On Tue, Jun 10, 2003 at 10:14:47AM -0400, Jason M. Harvey wrote: > On Mon, 2003-06-09 at 15:15, ScruLoose wrote: > > > > > My machine is connected to a DSL-modem via a little router-box. The > > > > router has the usual little LEDs on the front to indicate activity. > > > > In the last couple of days, I've noticed unexplained flickerings of the > > > > little LED. > > > > > > This is normal. You're on the same broadcast domain as other users. > > > > Hm. Perhaps I should have been more specific: > > It's the LED specifically for the connection from *my* PC to the router > > that's flickering... not the one for traffic to the cable-modem. > > Also, I've been connected with the same setup for six months, and this > > behaviour is new in the last couple of days. > > i have a similar situation with my cable modem, from the day i installed > it. as far as i know, the cablemodem is like an ethernet bridge, and > forwards all ethernet traffic to your pc. dsl modems (bridges) work in > the same manner. i've ran tcpdump on my deb box, and i see a bunch of > arp requests (which are tcp/ip's way of knowing which ip is bound to > which mac address). i also see a bunch of broadcast traffic, like > netbios stuff - people with file-sharing enabled.
I think you're misunderstanding my situation. I am *not* talking about indicators on my cable-modem. My cable-modem plugs into the WAN port of a router (SOHOware BroadGuard)... my PC is in LAN port #1 of the BroadGuard router. Yes, there's broadcast traffic (and the occasional port-scan, and maybe a keepalive) flickering now and then on the cable-modem's rx and tx lights, which is fine. The situation I was looking at was on the light for LAN port #1 on the BroadGuard router, and was something that started up a few days ago, after six months of the same hardware configuration *not* having this symptom. > this may not be the > case with you, since you mention possbile problems with the dhcp client. > strangely, back in january when i switched from analog to digital cable > - strickly tv-cable-box-speaking, i saw about a 50% reduction in this It's actually ddclient I mentioned, not dhclient. And ddclient (dynamic-IP update utility for DynDNS) is in fact the culprit. When I start it with the /etc/init.d/ddclient script, it takes a couple percent of my processor, and generates this excessive traffic. When I start it by simply calling the ddclient binary, it takes ~0 percent processor, and only generates traffic at the specified interval (300 sec). Now I just need to see if I can fix that script, so's it'll work properly at boot time... Thanks for the input! -- ,-----------------------------------------------------------------------------. > -ScruLoose- | All your base are belong to us! < > Please do not | - "Cats" from Zero Wing < > reply off-list. | < `-----------------------------------------------------------------------------'
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