←back to thread

1183 points robenkleene | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.207s | source
Show context
eptcyka ◴[] No.24839101[source]
Apple seems to do all kinds of weird networking _stuff_. For instance, during wakeup, your T2 equipped Macbook will wait for a DNS response and then use said DNS response to synchronize time via NTP before letting the user use the keyboard. Probably checking timestamps on signatures for the keyboard firmware, or something stupid like that. This only happens if it happens to have a default route.

Similarly, all macOS machines will test a DHCP supplied default route before applying it by trying to reach something on the internet. So if you happen to have some firewall rules that block internet access, no default route will be applied until the internet check times out.

I won't share the other sentiments about the above, but is it really that hard to document these behaviors?

replies(22): >>24839205 #>>24839226 #>>24839281 #>>24839287 #>>24839352 #>>24839401 #>>24839503 #>>24839892 #>>24840087 #>>24840150 #>>24840234 #>>24840673 #>>24840752 #>>24841372 #>>24841670 #>>24842254 #>>24842446 #>>24843973 #>>24843982 #>>24845295 #>>24845368 #>>24847526 #
commandlinefan ◴[] No.24840673[source]
I was trying to figure out how my routing table was set up on my iPad and I found out that iOS doesn't expose any interface to routing tables, at any level of privilege. Very frustrating.
replies(1): >>24841611 #
1. e28eta ◴[] No.24841611[source]
I think this is probably wrong. I don’t know what the interface is, but on my iPad running 14.0.1 this app shows a Routing Table that looks okay to me. https://networktools.he.net/