RE: Network speed

2003-06-16 Thread Chris W. Parker
Bret Hughes wrote: > > Yes you are. You (not you specifically, but people in general) don't > > ping webpages, you ping DNS records. > > Well, not exactly ping is a program that sends an ICMP message (echo > request) to a machine. as with most (all?) tcp/ip networking

RE: Network speed

2003-06-16 Thread Chris W. Parker
Bret Hughes wrote: > On Tue, 2003-06-10 at 11:08, Chris W. Parker wrote: > > jeff allen wrote: > > > > > I can bring the man pages up on traceroute but it comes up with > > > the error command not found. > > > > That's because the path that l

RE: Network speed

2003-06-13 Thread Bret Hughes
On Tue, 2003-06-10 at 11:08, Chris W. Parker wrote: > jeff allen wrote: > > > I can bring the man pages up on traceroute but it comes up with the > > error command not found. > > That's because the path that leads to traceroute is not a part of a regular user's > envir

RE: Network speed

2003-06-10 Thread Chris W. Parker
jeff allen wrote: > I can bring the man pages up on traceroute but it comes up with the > error command not found. That's because the path that leads to traceroute is not a part of a regular user's environment. You have to specifically call it. Use 'locate traceroute'

RE: Network speed

2003-06-09 Thread jeff allen
Am I missing something here? From: "Chris W. Parker" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Subject: RE: Network speed Date: Mon, 9 Jun 2003 16:43:30 -0700 jeff allen <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > I have 22 workstations that hav

RE: Network speed

2003-06-09 Thread Chris W. Parker
jeff allen wrote: > I have 22 workstations that have all the same hardware and software. > > Some machines are running great. They are pulling our intranet up > quickly and then I have other machines that are taking forever to > pull the page up. The page isn't flash ba

Network speed

2003-06-09 Thread jeff allen
I have 22 workstations that have all the same hardware and software. Some machines are running great. They are pulling our intranet up quickly and then I have other machines that are taking forever to pull the page up. The page isn't flash based at all so I am thinking this is more of a network

Re: Network Speed Problem

2003-01-29 Thread Nick Lindsell
At 02:09 29/01/2003 -0800, you wrote: HelP!!.i need to know how to get my network card to run down at 10mbps, as right now it's trying for 100mbps, and my router won't give it an ip address for some reason. before i installed linux, the machine wouldn't take an ip at 100mbps, but when i dropp

Re: Network Speed Problem

2003-01-28 Thread Francisco Neira
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Geoff Smith wrote: | HelP!!.i need to know how to get my network card to run down at 10mbps, | as right now it's trying for 100mbps, and my router won't give it an ip | address for some reason. before i installed linux, the machine wouldn't | take

Re: Network Speed Problem

2003-01-28 Thread nate
Geoff Smith said: > HelP!!.i need to know how to get my network card to run down at > 10mbps, as right now it's trying for 100mbps, and my router won't give it > an ip address for some reason. before i installed linux, the machine > wouldn't take an ip at 100mbps, but when i dropped the speed

Network Speed Problem

2003-01-28 Thread Geoff Smith
HelP!!.i need to know how to get my network card to run down at 10mbps,as right now it's trying for 100mbps, and my router won't give it an ipaddress for some reason.  before i installed linux, the machine wouldn'ttake an ip at 100mbps, but when i dropped the speed down to 10mbps itworke

Re: Network Speed

2002-10-25 Thread Robert P. J. Day
On Wed, 23 Oct 2002, Mahaveer Jain wrote: > Hello, > Does anyone know a solution to force the speed of a network card on Redhat > 7.2 (Like instructions in the /etc/system > or ndd command in Solaris) ?? mii-tool rday -- redhat-list mailing list unsubscribe mailto:redhat-list-request@;redhat

Network Speed

2002-10-25 Thread Mahaveer Jain
Hello, Does anyone know a solution to force the speed of a network card on Redhat 7.2 (Like instructions in the /etc/system or ndd command in Solaris) ?? Thanks. Mjain -- redhat-list mailing list unsubscribe mailto:redhat-list-request@;redhat.com?subject=unsubscribe https://listman.redhat.com/

Re: Network Speed

2002-08-12 Thread Klotz, Leigh
Note that mii-tool reports 10 Mbit for RTL8139 cards. See http://www.uwsg.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/net/0108.3/0015.html >From: "Teodor Georgiev" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> >To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> >Subject: Re: Network Speed >Date: Mon, 12 Aug 2002 22:14:31 +0300

