.199.191.5
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e3500
10.199.191.6
10.199.191.6
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e3600
10.199.191.8
10.199.191.8
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e3800
10.199.191.13
10.199.191.13
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e313300
10.199.191.14
10.199.191.14
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e313400
10.199.191.15
10.199.191.15
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e313500
10.199.191.16
10.199.191.16
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e313600
10.199.191.17
10.199.191.17
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e313700
10.199.191.18
10.199.191.18
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e313800
10.199.191.19
10.199.191.19
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e313900
10.199.191.20
10.199.191.20
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e323000
10.199.191.21
10.199.191.21
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e323100
10.199.191.22
10.199.191.22
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e323200
10.199.191.23
10.199.191.23
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e323300
10.199.191.24
10.199.191.24
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e323400
10.199.191.27
10.199.191.27
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e323700
10.199.191.29
10.199.191.29
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e323900
10.199.191.30
10.199.191.30
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e333000
10.199.191.31
10.199.191.31
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e333100
10.199.191.32
10.199.191.32
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e333200
10.199.191.33
10.199.191.33
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e333300
10.199.191.34
10.199.191.34
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e333400
10.199.191.37
10.199.191.37
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e333700
10.199.191.38
10.199.191.38
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e333800
10.199.191.39
10.199.191.39
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e333900
10.199.191.42
10.199.191.42
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e343200
10.199.191.44
10.199.191.44
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e343400
10.199.191.49
10.199.191.49
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e343900
10.199.191.52
10.199.191.52
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e353200
10.199.191.54
10.199.191.54
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e353400
10.199.191.56
10.199.191.56
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e353600
10.199.191.61
10.199.191.61
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e363100
10.199.191.62
10.199.191.62
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e363200
10.199.191.64
10.199.191.64
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e363400
10.199.191.65
10.199.191.65
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e363500
10.199.191.66
10.199.191.66
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e363600
10.199.191.70
10.199.191.70
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e373000
10.199.191.72
10.199.191.72
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e373200
10.199.191.73
10.199.191.73
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e373300
10.199.191.79
10.199.191.79
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e373900
10.199.191.80
10.199.191.80
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e383000
10.199.191.81
10.199.191.81
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e383100
10.199.191.82
10.199.191.82
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e383200
10.199.191.83
10.199.191.83
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e383300
10.199.191.84
10.199.191.84
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e383400
10.199.191.86
10.199.191.86
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e383600
10.199.191.90
10.199.191.90
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e393000
10.199.191.91
10.199.191.91
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e393100
10.199.191.92
10.199.191.92
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e393200
10.199.191.93
10.199.191.93
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e393300
10.199.191.97
10.199.191.97
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e393700
10.199.191.98
10.199.191.98
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e393800
10.199.191.99
10.199.191.99
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e393900
10.199.191.101
10.199.191.101
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e31303100
10.199.191.102
10.199.191.102
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e31303200
10.199.191.105
10.199.191.105
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e31303500
10.199.191.106
10.199.191.106
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e31303600
10.199.191.108
10.199.191.108
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e31303800
10.199.191.112
10.199.191.112
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e31313200
10.199.191.115
10.199.191.115
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e31313500
10.199.191.116
10.199.191.116
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e31313600
10.199.191.117
10.199.191.117
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e31313700
10.199.191.119
10.199.191.119
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e31313900
10.199.191.120
10.199.191.120
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e31323000
10.199.191.121
10.199.191.121
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e31323100
10.199.191.125
10.199.191.125
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e31323500
10.199.191.133
10.199.191.133
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e31333300
10.199.191.146
10.199.191.146
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e31343600
10.199.191.158
10.199.191.158
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e31353800
10.199.191.162
10.199.191.162
2014/8/5 10:07
DHCP/BOOTP
31302e3139392e3139312e31363200Hi,
According your description, this may be caused by virus or malicious client.
Please try to perform a network capture on your DHCP server. Then find the device which send these malicious discover messages.
To download Network Monitor, please click the link below,
http://www.microsoft.com/en-hk/download/details.aspx?id=4865
To prevent this issue, you may implement NAP Enforcement for DHCP.
Here is a checklist of configuring NAP Enforcement for DHCP,
Checklist: Configure NAP Enforcement for DHCP
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc772356(v=WS.10).aspx
Hope this helps.
Steven Lee
TechNet Community Support -
Mail address scrambled when replying
Hi,
A user in our company has the following problem on his Mac running Yosemite.
When replying to specific users the address of these users is changed to an undeliverable address.
