No you do not want to add an alias to remove an alias.
Also, its not as simple as editing a file on AIX to add in changes. AIX has whats called the ODM (Object Data Manager). The ODM is where the OS stores and maintains a lot of parameters about what is configured and set. Now, there are some files you can edit and cycle the services to take affect right away. Some examples are syslog.conf and sendmail.cf. The /etc/resolv.conf can also be edited on the fly if so necessary.
Could you paste the output of
for all your Ethernet devices? That would help us understand where that 2nd ip address is coming from.
I need to delete a TTY in my AIX 4.3 system. I have tried using the smit but everytime I try it, there is a message telling me that the device is in use and cannot be changed. How do I take the device "offline", so to speak, so that I can edit the settings and/or delete it.
V/R
Djassi (3 Replies)
Hi All,
How can I find out which is ETH5 on my AIX P5 system. I have about seven different NIC card on this. I did move the cable to each one but still I was not able to see the link light up when I did netstat -v
Any idea?
Thanks. (2 Replies)
I couldn't install my nic in solaris 10. I compiled and added
the driver but failed to attach the driver and ifconfig output
shows only loopback dev. Please see the following output and tell
me whether my nic has been detected and why the driver failed to
attach?
My nic is detected in linux... (0 Replies)
Hi, I have the following packages installed on my AIX server
xlC.aix50.rte 10.1.0.2 COMMITTED XL C/C++ Runtime for AIX 5.3
xlC.cpp 9.0.0.0 COMMITTED C for AIX Preprocessor
xlC.msg.en_US.cpp 9.0.0.0 COMMITTED C for AIX Preprocessor
xlC.msg.en_US.rte 10.1.0.2 COMMITTED XL C/C++ Runtime
xlC.rte... (4 Replies)
Dear All
I want tune my NIC's rps, rfs and xps value.
In my system I have two NIC (eth0, eth1) and I have a bond0 ( eth0, eth1).
Here is the question? Which device should I modify ?
eth0 and eth1? or just modify bond0 or modify all device (eth0, eth1, bond0)
Any advice is welcome.... (0 Replies)
NIC port is down on IBM Frame. From the back its slot C7/C8. The network switch is the problem, and a new switch will be coming into play. There's one VIO and one LPAR.
How do i tell the port is down in the OS on the VIO? And how can i verify it's backup without pulling cables? We have a... (1 Reply)
Hello Admins,
My ask is how can I add two different subnet IPs to same box with two different gateways?
The issue is I can connect to the box when I am on ethernet LAN, but I am not able to connect to the same IP when I am on wifi. The server is RHEL 7 VM on vmware.
How can I get connected... (4 Replies)
I have Xubuntu 18.04 installed on my PC. I have created a 10G .img image file created by QEMU-IMG. I have installed inside of it Solaris 9 SPARC edition . If I try and mount the image file as a loop device (using sudo losetup /dev/loop0 /path-to-img-file) I can only mount it as read only.
... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: alphatron150
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
lsdev
LSDEV(8) Linux System Manual LSDEV(8)NAME
lsdev - display information about installed hardware
SYNOPSIS
lsdev
DESCRIPTION
lsdev gathers information about your computer's installed hardware from the interrupts, ioports and dma files in the /proc directory, thus
giving you a quick overview of which hardware uses what I/O addresses and what IRQ and DMA channels.
OPTIONS
None.
FILES
/proc/interrupts
IRQ channels.
/proc/ioports
I/O memory addresses.
/proc/dma
DMA channels.
BUGS
lsdev can't always figure out which lines in the three examined files refer to one and the same device, because these files sometimes use
different names for the same piece of hardware. For example, in some kernels the keyboard is referred to as `kbd' in /proc/ioports and as
`keyboard' in /proc/interrupts. This should be fixed in the kernel, not in lsdev (as has indeed happened for this particular example).
The program does however try to match lines by stripping anything after a space or open parenthesis from the name, so that e.g. the
`serial' lines from /proc/interrupts match the `serial(set)' lines from /proc/ioports. This attempt at DWIM might be considered a bug in
itself.
This program only shows the kernel's idea of what hardware is present, not what's actually physically available.
SEE ALSO procinfo(8).
AUTHOR
Sander van Malssen <svm@kozmix.cistron.nl>
3rd Release 1998-05-31 LSDEV(8)