Guillaume
Found this in the Network Admin Guide -
http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/linag2/book/ch05.html#X-087-2-IFACE.IFCONFIG
"Receiver overruns usually occur when packets come in faster than the kernel
can service the last interrupt."
I think you definitely have a problem with your NIC on the Samba machine. I
would swap it out and/or change the cable and see if that cures things. By
the sound of that explanation above it could also be something like a PCI
driver problem or a negotiation mismatch?
HTH
Noel
-Original Message-
From: Guillaume Estival [mailto:guillaume.estival@;illico.fr]
Sent: 18 October 2002 16:01
To: Noel Kelly
Subject: Re: [Samba] Slow transfer file between Windows and Samba PDC
(2.2 .3a)
On Fri, Oct 18, 2002 at 03:50:26PM +0100, Noel Kelly wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Don't want to state the obvious but I had a problem like this just
yesterday
> - turned out to be a bad switch port. Do a 'ifconfig' and check there are
> no errors on the network card.
>
Well, it's the first thing I've thought, but this means I have *three*
bad switch port.
I have this in the customer card (eth0):
RX packets:3969314 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:6980 frame:0
No errors, but some overruns. Try to get some information about this,
but nothing related to samba.
I'll do a new post with "home status" and this overruns problem. I've
forgotten this fact when I write my post
Many thanks for your reply :)
--
Guillaume Estival
---
Incoming mail is certified Virus Free.
Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com).
Version: 6.0.394 / Virus Database: 224 - Release Date: 03/10/2002
---
Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free.
Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com).
Version: 6.0.394 / Virus Database: 224 - Release Date: 03/10/2002
--
To unsubscribe from this list go to the following URL and read the
instructions: http://lists.samba.org/mailman/listinfo/samba