The users' normal address looks like [email protected], but replying makes the address change to something like this:
</o=Company name/ou=Exchange Administrative Group /cn=Recipients/cn=f6d0033310534960a6fb8f49d8653620>
Sending to this address results in an non-deliverable reply.
It only happens with users whose mailboxes are on the same mailserver this user is on, but in a seperate addressbook (we're a hosting company). /the server is Exchange 2013 (latest SP and updates).
Right now this user corrects the mailaddress each time he encounters this, but he would like this be solved.
Anyone who has a clue where the problem might be?No one who has this problem as well? The problem occurs again after a couple of days after fixing the addresses.
-
Strange email address while restoring from iCloud!
Hey
I am restoring my data from iCloud to my new iPhone 5S but while I am restoring they tell me to enter the password for emails idk and when I click cancel they show me another email address until I reach to mine.
what's happening? and why I am seeing like 4-5 emails adresses before I reach mine?
Thanks!Thanks for ur reply
My problem is when I am restoring from iCloud and when they ask me to enter my password they ask me to enter the password for email I don't know and when I click skip I see another strange email until I reach to my email and enter my password to start syncing my data from iCloud. So I mean that why they are showing me strange emails addresses that I don't know and I have to write their password so from where did that email address come? -
Enabled RBL - Cannot send from dynamic address ranges
I have recently enabled some RBL on my mail server to help combat some spam problems that have been starting. Unfortunately, some users can no longer send email through my server when they are working remotely. I am pretty sure they are being blocked because they are on dynamic address ranges (Comcast home accounts and Verizon air cards).
Is there a way to:
1) (preferred) Allow SMTP to go through without looking up the RBL (white-listing) based on SMTP authentication? This way they could me anywhere and always be able to send.
or
2) How do I white-list address ranges so that they can send through.
ThanksBased on your reply, it sounds like postfix processes its config in a top to bottom fashion. It now makes sense to me that it must be getting to the RBL's before authentication. Below is my postconf, any help would be greatly appreciated. Thanks
xserve0:~ root# postconf -n
alias_maps = hash:/etc/aliases,hash:/var/mailman/data/aliases
command_directory = /usr/sbin
config_directory = /etc/postfix
content_filter = smtp-amavis:[127.0.0.1]:10024
daemon_directory = /usr/libexec/postfix
debugpeerlevel = 2
enableserveroptions = yes
html_directory = no
inet_interfaces = all
mail_owner = postfix
mailboxsizelimit = 0
mailbox_transport = cyrus
mailq_path = /usr/bin/mailq
manpage_directory = /usr/share/man
mapsrbldomains =
messagesizelimit = 0
mydestination = $myhostname,localhost.$mydomain,localhost,mail.intrix.org,intrix.org
mydomain_fallback = localhost
myhostname = xserve0.intrix.org
mynetworks = 127.0.0.1/32,64.193.94.128/28,75.0.0.0/8
mynetworks_style = host
newaliases_path = /usr/bin/newaliases
ownerrequestspecial = no
queue_directory = /private/var/spool/postfix
readme_directory = /usr/share/doc/postfix
recipient_delimiter = +
sample_directory = /usr/share/doc/postfix/examples
sendmail_path = /usr/sbin/sendmail
setgid_group = postdrop
smtpdclientrestrictions = permit_mynetworks rejectrblclient zen.spamhaus.org rejectrblclient dnsbl.sorbs.net rejectrblclient list.dsbl.org rejectrblclient bl.spamcop.net permit
smtpdenforcetls = no
smtpdpw_server_securityoptions = cram-md5,gssapi,login
smtpdrecipientrestrictions = permitsasl_authenticated,permit_mynetworks,reject_unauthdestination,permit
smtpdsasl_authenable = yes
smtpdtls_certfile = /etc/certificates/Default.crt
smtpdtls_keyfile = /etc/certificates/Default.key
smtpduse_pwserver = yes
smtpdusetls = yes
unknownlocal_recipient_rejectcode = 550
virtualmailboxdomains = hash:/etc/postfix/virtual_domains
virtual_transport = lmtp:unix:/var/imap/socket/lmtp
xserve0:~ root# -
Sender's email address in Email Campaign
Hi Folks,
Whenever I am creating an email campaign in Communication Channel I enter Email as channel,I have to enter Sender or email address .
So If I click on input help of Sender field it will take me to search screen of Employees "Search Employees".Does this mean Any employee can send an email outside sap?Or here we have to select the configured email address?Please help?
Regards
JayaHi Jaya,
The email address entered here will be visible to the receiver as 'from' mail id. So that if the receiver wish to reply then he can use this mail id.
Also please see below threads.
