Hi expert,
Need some help on network interface issue..
I have added 2 x NIC card onto the Ultra 2 system recently and configured as hme1 and hme2. I have unconfigured the onboard hme0 network interface and it was running fine till few days later, i keep recieving error messages showing hme0... (6 Replies)
Hi guys,
Hope somebody can help me on this. I have a Sun Sparc 20 workstation and it has a boot problem. During boot, an error message " ifconfig:socket: Bad File Number" come up and the workstation hang (cannot boot).
I did boot -s and checked using ifconfig -a command but i got the same... (0 Replies)
Hi every body,
I have a Fiber Channel interface (fcs2) in AIX 5.2. This interface was fine & up but for some reason I could not return this interface UP again after I set it DOWN.
When I tried to set this interface UP I encountered the following error:
Method error... (7 Replies)
My system info is show below:-
#uname -a
SunOS qfserver 5.8 Generic_117350-29 sun4u sparc SUNW,Sun-Blade-2500
and I have two network card as shown below:-
#ifconfig -a
lo0: flags=1000849<UP,LOOPBACK,RUNNING,MULTICAST,IPv4> mtu 8232 index 1
inet 127.0.0.1 netmask ff000000
bge0:... (1 Reply)
Hi
i have replace a NIC card on solaris 10 when i give the following command
ifconfig -a
it just show the lo0 (only loop back with inet 127.0.0.1)
when i give the following command to config the interface,
ifconfig elxl0 plumb
ifconfig: plumb: elxl0: no such interface
please help... (11 Replies)
i need to configure a zone to use different interface (bge2) than global and have connected to completely different network switch & to use its own defaultrouter and hosts file .. is it possible ..if so ..how ?
Thanks (9 Replies)
Hi,
I'm a italian student. For my thesis I develop a gateway with protocol 6lowpan.
For that I must access to network interface to develope my personal stack based on standard 802.15.4.
Can you help me? I need an explanation for that. (0 Replies)
I've one Netra 240
After changing main board and system configuration card reader, Network is not accessible any more, Network interfaces are always UP and Running even when there is no cable connected to Network interfaces.
I tried to restart and plumb/unplumb with no luck.
ifconfig -a... (7 Replies)
I have a RHEL 5 system with a bonded interface configure using only one network port (eth0). So I have config file for ifcfg-bond0 and ifcfg-eth. I'd like to configure eth5 to be the second SLAVE in the bond. My question is, after I modify ifcfg-eth5, can I add eth5 to the bond0 interface without... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: westmoreland
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT FREEBSD
timecounters
TIMECOUNTERS(4) BSD Kernel Interfaces Manual TIMECOUNTERS(4)NAME
timecounters -- kernel time counters subsystem
SYNOPSIS
The kernel uses several types of time-related devices, such as: real time clocks, time counters and event timers. Real time clocks are
responsible for tracking real world time, mostly when the system is down. Time counters are responsible for tracking purposes, when the sys-
tem is running. Event timers are responsible for generating interrupts at a specified time or periodically, to run different time-based
events. This page is about the second.
DESCRIPTION
Time counters are the lowest level of time tracking in the kernel. They provide monotonically increasing timestamps with known width and
update frequency. They can overflow, drift, etc and so in raw form can be used only in very limited performance-critical places like the
process scheduler.
More usable time is created by scaling the values read from the selected time counter and combining it with some offset, regularly updated by
tc_windup() on hardclock() invocation.
Different platforms provide different kinds of timer hardware. The goal of the time counters subsystem is to provide a unified way to access
that hardware.
Each driver implementing time counters registers them with the subsystem. It is possible to see the list of present time counters, via the
kern.timecounter sysctl(8) variable:
kern.timecounter.choice: TSC-low(-100) HPET(950)i8254(0)ACPI-fast(900) dummy(-1000000)
kern.timecounter.tc.ACPI-fast.mask: 16777215
kern.timecounter.tc.ACPI-fast.counter: 13467909
kern.timecounter.tc.ACPI-fast.frequency: 3579545
kern.timecounter.tc.ACPI-fast.quality: 900
kern.timecounter.tc.i8254.mask: 65535
kern.timecounter.tc.i8254.counter: 62692
kern.timecounter.tc.i8254.frequency: 1193182
kern.timecounter.tc.i8254.quality: 0
kern.timecounter.tc.HPET.mask: 4294967295
kern.timecounter.tc.HPET.counter: 3013495652
kern.timecounter.tc.HPET.frequency: 14318180
kern.timecounter.tc.HPET.quality: 950
kern.timecounter.tc.TSC-low.mask: 4294967295
kern.timecounter.tc.TSC-low.counter: 4067509463
kern.timecounter.tc.TSC-low.frequency: 11458556
kern.timecounter.tc.TSC-low.quality: -100
The output nodes are defined as follows:
kern.timecounter.tc.X.mask is a bitmask, defining valid counter bits,
kern.timecounter.tc.X.counter is a present counter value,
kern.timecounter.tc.X.frequency is a counter update frequency,
kern.timecounter.tc.X.quality is an integral value, defining the quality of this time counter compared to others. A negative value means
this time counter is broken and should not be used.
The time management code of the kernel chooses one time counter from that list. The current choice can be read and affected via the
kern.timecounter.hardware tunable/sysctl.
SEE ALSO attimer(4), eventtimers(4), ffclock(4), hpet(4)BSD April 12, 2014 BSD