I have a crazy and expensive suggestion: Buy an hub and add 3rd computer to the network.
Then install, on the three computers, scripts, which ping each other (say once a day). When a network card fails, two computers will still communicate with each other, and it'll be easy to find which computer is not communicating with both. On Mon, 2004-12-13 at 10:13, meh wrote: > Josh Zlatin-Amishav wrote: > > > On Mon, 13 Dec 2004, Yosef Leibovich wrote: > > > >> I'm maintaining a peer-2-peer sometimes one of the network cards is > >> getting corrupted. How can I detect which one is it ("failed to bring > >> up eth0 doesn't really help...)? > > > > > > Hi Yosef, > > At what point does the card get corrupted? Have you checked for carrier > > errors on the cards? > > I don't know how to check carrier error. > And about once a year one of the cards refuses to work so I'm forced to > replace it. --- Omer -- My own blog is at http://www.livejournal.com/users/tddpirate/ My opinions, as expressed in this E-mail message, are mine alone. They do not represent the official policy of any organization with which I may be affiliated in any way. WARNING TO SPAMMERS: at http://www.zak.co.il/spamwarning.html ================================================================= To unsubscribe, send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the word "unsubscribe" in the message body, e.g., run the command echo unsubscribe | mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]