Sending E-mail in Marketing Campaign
How can email sender be overrided?
Rgds
Hari -
Iphone 3G, Exchange mail - can't send new mail only works by reply
Before upgrading from 2.0 to 2.0.2 all worked like a charm with Exchange mail. Now I am not able to send new mail from iphone using Exchange account. When I try to do so, a send bar appears shortly, but no message is sent. When trying to forward a note from Notes application using exchange account, also applications closes down automatically.
The only viable option to send mail via Exchange is by replying to someone's message.
How to deal with this?
I have tried to delete all accounts on iphone and re-establishe them. Doesn't work.Discovered, that it is a problem connected to Contacts. If you are using Contacts or typing a new email address, New mail won't go.
If you however browse Exchange address book and select a person to send email to, that will work.
Apple what happenedin 2.0.2? -
Hi,
I am trying to get an ethernet address by sending ioctl to socket descriptor. I am using SIOCGENADDR command. Looks like this is not supported under Solaris 8.0. Due to some reasons, I do not wish to use DLPI for getting the same.
The sockio.h has the definition for above command.
Any idea, what is going wrong?
-BobUsing the SIOCGIFCONF ioctl to learn the interface name? Section 16.6
of UNIX Network Programming, Volume 1, Second Edition by the late W. Richard
Stevens provides a good example of its use.
Please refer this URL for source code :
http://www.cis.temple.edu/~ingargio/cis307/software/StevensBook/unpv12e/ioctl/
Thanks,
Senthilkumar
Developer Technical Support
http://www.sun.com/developers/support -
as of lately my iCloud mail box as been full of junk mail ....... in iCloud preferences you can only send 99 different address directly to trash? what Virus & Malware do you recommend for my iMac, iPad and iPhone ............ thank you !!!!
as of lately my iCloud mail box as been full of junk mail ....... in iCloud preferences you can only send 99 different address directly to trash? what Virus & Malware do you recommend for my iMac, iPad and iPhone ............ thank you !!!!
-
In the past three days, whenever I send a message, it does not go through. Instead, I get the message: 5.1.0 - Unknown address error 501- "5.1.8 Bad sender's system address". I tried downloading the newest version of Thunderbird but it did not work. I do not receive this message when using other software.
I had the look that you suggested. As far as I can tell there are no problems with the user name. Maybe I should check with my email company, Cogeco?
-
Reading the ethernet address without root permissions
Hello,
Is there a way to get the ethernet address of a network interface without root permissions (in a user program)?
I need the mac address in order to generate DCE's uuids. The mac address is used as a unique machine identifier.
SergeHI
You may use this program copied from a technote 2856-09 to get MAC address in C. Works fine only if arp cache is present though . It
does not talk to the driver directly . May be usefull to you. Compile
with "-lsocket -lnsl" flags.
<pre>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/sockio.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
#include <net/if.h>
#include <net/if_arp.h>
#include <netinet/in.h>
#include <arpa/inet.h>
#include <netdb.h>
#include <errno.h>
main(argc, argv)
int argc;
char *argv[];
int sockfd, i;
struct arpreq arpreq;
struct sockaddr_in *sin;
struct hostent *hp;
char host[256];
if(argc != 2)
printf("Usage : %s hostname\n", argv[0]), exit(1);
strcpy(host, argv[1]);
bzero(&arpreq, sizeof(struct arpreq));
arpreq.arp_pa.sa_family = AF_INET;
sin = (struct sockaddr_in *)&arpreq.arp_pa;
sin->sin_family = AF_INET;
sin->sin_addr.s_addr = inet_addr(host);
if (sin->sin_addr.s_addr == -1) {
hp = gethostbyname(host);
if (hp == NULL) {
fprintf(stderr, "%s: %s: unknown host\n",
argv[0], host);
exit(1);
bcopy((char *)hp->h_addr, (char *)&sin->sin_addr,
sizeof
(sin->sin_addr));
if ( (sockfd = socket(AF_INET, SOCK_DGRAM, 0)) < 0 )
perror("can't open datagram socket");
if (ioctl(sockfd, SIOCGARP, (caddr_t)&arpreq) < 0)
if (errno == ENXIO)
printf("%s (%s) -- no entry\n",
host, inet_ntoa(sin->sin_addr));
else
perror("SIOCGARP IOCTL failed");
exit(1);
printf("Hostname : %s", host);
for (i=0; i<6; i++)
printf("%c%x", i == 0 ? '\t': ':', (unsigned
char)arpreq.arp_ha.sa_data);
printf("\n");
close(sockfd);
exit(0);
</pre>
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