70fc25ad6e
Separate out the concept of "hardware maximum supported frame length" and "configured link MTU", and limit the latter according to the former. In networks where the DHCP-supplied link MTU is inconsistent with the hardware or driver capabilities (e.g. a network using jumbo frames), this will result in iPXE advertising a TCP MSS consistent with a size that can actually be received. Note that the term "MTU" is typically used to refer to the maximum length excluding the link-layer headers; we adopt this usage. Signed-off-by: Michael Brown <mcb30@ipxe.org> |
||
---|---|---|
contrib | ||
src | ||
COPYING | ||
COPYING.GPLv2 | ||
COPYING.UBDL | ||
README |
README
iPXE README File Quick start guide: cd src make For any more detailed instructions, see http://ipxe.org