On Fri, 16 May 2003 23:16:03 -0300 (EST) Felipe Massia Pereira
<massia@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: [on LKML]
| Hello,
|
| I've been searching for the exact meaning of this variable through
| Documentation and I've found just empty descriptions (to be filled in, in
| Advanced Linux Routing HOWTO, and nothing also in
| Documentation/networking/ip-sysctl.txt). I've tried also to read the
| kernel source code (net/ipv4/route.c) but I could not figure out what they
| mean.
What kernel version?
And this question would be better asked/answered on either
linux-net or netdev mailing lists, so I've replied to those.
It (ip_rt_mtu_expires variable) appears not to be used very much.
| I've came accross this var because we want to do some experiments in class
| with Path MTU discovery. But it happens that MTU is recorded between
| experiments (and it's what we expect: that the stack does not do a PMTU
| every time). BTW where is the PMTU value kept? Is MTU value recorded for
| each destination or for each route?
|
| So it would be nice if we could make the value found in a experiment to be
| forgotten by the kernel so the students could execute the ping several
| times. (ping -c 2 -m want ...) Is mtu_expires what we're looking for?
Maybe someone else can answer this...
| We tried to "echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/route/mtu_expires" considering
| that it's expressed in seconds. The usual value is 600. But I've read that
| it's expressed in jiffies. Jiffies occur 100 times per sec on a PC, is it?
| So the value 600 on a PC means 6 seconds?
In 2.4.x there are 100 jiffies / second on a PC (x86 arch).
However, /proc/sys/net/ipv4/route/mtu_expires is hiding this HZ
conversion factor from us, so that the value is expressed in seconds
and not in jiffies, so 600 is 600 seconds = 10 minutes.
--
~Randy
|