This gave me an idea it may be caused by Ipv6 so I ran networksetup -setv6off Wi-Fi on both machines which caused no changes, so I enabled it back. MacBook got no responses, all 4 requests timed out but as you can see mac mini got all requests and seems to even respond to ARP but ICMP is left without a response. Note: I do have a VPN installed but it's not connected/used at the moment, so you might see something here related to that.ġ92.168.1.1 20:1f:31:aa:e5:90 UHLWIir en1 1196ġ92.168.1.255 ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff UHLWbI en1 ! Nslookup sams-mbp successfully resolves to 192.168.1.231 Netstat -rn (routing table): see SuperUser post Nslookup sams-mac-mini successfully resolves to 192.168.1.185 This forum has a limit of 5000 characters, so I had to cut out some stuff. I want to connect my laptop (MacBook) to the stationary PC (mac mini) via remote desktop. Both machines run on Mac OS, firewalls disabled, tried connecting them using my Android phone's hotspot wifi with the same result. Ping from A to B fails on timeout. tcpdump shows that machine B does see the incoming requests. I have a home network with 2 machines connected to the wifi router. I found multiple similar questions but none of them helped me. So any help will be very appreciated.Ĭomputer receives ping but doesn't respond Also posted on SuperUser StackExchange. I guess I should set up NAT somehow, but I'm not sure how to do that with PF to achieve that. Load anchor "com.apple" from "/etc/pf.anchors/com.apple" I'm able to redirect ports inside Mac OS, so if I access localhost:444 it redirects to localhost:443 this way:Ģ. I would like to configure Mac OS in that way if I access localhost:443 it will redirect to 192.168.100.50:443. I have a host with Mac OS and another machine (192.168.100.50) in the same LAN.
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