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Date:      14 Feb 2001 12:05:29 -0500
From:      Lowell Gilbert <lowell@world.std.com>
To:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: Firewall rules block P:2 and P:103
Message-ID:  <443ddhqjom.fsf@lowellg.ne.mediaone.net>
In-Reply-To: joes@joescanner.com's message of "14 Feb 2001 10:29:57 %2B0100"
References:  <20010214102008.A2113@junior.kasby> <Pine.WNT.4.31.0102140128210.1164-100000@hood>

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joes@joescanner.com (Joseph Stein) writes:

> > Can anybody explain me what P:103 and P:2 mean? Why my ISP keep sending me
> > these packets?
> 
> according to /etc/protocols, P:103 is "Protocol independent Multicast" and
> P:2 is "Internet Group Management Protocol".
> 
> > Should I allow or deny these packets?
> 
> It's probably safe to block them, but i'm no expert.

They're ways of determining membership in multicast groups.  If the
machine isn't doing multicast, blocking them is fine; if it is, then
somebody probably already noticed that multicast didn't work.  :-)


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