That is strange, you should have no need to setup mac addresses 'by hand'.
Have you setuped some of your macs by hand and other automatically ?
Few more hints to avoid problems in future.
If you have multiple physical hosts (hypervisors) and one or more ldoms can be migrated / imported to other, be sure to export the configuration of everything daily into a file
hostid is important here cause a change can happen if you don't migrate the machine (ldm migrate) to a new host, but import it from configuration file, can cause for zpools not to import during boot (rpool should import, but every other zpool will require manual work.)
I have Digital UNIX V4.0B (Rev. 564) on alpha machine.
I'm trying to acces network in subnet (192.168.1.x).
Ip on Alpha comp. is from 192.168.3.X subnet. My default gateway on this network is 192.168.3.1 and it working OK from other machines. This machine is visible from same subnet... (2 Replies)
Hi,
My project needs to migrate the existing Subnet (255.255.255.0) to a new subnet and change the ipaddresses (currently C class). How can I do that. I need some information.
John (0 Replies)
I've got Sun Fire T2000 with two LDoms - primary and ldom1, both being Solaris 10 u8. Both can be accessed over the network (ssh, ping), both can access the network, but they can't ping or ssh to each other.
I only use e1000g0 interface on T2000, the primary ldom has an address on it, ldm has a... (1 Reply)
I have a question for one who wants to help me.
I want to create a bash script to ping IP-adresses. It must first ask me the beginnen IP, then the ending IP like: 192.168.100.1 - 192.168.100.255.
When nothing is filled in, then it must find my subnet and ping that, like when my ip is... (14 Replies)
I want to make a program where you have to insert binary numbers like this:
do
{
iBinary = getche();
}while(iBinary == 1 || iBinary == 0);
after you get the numbers I want them to be placed behind eachother so you will get:
input:
1
1
0
1
output:
1101 (7 Replies)
Hi Everyone,
one question is it possible to migrate a physical standalone Solaris 8 or 9 OS to Guest Domain (LDOMs).
If yes, can someone please provide steps to migrate these OS to LDOMs.
Thanks,
Kartheek. (1 Reply)
Hello All,
We have added a windows host and its config files to Nagios master server and wanted to do a ping check alone at the moment however, the nagios master server identifies the host in its GUI and immediately disappears can anyone let me know the right approach to this one, We want to... (2 Replies)
Hi Folks,
I am used to writing scripts to get info by running commands at local zones level from their respective global zone by using zlogin <localzone> "command>" while remaining at the global zone level.
Can the same be done with Guest LDoms while remaining at the control LDOM level?
... (4 Replies)
Hi,
I am using win7 on my PC and installed VMware on it on which i am running linux
I am unable to ping my linux guest from my win machine,
but i can ping my windows host from linux guest :
Below is my system configuration
Linux
root@localhost ~]# ifconfig
eth0 Link... (9 Replies)
Running 3650 switch. I have this odd issue where I cannot get 4 new Centos 7 boxes pinging out on public IPs (nor pinging in), only gateway .1 and first public IP .2
This is what I see, which doesn't look normal. How do I fix this?
The server itself is configured fine (Centos 7)
# cat... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Bashed
0 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
mrtg-ping-probe
MRTG-PING-PROBE(1) General Commands Manual MRTG-PING-PROBE(1)NAME
mrtg-ping-probe - ping probe module for Multi Router Traffic Grapher
DESCRIPTION
mrtg-ping-probe is a ping probe module for MRTG 2.x. It is used to monitor the round trip time and packet loss to networked devices. MRTG
uses the output of mrtg-ping-probe to generate graphs visualizing minimum and maximum round trip times or packet loss.
mrtg-ping-probe is not run directly, but is called by MRTG as a helper when it needs to determine ping time to a host.
Act responsibly: do not use mrtg-ping-probe to ping devices without the owner's permission. Just imagine if 10,000 people decided to ping
your hosts! mrtg-ping-probe is meant to be used within your network to get round trip time performance figures for your network.
OPTIONS
To use mrtg-ping-probe you need to configure MRTG to call it from within the definition of a target host. This is done in the MRTG config
file, which is usually /etc/mrtg.conf.
Here's an example snippet: change the target name and IP address to suit your needs.
Target[your.target.ping]: `/usr/bin/mrtg-ping-probe 123.456.789.123`
SetEnv[your.target.ping]: MRTG_INT_IP="123.456.789.123" MRTG_INT_DESCR="ping"
MaxBytes[your.target.ping]: 100
AbsMax[your.target.ping]: 200
Options[your.target.ping]: gauge, growright
YLegend[your.target.ping]: ping time (ms)
ShortLegend[your.target.ping]: ms
Legend1[your.target.ping]: Maximum Round Trip Time in ms
Legend2[your.target.ping]: Minimum Round Trip Time in ms
Legend3[your.target.ping]: Maximal 5 Minute Maximum Round Trip Time in ms
Legend4[your.target.ping]: Maximal 5 Minute Minimum Round Trip Time in ms
LegendI[your.target.ping]: Max:
LegendO[your.target.ping]: Min:
Pay close attention to the backticks in the first line which tell MRTG to execute the nominated external program. Note also that you need
to use the "gauge" option, since the results of subsequent ping probes are independant values and not an incrementing counter.
SEE ALSO mrtg(1).
The latest release of mrtg-ping-probe can be found on the web at http://pwo.de/projects/mrtg/
AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Jonathan Oxer <jon@debian.org>, for the Debian project (but may be used by others).
April 14, 2003 MRTG-PING-PROBE(1)