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Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users Differentiating between Virtual and non Virtual IP addresses Post 302255239 by demwz on Thursday 6th of November 2008 05:25:36 AM
Old 11-06-2008
you will recognize virtual ips on the : caracter
eth1:0 is virtual on linux where eth1 is physical
qfe0:1 is virtual on solaris where qfe1 is physical
to know whether the virtual ip is setup by a cluster you will have to consult the cluster configuration or the network scripts depending on your os.
or did i misunderstand you
 

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PHYS(2) 							System Calls Manual							   PHYS(2)

NAME
phys - allow a process to access physical addresses SYNOPSIS
phys(segreg, size, physadr) DESCRIPTION
The argument segreg specifies a process virtual (data-space) address range of 8K bytes starting at virtual address segregx8K bytes. This address range is mapped into physical address physadrx64 bytes. Only the first sizex64 bytes of this mapping is addressable. If size is zero, any previous mapping of this virtual address range is nullified. For example, the call phys(6, 1, 0177775); will map virtual addresses 0160000-0160077 into physical addresses 017777500-017777577. In particular, virtual address 0160060 is the PDP-11 console located at physical address 017777560. This call may only be executed by the super-user. SEE ALSO
PDP-11 segmentation hardware DIAGNOSTICS
The function value zero is returned if the physical mapping is in effect. The value -1 is returned if not super-user, if segreg is not in the range 0-7, if size is not in the range 0-127, or if the specified segreg is already used for other than a previous call to phys. BUGS
This system call is obviously very machine dependent and very dangerous. This system call is not considered a permanent part of the sys- tem. ASSEMBLER
(phys = 52.) sys phys; segreg; size; physadr PDP11 PHYS(2)
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