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-negotiation

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

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 sir...@gmail.com wrote: @Bzzz, cables are self made. Then did you respect the wiring code of colors, and what is the length of these? -- Ben BTW, why don't you have optical fiber in your building? Magus The last time I asked the property

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 normal

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 sir...@gmail.com 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

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

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

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 on

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 using

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

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) Description:

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 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

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 configuration

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, the

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.

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 duplex