Sponsored Content
Operating Systems Solaris How to find half duplex or full duplex Post 302373919 by rogerben on Monday 23rd of November 2009 12:38:55 AM
Old 11-23-2009
How to find half duplex or full duplex

Hi,

How to find whether the server is running with half duplex or full duplex. I tried with the following command ndd -get /dev/ but am not getting any output,. Is the command correct?
Also let me know how to change from half to full duplex.
rogerben
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Full duplex at HUB?

Ok at the moment I have a hub whit 5 computers connected to it. It's a 10/100 NetGear hub. Ok I heard that there is some command I can run or a file I edit or something like that. But what the command/file/script/whatever does is tells you what connect speed it's connecting to the hub to. ... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: merlin
4 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Full Duplex Howto

Dear Members, I was reading a few posts and saw something about installing two Nics so one could use Full Duplex. I remember back in the day of dial up, you could have two modems and use one for upstream and one for downstream. This was called shotgunning. It seems that you can now do the same... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Phobos
4 Replies

3. Programming

full -duplex ?

what is meant by full duplex and half duplex? b'coz in differences b\w hub and switch ,i heard lot this duplex word so please help me (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: parvathy
1 Replies

4. Red Hat

RedHat 9 Force full duplex

All, I have a RedHat 9 box which I need to figure out how to get it to stay in full duplex mode after a reboot. I have tried ethtool -s eth0 speed 100 duplex full autoneg off I have tried to add a line to the /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-eth0 like this: ETHTOOL_OPTS="speed... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: bubba112557
4 Replies

5. Solaris

How to force a full duplex

I need to change some Ip addresses for my servers to reflect in the NIS map. I also need to force full duplex on the 10/100 cards & 1/2 duplex in the 10 cards. I can change the IP by doing ifconfig <NIC card > plumb up <newip>. Not quite sure on how to force the full / half duplex & how to... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Remi
2 Replies

6. SuSE

configure full duplex

How do I configure full duplex on suse 8.2 I tried ethtool -s eth0 speed 100 duplex full autoneg off the above works but when I reboot the machine the configure was lost. How do I configure full duplex so that when the machine get rebooted the configuration will stay. My interface... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: hassan2
4 Replies

7. Linux

Network 10Mb/s half duplex only. r8168 on Centos 5.

Hi, For some reason my network card started going 10Mb/s half duplex instead of 1000Mb/s full duplex. System is connected to 8x1Gb HP switch. Other devices connect fine through the switch and get full 1Gb network. I have Centos 5 with all updates. Driver comes from elrepo and as well is... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: columb
1 Replies

8. AIX

Connected and Running with half duplex speed

VIO Server connected to switch port and running with half duplex speed on one of the shared ethernet adapter. We have verified at switch end and everythings looks good. Other ethernet adapter in the VIO server are connected and running in Full duplex speed. Please help me find why this shared... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: mugunthanvh
4 Replies

9. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

100Mb/s full duplex link

Hi, I have been trying to connect two computers directly through their LAN cards. One is a 3com 3c905c 10/100 Mbit/s card and the other is an Intel i217-lm 10/100/1000Mbit/s card. I have connected them through a CAT 6 cable. Whenever autoneg is turned on, the PCs connect in the 10Mb/s mode, and... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: jamie_123
7 Replies
lan_config(8)						      System Manager's Manual						     lan_config(8)

NAME
lan_config - Modifies low-level configuration parameters for a given LAN interface SYNOPSIS
/usr/sbin/lan_config -i interface_name [-a [0 | 1]] [-m [aui | bnc | utp | fiber]] [-s [10 | 100]] [-x [0 | 1]] OPTIONS
Changes the specified characteristics for interface_name. You must provide an interface name. Enables (1) or disables (0) IEEE 802.3u autonegotiation. This option applies only to those devices that are capable of autonegotiation (for example, DE500-AA and DE500-BA). When enabled, the interface automatically negotiates the link speed (10 or 100 Mb/s) and the mode (half-duplex or full-duplex) with the remote interface. The interface initially advertises the speed and mode previously selected at the console level or with the -s and -x options. The -s and -x options may also be specified on the same command line as the -a option to redefine and renegotiate the interface's capa- bility (when enabled) or to force the interface at a certain configuration (when disabled). Note The interface initiates the autonegotiation process only if and when it is up and running. See ifconfig(8) for information on how the interface is marked up. Changes the type of medium. The following table lists the supported types: -------------------------------------------------------------- Type Meaning -------------------------------------------------------------- aui 10Base5, or thick wire bnc 10Base2, or ThinWire utp 10BaseT (if speed is 10 Mb/s) or 100BaseT (if speed is 100 Mb/s), or twisted-pair fiber 100BaseFX only -------------------------------------------------------------- On some devices, for example, DE435 and DE425, bnc selection is done by means of an on-board gang jumper. When specifying aui or bnc for these devices, be sure that the jumper is in the correct position. Changes the medium speed, if the interface is capable of operating at both regular (10 Mb/s) and fast (100 Mb/s) Ethernet speeds. The fast speed cannot be selected for the aui and bnc media. Enables (1) or disables (0) full-duplex operation when the utp medium is specified. DESCRIPTION
The lan_config command allows you to modify the type of medium, speed, and mode of operation (half- or full-duplex). You can also use the lan_config command to enable or disable autonegotiation, if the underlying device has this capability. Autonegotia- tion is a hardware and software (driver) process that allows determination of the highest common speed and duplex (half or full) configura- tion. The permitted combinations of speed and mode of operation in descending order of precedence, from the highest to the lowest, are: ----------------------- Speed Mode ----------------------- 100 Mb/s full-duplex 100 Mb/s half-duplex 10 Mb/s full-duplex 10 Mb/s half-duplex ----------------------- During autonegotiation, for example, if the local interface advertises that it is capable of 100 Mb/s half-duplex operation, it is by implication also capable of 10 Mb/s, full-duplex and 10 Mb/s, half-duplex operation. If the remote interface advertises that it is capable of 10 Mb/s, full-duplex operation only, the link is established at 10 Mb/s, full-duplex. The autonegotiation process can take several sec- onds to complete. The characteristics managed with the lan_config command are ordinarily set from the console level via the EWx0_MODE environment variable. The lan_config command allows you to override this default and configure the interface as needed after the system is up and running. Modifications made with the lan_config command do not persist across reboots of the operating system. You can also use the ifconfig command to set the speed and mode (half- or full-duplex) either from the command line or in the /etc/rc.local file. If you specify the command in the rc.local file, the command is executed each time the system is booted; you do not have to modify the SRM console environment variables. RESTRICTIONS
Support for the lan_config command is limited to the tu interface for this release of Tru64 UNIX. EXAMPLES
To switch from aui or bnc to utp full-duplex operation on tu0, enter: lan_config -i tu0 -m utp -x 1 To disable full-duplex operation on tu0, enter: lan_config -i tu0 -x 0 To enable autonegotiation on tu1, limiting capability to 100 Mb/s, enter: lan_config -i tu1 -a 1 -s 100 -x 0 To disable autonegotiation on tu1, forcing 10 Mb/s, half-duplex operation, enter: lan_config -i tu1 -a 0 -s 10 -x 1 SEE ALSO
Commands: ifconfig(8) Files: inet.local(4) Interfaces: tu(7) lan_config(8)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 10:21 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy