Sponsored Content
Operating Systems AIX Source port on AIX for NAS is same? Post 303019008 by bakunin on Thursday 21st of June 2018 04:50:55 AM
Old 06-21-2018
Quote:
Originally Posted by anil1000
How to keep it alive? What do you mean by this, which connection to keep it alive? Kindly suggest..
In regular intervals packets are sent in an existing connection to make sure the partner still is there. These packets are called "keepalive" packets. If these packets are not received the partner assumes that the other side went dead and closes the connection.

Think of a connection like a telephone call: when you talk to someone you expect some sort of acknowledgement that the other is still listening at times, be it "aha" or "hmm" or something such. If you don't get that you may ask "are you still there" - and if there is no answer you hang up. This is quite the same mechanism.

I hope that helps.

bakunin
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. AIX

How to open a port in AIX

Hi Guys, i am trying to open a port in AIX. but i am not able to get the command for this. AIX is not having the iptables file present. So please any body can tell me how to open a port in AIX... Thanks sanju (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: sanju_d1231
2 Replies

2. Programming

Source code for serial port

Hi, I am working with sun Solaris 5.9 and in my application,I have to communicate with Serial port(i.e /dev/term/a). So I need source code to by which I can do the following things-- 1)check the port is available or not.If it dosn't find the port,it should throw the error message(i.e. port not... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: smartgupta
0 Replies

3. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

how to port a package to huge source code having its own make and compilers

In general for intalling a package like we do ./configure, make , make install But if we want to integrate the package with a huge source base what are the things to be taken care could some one have a light on purpose of ./configure , make and make install along with above question. I... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Gopi Krishna P
1 Replies

4. AIX

AIX(VIO/LPAR) with Free NAS ISCSI solution

Hi, I was looking on Google for AIX-VIO/LPAR with ISCSI solution and found following really nice tutorial about how to setup ISCSI with free NAS. 1) Build Your Own Open Source NAS Device Using FreeNAS | Train Signal Training - Free Computer Training Videos 2) Build Your Own Open Source... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: kabir
4 Replies

5. AIX

Compiling samba from source in AIX 5.3

Hello all. I have never had any issues like this when compiling applications from source. When I try to compile samba-3.5.0pre2, configure runs with no issues, but when the time comes to make, this happens: make: make 1254-025 There must be an existing description file or specify a target. ... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: raidzero
4 Replies

6. AIX

Who's using my port in AIX

Hello Gurus, I was trying to find who's using my port and got below answer from a IBM website. But the problem with the below answer is I need a root to run the rmsock, is there any other alternative to find out who is using my port with out a root access?? 1. netstat -Aan | grep <port... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: tenderfoot
1 Replies

7. Programming

Changing source port number of a TCP client packet

Hi all, I need to change the source port number of an outgoing TCP packet. First I have to bind the socket to a particular port(suppose 9001) but when I send the TCP packet I want to change the source port number lets say to 9002 still letting the socket to be bound to the same old port (9001).... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: anuragrai134
0 Replies

8. AIX

XVFB Source package for AIX

Please send me link for XVFB Source package for AIX (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: prathap.g
3 Replies

9. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

How to release port on AIX?

Hello all, I need your help with any command to release a port on AIX. Thanks for all. (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Mcipamo
5 Replies
pppstats(8)						      System Manager's Manual						       pppstats(8)

NAME
pppstats - Print Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP) statistics SYNOPSIS
/usr/sbin/pppstats [-a] [-v] [-r] [-c count] [-w secs] [interface] [-z] OPTIONS
Displays absolute values rather than deltas. With this option, all reports show statistics for the time since the link was initiated. Without this option, the second and subsequent reports show statistics for the time since the last report. Repeats the display count times. The default repeat count is 1 if the -w option is not specified, otherwise infinity. Displays the overall packet compression rate. The rate value is between 0 and 1, with 0 meaning that the data is incompressible. Displays additional statistics, such as the number of packets ignored (rejected by the VJ TCP header decompression code). Pauses wait seconds between each display. If this option is not spec- ified, the default interval is 5 seconds. Instead of the standard display, show statistics indicating the performance of the packet com- pression algorithm in use. See the STATISTICS section for further information on this option. DESCRIPTION
The pppstats utility reports PPP-related statistics at regular intervals for the specified PPP interface. If interface is unspecified, it will default to ppp0. The display is split horizontally into input and output sections containing columns of statistics describing the properties and volume of packets received and transmitted by the interface. STATISTICS The following fields are printed on the input side when the -z option is not used: The total number of bytes received by this interface. The total number of packets received by this interface. The number of header-compressed TCP packets received by this interface. The num- ber of header-uncompressed TCP packets received by this interface. Not reported when the -r option is specified. The number of corrupted or bogus header-compressed TCP packets received by this interface. Not reported when the -r option is specified. The number of VJ header- compressed TCP packets dropped on reception by this interface because of preceding errors. Only reported when the -v option is specified. The total number of non-TCP packets received by this interface. Only reported when the -v option is specified. The compression ratio achieved for received packets by the packet compression scheme in use, defined as the uncompressed size divided by the compressed size. Only reported when the -r option is specified. The total number of bytes received, after decompression of compressed packets. Only reported when the -r option is specified. The following fields are printed on the output side: The total number of bytes transmitted from this interface. The total number of pack- ets transmitted from this interface. The number of TCP packets transmitted from this interface with VJ-compressed TCP headers. The number of TCP packets transmitted from this interface with VJ-uncompressed TCP headers. Not reported when the -r option is specified. The total number of non-TCP packets transmitted from this interface. Not reported when the -r option is specified. The number of searches for the cached header entry for a VJ header compressed TCP packet. Only reported when the -v option is specified. The number of failed searches for the cached header entry for a VJ header compressed TCP packet. Only reported when the -v option is specified. The compression ratio achieved for transmitted packets by the packet compression scheme in use, defined as the size before compression divided by the compressed size. Only reported when the -r option is specified. The total number of bytes to be transmitted, before packet compression is applied. Only reported when the -r option is specified. When the -z option is specified, pppstats displays the following fields, relating to the packet compression algorithm currently in use. If packet compression is not in use, these fields all display zeroes. The fields displayed on the input side are: The number of bytes of com- pressed packets received. The number of compressed packets received. The number of bytes of incompressible packets (that is, those which were transmitted in uncompressed form) received. The number of incompressible packets received. The recent compression ratio for incoming packets, defined as the uncompressed size divided by the compressed size (including both compressible and incompressible packets). The fields displayed on the output side are: The number of bytes of compressed packets transmitted. The number of compressed packets transmitted. The number of bytes of incompressible packets transmitted (that is, those which were transmitted in uncompressed form). The number of incompressible packets transmitted. The recent compression ratio for outgoing packets. SEE ALSO
Daemons: pppd(8) pppstats(8)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 12:43 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy