Yes, it is possible for an external stimulus to trigger a flood of ARP requests. The causes are usually misconfigured devices, a network loop, and yes, ...
If an ARP response has the destination MAC address as a switch base MAC address, the switch may just steal that ARP response packet and drop it or it may flood ...
If you see a lot of ARP traffic from a single machine, looking for MAC addresses for many of the IP addresses on your local network, there might be a virus on ...
ARP flooding is required when you need Gratuitous ARP (GARP) requests to update host ARP caches or router ARP caches. This is the case when an IP address can ...