Re: Network speed drop down to 10MBPS for unknown reason.

2014-09-06 Thread Bob Proulx
Muhammad Yousuf Khan wrote: > @bob > if you mean speed and duplex mode then here is the detail I wanted to see it say it was full duplex and whatever speed it had negotiated. > Speed: 1000Mb/s > Duplex: Full That says that it has linked and negotiated okay. In problem cases where auto-negotiati

Re: Network speed drop down to 10MBPS for unknown reason.

2014-09-03 Thread Alexandre Ferrieux
On Tuesday, September 2, 2014 3:50:02 PM UTC+2, Muhammad Yousuf Khan wrote: > i am using wheezy 7.x and for some unknown reason my network speed drop down > to 10MBPS.  > i can see anything in /var/log/messages and /var/log/syslog related to the > issue. when i restart the server it back to norma

Re: Network speed drop down to 10MBPS for unknown reason.

2014-09-03 Thread Bzzzz
On Wed, 3 Sep 2014 14:25:14 +0500 Muhammad Yousuf Khan wrote: > @Bzzz, cables are self made. Then did you respect the wiring code of colors, and what is the length of these? -- BTW, why don't you have optical fiber in your building? The last time I asked the property management company, they

Re: Network speed drop down to 10MBPS for unknown reason.

2014-09-03 Thread Muhammad Yousuf Khan
@Bzzz, cables are self made. @bob if you mean speed and duplex mode then here is the detail Supported ports: [ TP ] Supported link modes: 10baseT/Half 10baseT/Full 100baseT/Half 100baseT/Full 1000baseT/Full Supports auto-negotiation: Yes Advertise

Re: Network speed drop down to 10MBPS for unknown reason.

2014-09-02 Thread Bob Proulx
Muhammad Yousuf Khan wrote: > i am using wheezy 7.x and for some unknown reason my network speed drop > down to 10MBPS. > i can see anything in /var/log/messages and /var/log/syslog related to the > issue. when i restart the server it back to normal and shows above 50MBPS > while transferring file.

Re: Network speed drop down to 10MBPS for unknown reason.

2014-09-02 Thread Bzzzz
On Tue, 2 Sep 2014 18:44:39 +0500 Muhammad Yousuf Khan wrote: > i am using wheezy 7.x and for some unknown reason my network speed > drop down to 10MBPS. > i can see anything in /var/log/messages and /var/log/syslog > related to the issue. when i restart the server it back to normal > and shows a

Re: Network speed

2003-07-24 Thread Paul Johnson
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 On Thu, Jul 24, 2003 at 09:46:19AM -0400, Mike Dresser wrote: > > If it's running at 10Mbit, it will never be full duplex. If you're > > running at 100, then it could be full or half. If your network cables > > only have four leads connected, you're

Re: Network speed

2003-07-24 Thread Mike Dresser
On Thu, 24 Jul 2003, Paul Johnson wrote: > If it's running at 10Mbit, it will never be full duplex. If you're > running at 100, then it could be full or half. If your network cables > only have four leads connected, you're using 10. Actually, you can have full duplex on 10BaseT. 100BaseT runs o

Re: Network speed

2003-07-24 Thread Paul Johnson
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 On Tue, Jul 22, 2003 at 07:44:13PM -0400, Dan Jones wrote: > Is there a straightforward way to determine what speed (10 or 100mbs) a > NIC is running? How about to determine if it is in half or full duplex > mode? If it's running at 10Mbit, it will n

Re: Network speed

2003-07-23 Thread Mihalis I. Tsoukalos
On Tue, Jul 22, 2003 at 07:44:13PM -0400, Dan Jones wrote: > Is there a straightforward way to determine what speed (10 or 100mbs) a > NIC is running? How about to determine if it is in half or full duplex > mode? racoon:~# apt-cache show mii-diag Package: mii-diag Priority: extra Section: net In

RE: Network speed

2003-07-22 Thread DePriest, Jason R.
Have you tried using 'ethtool'? [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ dpkg -s ethtool Package: ethtool Status: install ok installed Priority: extra Section: misc Installed-Size: 156 Maintainer: Eric Delaunay <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Version: 1.7-1 Depends: libc6 (>= 2.2.4-4) Conflicts: sparc-utils (<< 1.9-1) Descriptio

Re: Network speed

2001-07-04 Thread Hannu Virtanen
It was written: __ I´m a network engineer for a living, and trust me, the only way to be sure there won´t be something wrong with autodetection is to avoid it. Setting speed and duplex on _both_ sides of an ethernet link

Re: Network speed

2001-07-03 Thread Robert Waldner
On Tue, 03 Jul 2001 17:20:47 EDT, Jeld The Dark Elf writes: >On Tue, Jul 03, 2001 at 09:53:58PM +0200, Robert Waldner wrote: >> I?m a network engineer for a living, and trust me, the only way to be >> sure there won?t be something wrong with autodetection is to avoid it. >> >> Setting speed and

Re: Network speed

2001-07-03 Thread Jeld The Dark Elf
On Tue, Jul 03, 2001 at 09:53:58PM +0200, Robert Waldner wrote: > I?m a network engineer for a living, and trust me, the only way to be > sure there won?t be something wrong with autodetection is to avoid it. > > Setting speed and duplex on _both_ sides of an ethernet link is a Good > Thing. A

Re: Network speed

2001-07-03 Thread Robert Waldner
>On Tue, Jul 03, 2001 at 06:11:11PM +0300, virtanen wrote: >> some of our computer engineers are telling me that my debian box >> ('Potato') ethernet card should be fixed to a static speed (10,5). (Some >> others are telling just the opposite...) I´m a network engineer for a living, and trust me

Re: Network speed

2001-07-03 Thread Jeld The Dark Elf
On Tue, Jul 03, 2001 at 06:11:11PM +0300, virtanen wrote: > > Hi, > > some of our computer engineers are telling me that my debian box > ('Potato') ethernet card should be fixed to a static speed (10,5). (Some > others are telling just the opposite...) > > How to do it? > Where is the configur

Re: Network speed

2001-07-03 Thread Lamer
it's done through 'iproute(2?)'. basically, create a channel, and divert a subchannel of whatever speed u want. moreover, i dun understand your question completely. -- k h a o s * lamer new name, new look, new ftp: linux.dyn.dhs.org (change FOUR letter) upload something before downloading, or y