Hey Manish,

What does

$ cat /etc/nwam/llp

Say ? This file has the ordered list of network interfaces managed by NWAM.
If there ain't no bcme0 here, NWAM won't manage it. Or if wpi0 comes 
above bcme0, it gets higher priority.

Ananth

Manish Chakravarty wrote:
>
> Hi BOSUG,
>
> Please have a look at this:
>
> -bash-3.2$ /sbin/ifconfig -a
>
> lo0: flags=2001000849<UP,LOOPBACK,RUNNING,MULTICAST,IPv4,VIRTUAL> mtu 
> 8232 index 1
>
> inet 127.0.0.1 netmask ff000000
>
> bcme0: flags=1000842<BROADCAST,RUNNING,MULTICAST,IPv4> mtu 1500 index 4
>
> inet 0.0.0.0 netmask 0
>
> wpi0: flags=201004843<UP,BROADCAST,RUNNING,MULTICAST,DHCP,IPv4,CoS> 
> mtu 1500 index 5
>
> inet 10.1.1.197 netmask ffffff00 broadcast 10.1.1.255
>
> lo0: flags=2002000849<UP,LOOPBACK,RUNNING,MULTICAST,IPv6,VIRTUAL> mtu 
> 8252 index 1
>
> inet6 ::1/128
>
> In short, nwam does not give me an ip on my ethernet port. Wireless 
> however works pretty well.
>
> I have tried disabling/enabling nwam repeatedly with
>
> svcadm disable svc:/network/physical:nwam
>
> svcadm enable svc:/network/physical:nwam
>
> This does not seem to change anything
>
> At booting time, I do see a kernel message saying ? 100 Mbps link up 
> Full Duplex? so there is no problem with the network/cabling.
>
> So nwam not be shifting to the Ethernet interface automatically (when 
> it is plugged in) ? Is that not the expected behavior? Or am I doing 
> something wrong here?
>
> I am running SXDE 1/08
>
> Manish
>


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