On Sat, 2 Dec 2000 13:07:29 -0600 (CST), Jeff Garzik <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >If yes, my guess is correct, I think the proper solution is to: >* create a generic set_config, which does nothing but convert the calls' >semantics into ethtool semantics, and >* add ethtool support to the specific driver cc list trimmed. If you go down this path, please add a standard performance monitoring method to query the current capacity of an interface. It is frustrating to report "eth0 is handling 1 Megabyte/second, but we cannot tell if that is 90% (10BaseT) or 9% (100BaseT) utilization". We should report capacity rather than speed because speed alone is not the controlling factor, other things like half or full duplex affect the capacity. - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/
- Re: [RFC] Configuring synchronous interfaces in Linux Russell King
- Re: [RFC] Configuring synchronous interfaces in Linux Francois Romieu
- Re: [RFC] Configuring synchronous interfaces in L... Donald Becker
- Re: [RFC] Configuring synchronous interfaces in Linux Philip Blundell
- Re: [RFC] Configuring synchronous interfaces in Linux Bogdan Costescu
- Re: [RFC] Configuring synchronous interfaces in Linux Jeff Garzik
- Re: [RFC] Configuring synchronous interfaces in Linux Russell King
- Re: [RFC] Configuring synchronous interfaces in Linux Philip Blundell
- Re: [RFC] Configuring synchronous interfaces in L... Philip Blundell
- Re: [RFC] Configuring synchronous interfaces ... Russell King
- Re: [RFC] Configuring synchronous interfaces in Linux Keith Owens
- Re: [RFC] Configuring synchronous interfaces in L... Jeff Garzik
- Re: [RFC] Configuring synchronous interfaces ... Keith Owens
- Re: [RFC] Configuring synchronous interfa... Keith Owens
- Re: [RFC] Configuring synchronous interfaces in Linux Donald Becker