Re: Network Speed

2002-08-12 Thread Joe Giles
Awesome... Thanks man :) Joe > man mii-tool > > mii-tool -v eth0 > > > - Original Message - > From: "Joe Giles" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > Sent: Monday, August 12, 2002 9:57 PM > Subject: Network Speed > &g

Re: Network Speed

2002-08-12 Thread Teodor Georgiev
man mii-tool mii-tool -v eth0 - Original Message - From: "Joe Giles" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Monday, August 12, 2002 9:57 PM Subject: Network Speed > How can I find out what SPEED and DUPLEX my NIC is runnins at. It is a 10/100 and

Network Speed

2002-08-12 Thread Joe Giles
How can I find out what SPEED and DUPLEX my NIC is runnins at. It is a 10/100 and I want to make sure that it is useing 100 full. Thanks Joe Giles [EMAIL PROTECTED] AOL ID: mcigiles -- redhat-list mailing list unsubscribe mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=unsubscribe https://listman.redhat.

RE: How Can I change the network speed? (10Mb or 100 Mb)

2002-06-22 Thread Chad and Doria Skinner
tt > Sent: Thursday, June 13, 2002 8:45 AM > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Subject: Re: How Can I change the network speed? (10Mb or 100 Mb) > > > On Thu, 13 Jun 2002, Anand Buddhdev wrote: > > On Thu, Jun 13, 2002 at 08:37:53AM -0400, Rodney Fulk wrote: > > > > >

Re: How Can I change the network speed? (10Mb or 100 Mb)

2002-06-13 Thread Ray Abbitt
On Thu, 13 Jun 2002, Anand Buddhdev wrote: > On Thu, Jun 13, 2002 at 08:37:53AM -0400, Rodney Fulk wrote: > > > Isn't that handled automatically by the card? > > It's supposed to, but sometimes autonegotiation doesn't always work > right. Those who use cisco know it only too well. You said a mo

Re: How Can I change the network speed? (10Mb or 100 Mb)

2002-06-13 Thread Alex Meaden
>Hello , somebody knows which file I need to modify for my linux machine runs at 10Mbs or 100Mbs? Thanks You should be able to do this using the software that came with the NIC (ethernet card) - it is usually a DOS program that you run from a bootable disk HTH, Alex. -- Mr Alex Meaden Computer

Re: How Can I change the network speed? (10Mb or 100 Mb)

2002-06-13 Thread Javier Gostling
On Thu, 2002-06-13 at 08:49, Anand Buddhdev wrote: > On Thu, Jun 13, 2002 at 08:37:53AM -0400, Rodney Fulk wrote: > > > Isn't that handled automatically by the card? > > It's supposed to, but sometimes autonegotiation doesn't always work > right. Those who use cisco know it only too well. > > S

Re: How Can I change the network speed? (10Mb or 100 Mb)

2002-06-13 Thread Emmanuel Seyman
On Thu, Jun 13, 2002 at 11:20:02AM +0200, Claudio Delgado wrote: > > Hello , somebody knows which file I need to modify for my linux machine > runs at 10Mbs or 100Mbs? Thanks This depends on the kernel module which is used by the card. Some of the modules take options from /etc/modules.conf but

Re: How Can I change the network speed? (10Mb or 100 Mb)

2002-06-13 Thread Jason P Holland
auto negotiation is unreliable at best. i suggest going to donald beckers website, he wrote most of the network drivers in linux. he has some configuration programs you can compile to set your card to force 100fd or whatever you want in the prom. http://www.scyld.com/diag/ also, most of th

Re: How Can I change the network speed? (10Mb or 100 Mb)

2002-06-13 Thread Mike Burger
If you have a 10/100 card, it should auto-negotiate with the switch/hub for its connection speed. On Thu, 13 Jun 2002, Claudio Delgado wrote: > Hello , somebody knows which file I need to modify for my linux machine > runs at 10Mbs or 100Mbs? Thanks > > ___

Re: How Can I change the network speed? (10Mb or 100 Mb)

2002-06-13 Thread Anand Buddhdev
On Thu, Jun 13, 2002 at 08:37:53AM -0400, Rodney Fulk wrote: > Isn't that handled automatically by the card? It's supposed to, but sometimes autonegotiation doesn't always work right. Those who use cisco know it only too well. So I need to force the card to use full-duplex. > > > Hello , someb

RE: How Can I change the network speed? (10Mb or 100 Mb)

