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Operating Systems Solaris Loosing connection after authentication Post 302942487 by hicksd8 on Wednesday 29th of April 2015 07:50:28 AM
Old 04-29-2015
Well if the system is disconnecting users after only a few seconds then this "production" system is no good to them, is it!! So put a client box on the main network connection (even if you use a mini switch of your own if you haven't got a crossover cable) and test it yourself by-passing the network infrastructure. That will tell you if Solaris is actually kicking people out or not.

You're not dealing with a Mickey Mouse desktop OS here, Solaris runs banks worldwide and is unlikely to be the culprit here. A simple test will prove it or not.

---------- Post updated at 12:48 PM ---------- Previous update was at 12:46 PM ----------

The fact that you can use the management port without getting kicked out doesn't prove the main network port is okay. Connect your own client to the main network port.

---------- Post updated at 12:50 PM ---------- Previous update was at 12:48 PM ----------

And don't forget that you'll have to set your client box to a suitable static ip address.
 

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IPL(4)							     Kernel Interfaces Manual							    IPL(4)

NAME
ipl - IP packet log device DESCRIPTION
The ipl pseudo device's purpose is to provide an easy way to gather packet headers of packets you wish to log. If a packet header is to be logged, the entire header is logged (including any IP options - TCP/UDP options are not included when it calculates header size) or not at all. The packet contents is also logged after the header. Prepending every packet header logged is a structure containing information relevant to the packet following and why it was logged. The structure's format is as follows: struct ipl_ci { u_long sec; /* time when the packet was logged */ u_long usec; u_long plen; /* length of packet data logged */ u_short hlen; /* length of headers logged */ u_short rule; /* rule number (for log ...) or 0 if result = log */ u_long flags:24; /* XXX FIXME do we care about the extra bytes? */ #if (defined(OpenBSD) && (OpenBSD <= 1991011) && (OpenBSD >= 199606)) u_long filler:8; /* XXX FIXME do we care? */ u_char ifname[IFNAMSIZ]; #else u_long unit:8; u_char ifname[4]; #endif }; In the case of the header causing the buffer to finish on a non-32bit boundary, padding will be `appended' to ensure that the next log entry is aligned to a 32bit boundary. If the packet contents is more then 128 bytes, then only 128 bytes of the packet contents is logged. Should the packet contents finish on a non-32bit boundary, then the last few bytes are not logged to ensure the log entry is aligned to a 32bit boundary. ipl is a read-only (sequential) character pseudo-device. The ioctls which are loaded with this device can be found under ipf(4). The only ioctl which is used for logging and doesn't affect the filter is: ioctl(fd, SIOCIPFFB, int *) This ioctl flushes the log buffer and returns the number of bytes flushed. There is currently no support for non-blocking IO with this device, meaning all read operations should be considered blocking in nature (if there is no data to read, it will sleep until some is made available). SEE ALSO
ipf(4) BUGS
Packet headers are dropped when the internal buffer (static size) fills. FILES
/dev/ipl0 IPL(4)
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