Dear Reader,
I have a very unique problem. Quite often my on board ethernet port( hme0 ) related message is appearing in /var/adm/messages.
The message is hme0: babble.. The port is up and alive.
What does this message mean.. Is the on board port is about to fail??
Thanks in advance, (2 Replies)
Hi .....
My problem is that when i reboot the system i can't connect to the network because my ethernet ( hme0 ) is down , i must up it by ifconfig command
after reboot :
# ifconfig -a
lo0: flags=1000849<UP,LOOPBACK,RUNNING,MULTICAST,IPv4> mtu 8232 index 1
inet 127.0.0.1 netmask... (1 Reply)
I know that I could use the
#ifconfig hme0 plumb
to activate the network interface.
However, how can I know the name of the interface e.g. hme0 before I could use the ifconfig to plumb it up?
I know there is a command (but I forgot it) to use in the Sparc version when you are in the... (7 Replies)
I have sun solaris 9 installed but I have the interface configured to hme1 instead of hme0, our default value.
Is there a way where i can rename the existing/working hme1 to hme0...?
I want to showup the hmeo up if i say ifconfig -a..
rite now i see the hme1 up..
please advice if possible... (4 Replies)
I have a 420r server it boots up all of the network settings are correct, however the machines network connection is not working. Cant ping anything from it, cant ping it from another machine on the network.
If I ping 127.0.0.1 it says alive.
Is there a chance the network card has been... (2 Replies)
Hi All,
I logged into a sun microsystems server box, using both a vnc session and a ssh session. I am able to use "ifconfig -a" in a ssh session, but the same on a vnc session says that its a invalid command. how is this possible, when i am logging into the same box through two different... (4 Replies)
its a fresh installation. during the OS setup, it did not prompt for IP, netmask and gateway. using Solaris 10 08/07 update 4. I tried to plumb manually but encountered no such interface error. but nxge interfaces can be greped from the /etc/path_to_inst file.
getting similar error on... (3 Replies)
Ultra E150 Solaris 2.5.1 Oracle server. was working fine, then started losing network connection. I can see in messages file that it was complaining about another device using its ip address. Though not any longer, though I wonder if that was a red herring. My IT guys have now re-reserved its ip... (29 Replies)
Hello Folks, can anyone please help me with this ?! :wall:
I'm using Solaris 10 with Sun V880 which has two Networks Interfaces, a Fiber (ge0) and a cooper (eri0).
The eri0 is working great but when I try to plumb the ge0 interface ...
# ifconfig ge0 plumb
ifconfig: cannot open link... (18 Replies)
Discussion started by: pxb368@motorola
18 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUNOS
nodename
nodename(4) File Formats nodename(4)NAME
nodename - local source for system name
SYNOPSIS
/etc/nodename
DESCRIPTION
When a machine is standalone or its IP address is configured locally, the /etc/nodename file contains the system name. By convention, the
system name is the same as the hostname associated with the IP address of the primary network interface, for example, hostname.hme0.
If the machine's network configuration is delivered by the RPC bootparams protocol, the /etc/nodename file is not used, as the system name
is delivered by the remote service.
Given a system name value, regardless of source, the uname utility invoked with the -S option is used to set the system name of the running
system.
If the machine's network configuration is delivered by the DHCP protocol, the /etc/nodename file is used only if the DHCP server does not
provide a value for the Hostname option (DHCP standard option code 12).
A system name configured in /etc/nodename should be unique within the system's name service domain in order to ensure that any network ser-
vices provided by the system will operate correctly.
Given a system name value, regardless of source, the uname utility invoked with the -S option is used to set the system name of the running
system.
EXAMPLES
Example 1: Syntax
The syntax for nodename consists of a single line containing the system's name. For example, for a system named myhost:
myhost
ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
| ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
|Availability |SUNWcsu |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
SEE ALSO nis+(1), uname(1), named(1M), ypbind(1M), attributes(5)NOTES
The nodename file is modified by Solaris installation and de-installation scripts.
SunOS 5.10 9 Feb 2004 nodename(4)