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Difference between r1.2 and the current

@@ -10,8 +10,10 @@

* server fail over ¿¡ ´ëÇÏ¿©
* TCP/IP illustrated ¿¡¼­ µû¿È
{{{[Bhide, Elnozahy, and Morgan 1991] describe an application that can use this feature of ARP to allow a backup file server to take over from a failed server by issuing a gratuitous ARP request with the backup's hardware address and the failed server's IP address. This causes all packets destined for the failed server to be sent to the backup instead, without the client applications being aware that the original server has failed. 
 
}}}
{{{[Bhide, Elnozahy, and Morgan 1991] describe an application that can use this feature of ARP to allow a backup file server 
to take over from a failed server by issuing a gratuitous ARP request with the backup's hardware address 
and the failed server's IP address. This causes all packets destined for the failed server to be sent to the backup instead,  
without the client applications being aware that the original server has failed.

}}}



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  • server fail over ¿¡ ´ëÇÏ¿©
    • TCP/IP illustrated ¿¡¼­ µû¿È
      [Bhide, Elnozahy, and Morgan 1991] describe an application that can use this feature of ARP to allow a backup file server
       to take over from a failed server by issuing a gratuitous ARP  request with the backup's hardware address
       and the failed server's IP address. This causes all packets destined for the failed server to be sent to the backup instead, 
      without the client applications being aware that the original server has failed.
      
        

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