Here is one for the real Solaris aficionados on the site;
I have a T5240 and have to create an I/O domain with access to the serial port, in this case /dev/term/a and although I have been through the documentation I'm having some issues in identifying the device to assign.
What I have is;
The T5240 is on the older side having 2*6 Core CPU's each with 8 threads per core, where I have an issue - is that I don't actually see the serial device as assigned to either PCI bus. Of course it might just be that I'm being dumb!
Howto check if a ethernet interface is up?
It's impossible to determine via the ipaddress i have learned, or?
Can someone please give me a hint on howto do?
Environment == Linux x86 GNU GCC.
:D
regards
Esaia (2 Replies)
Given the interfaces on a firewall:
eth0 Link encap:Ethernet HWaddr 02:40:67:34:F5:47
inet addr:192.168.0.1 Bcast:192.168.0.255 Mask:255.255.255.0
eth1 Link encap:Ethernet HWaddr 86:23:98:45:35:56
inet addr:123.45.240.69 Bcast:255.255.255.255 ... (2 Replies)
Given a new Solaris box, with a fresh, unconfigured install on it, how does one figure out what kind of network interface it has (bge,le, hme, etc)? (8 Replies)
Hello,
I'm writing to you because I encountered the following problem. My program displayes all network interfaces that are available in the system, but I would like to add a functionality in which a user can enter a destination address IP (ex. the IP address of the Google search engine) and will... (1 Reply)
This is my situation
DOS pc serial cable (sl0) Linux Pc eth1
192.168.0.10 <-------------------->192.168.0.2 <------------>192.168.0.1 (router)
I connected the linux pc and the dos pc with a SLIP (serial line internet protocol), so they can communicate in the sl0 interface.
... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I´ve given only this info to configure a network interface : "port 1 PCI 4"
I´ve been searching for any kind of relationship in the system which allow me to find the etc that must be configured...
Please, could anybody help me?
rhxx:#/root# lspci |grep -i "PCI BRIDGE"
00:01.0 PCI... (0 Replies)
Hi
Had an old ML590 with RS232 serial card that stopped working (spindle that advance ribbon broke) so I purchased a working used on ebay.
Printer powers up and seems fine. Put serial board from old printer in working ebay unit but no printing happens.
Does anyone know if there are any... (0 Replies)
Hi
Had an old ML590 with RS232 serial card that stopped working (spindle that advance ribbon broke) so I purchased a working used on ebay.
Printer powers up and seems fine. Put serial board from old printer in working ebay unit but no printing happens.
Does anyone know if there are any... (3 Replies)
Hey guys, I want to use a a quick bash script/command to determine what network interface is connected to the internet so I can pipe it out to become a variable, in order so the user does not have to manually type it in each time or have to 'hardcode' the variable into the script.
I know about... (6 Replies)
I'm looking for driver for SunSAI/P 3.0 (Serial Asynchronous Interface) card X2156A for Solaris. It used to be on sun-solve, but I fail to find it on the Oracle site. Any help would be very appreciated! (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Ira28
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT FREEBSD
ofwdump
OFWDUMP(8) BSD System Manager's Manual OFWDUMP(8)NAME
ofwdump -- examine the Open Firmware device tree
SYNOPSIS
ofwdump -a [-p | -P property] [-R | -S]
ofwdump [-p | -P property] [-r] [-R | -S] [--] nodes
DESCRIPTION
The ofwdump utility is used to examine the Open Firmware device tree. In the first synopsis form, the complete device tree is printed; in
the second form, only the selected nodes will be examined.
The following options are available:
-a Print the complete device tree.
-p Print all available properties.
-P property Only print properties of the given name.
-R Print properties in ``raw'' format, i.e., omit all headings and indentation and just write the property values unaltered to the
standard output. This is intended to be used with the -P option to extract the value of a single property.
-S Print properties as strings; this is analogous to the -R option, except that each property is only output to the first NUL char-
acter, and that newline is appended to each.
-r Recursively print all children of the specified nodes.
EXAMPLES
Print the complete device tree:
ofwdump -a
Print the complete device subtree of the ``/pci'' node, including all available properties:
ofwdump -pr /pci
Print the ``compatible'' property of the ``/pci'' node as plain string:
ofwdump -P compatible -S /pci
SEE ALSO eeprom(8)HISTORY
The ofwdump utility first appeared in FreeBSD 5.0.
AUTHORS
The ofwdump utility was written by Thomas Moestl <tmm@FreeBSD.org>.
BSD October 18, 2002 BSD