2002-06-13 Thread Rodney Fulk
Isn't that handled automatically by the card? > -Original Message- > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Anand Buddhdev > Sent: Thursday, 13 June 2002 7:19 a.m. > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Subject: Re: How Can I change the network

Re: How Can I change the network speed? (10Mb or 100 Mb)

2002-06-13 Thread Anand Buddhdev
On Thu, Jun 13, 2002 at 11:20:02AM +0200, Claudio Delgado wrote: > Hello , somebody knows which file I need to modify for my linux machine > runs at 10Mbs or 100Mbs? Thanks Actually, I'm trying to find some information about this myself. I have a server with a quad-port PCI ethernet card, made

RE: How Can I change the network speed? (10Mb or 100 Mb)

2002-06-13 Thread Claudio Delgado
---Mensaje original- De: Mike Pelley [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Enviado el: jueves, 13 de junio de 2002 11:41 Para: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Asunto: RE: How Can I change the network speed? (10Mb or 100 Mb)   What type of network card?   Mike -- Mike P

RE: How Can I change the network speed? (10Mb or 100 Mb)

2002-06-13 Thread Mike Pelley
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On Behalf Of Claudio DelgadoSent: Thursday, June 13, 2002 6:50 AMTo: [EMAIL PROTECTED]Subject: How Can I change the network speed? (10Mb or 100 Mb) Hello , somebody knows which file I need to modify for my linux machine runs at 10Mbs or 100Mbs?  Thanks

How Can I change the network speed? (10Mb or 100 Mb)

2002-06-13 Thread Claudio Delgado
Hello , somebody knows which file I need to modify for my linux machine runs at 10Mbs or 100Mbs?  Thanks

Re: Network speed

2002-01-06 Thread Ian Truelsen
Statux writes: > 3Mbps or 3MB/s? There's a big difference. > Sorry, my bad. I obviously missed the shift key. It's 3MBs. Still kind of slow, but I found the culprit in the incredibly slow speed of my server's drive. Ian. Ian Truelsen Masters program in Philosophy University of Manitoba,

Re: Network speed

2002-01-05 Thread Stephen Torri
On Sun, 6 Jan 2002, Ian Truelsen wrote: > It looks like, in my case anyway, that the old UDMA33 drive in my server is > the bottleneck. hdparm -t reports it as doing buffered reads at a little > under 4 MB/s, which is about the speed I am getting, minus a bit for network > overhead. I do inten

Re: Network speed

2002-01-05 Thread Statux
3Mbps or 3MB/s? There's a big difference. On Sun, 6 Jan 2002, Ian Truelsen wrote: > Recently I have been transferring some large files between my computers. I > have a 100Mbps connection between the two, but the actual transfer speed is > being reported at less than 3Mbps. Now, admittedly, one

Re: Network speed

2002-01-05 Thread Ian Truelsen
Stephen Torri writes: > On Sun, 6 Jan 2002, Ian Truelsen wrote: > >> Recently I have been transferring some large files between my computers. I >> have a 100Mbps connection between the two, but the actual transfer speed is >> being reported at less than 3Mbps. Now, admittedly, one of the com

Re: Network speed

2002-01-05 Thread Stephen Torri
On Sun, 6 Jan 2002, Ian Truelsen wrote: > Recently I have been transferring some large files between my computers. I > have a 100Mbps connection between the two, but the actual transfer speed is > being reported at less than 3Mbps. Now, admittedly, one of the computers has > a UDMA 33 drive, b

Network speed

2002-01-05 Thread Ian Truelsen
Recently I have been transferring some large files between my computers. I have a 100Mbps connection between the two, but the actual transfer speed is being reported at less than 3Mbps. Now, admittedly, one of the computers has a UDMA 33 drive, but still, 3Mbps seems awfully low. Is this normal

Re: Network Speed

2000-09-21 Thread Steve Borho
On Thu, Sep 21, 2000 at 01:19:44PM -0400, Kevin Wood wrote: > Hey guys, > > Got a network question for you. I have a customer trying to find out > the speed of his network connection. He is running an Intel > Extherexpress Pro. Is there any way for him to determine its speed > under RedHat Lin

Network Speed

2000-09-21 Thread Kevin Wood
Hey guys, Got a network question for you. I have a customer trying to find out the speed of his network connection. He is running an Intel Extherexpress Pro. Is there any way for him to determine its speed under RedHat Linux 6.2. I know with the Digital Tulip Cards that if you run it with the