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Operating Systems AIX How to find TX and RX strength? Post 302457628 by kah00na on Tuesday 28th of September 2010 11:43:54 AM
Old 09-28-2010
[SOLVED] How to find TX and RX strength?

I have an AIX server running 6.1. My SAN switch is reporting that it is only receiving 5.9 uWatts (micro watts) and it should be well over 100 uWatts. How can I see the transmit strength of my fiber card from within AIX? I have Emulex fiber cards.

Last edited by kah00na; 09-28-2010 at 06:09 PM..
 

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ffcfstress(1)						      General Commands Manual						     ffcfstress(1)

NAME
ffcfstress - constant force stress test for force-feedback devices SYNOPSIS
ffcfstress [-d <device>] [-u <update rate>] [-f <frequency>] [-a <amplitude>] [-s <strength>] [-x <axis>] [-A] [-o] DESCRIPTION
ffcfstress stress tests constant non-enveloped forces on a force feedback device. It simulates a moving spring force by applying a fre- quently updated constant force effect. Beware, the stress test may damage your device! OPTIONS
At least one option is required. -d <device> The device to test (by default /dev/input/event0). -u <update rate> The update rate in Hz (25 by default). -f <frequency> The spring center motion frequency in Hz (0.1 by default). -a <amplitude> The spring center motion amplitude, between 0.0 and 1.0 (1.0 by default). -s <strength> The spring strength factor (1.0 by default). -x <axis> absolute axis to test (default: 0) [0 = X, 1 = Y, 2 = Z, 3 = RX, 4 = RY, 5 = RZ, 6 = WHEEL] -A switch off auto-centering -o Dummy option, useful when all defaults should be used. SEE ALSO
ffmvforce(1), fftest(1), jstest(1). AUTHOR
ffcfstress was written by Oliver Hamann. This manual page was written by Stephen Kitt <steve@sk2.org>, for the Debian GNU/Linux system (but may be used by others). It was last modified for ffcfstress dated February 15, 2002. ffcfstress March 8, 2009 ffcfstress(1)
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