I did set it manually. All my other devices are running at 100M or 1G. So for some reason IM guessed 10M even though nothing else was runing 10M?
-----Original Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Ian Struckhoff Sent: Wednesday, July 07, 2004 12:53 PM To: InterMapper Discussion Subject: Re: [IM-Talk] IM reporting on Ethernet Speed Mike, InterMapper has two ways to determine the speed of a link, as I understand it. First, it asks the device for its link speed. If available, it uses that. Otherwise, it will choose based on the other devices attached to the same network. This means in some cases it is best to manually set the link speed. Is this helpful? Thanks, Ian On Jul 7, 2004, at 12:59 PM, Mike Lieberman wrote: > How does IM decide when a NIC is runnint at 10M or 100M? Does it > default to 10M and modify that if the SNMP packet informs that it is > running faster? > The reason I ask is that I have a number of systems here running > Debian Linux 3.0 with the 2.4.18 kernel. SNMPD is set up for readonly > and read/write. Paranoid is commented out. The these NICs all run at > 100M but IM reports 10M. > > > ____________________________________________________________________ > List archives: > http://www.mail-archive.com/intermapper-talk%40list.dartware.com/ > To unsubscribe: send email to: [EMAIL PROTECTED] ____________________________________________________________________ List archives: http://www.mail-archive.com/intermapper-talk%40list.dartware.com/ To unsubscribe: send email to: [EMAIL PROTECTED] ____________________________________________________________________ List archives: http://www.mail-archive.com/intermapper-talk%40list.dartware.com/ To unsubscribe: send email to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
