Rick Jones wrote:
Phil Dibowitz wrote:

Does having the ability to boot into single user mode break networking? No, it
*allows* you to break networking. Does the _support_ of rmmod break the
kernel? No, but it *allows* you to.


Are SNMP traps generated by going into single-user mode? Rather like what I was saying to Brian earlier. I suspect though that an rmmod doesn't generate an SNMP trap - unless perhaps that to do the rmmod one has to first ifdown the interface and that might?

If the interface comes back, it will (may?) have a different device id 
(if-index),
even if the name is the same.

Regardless, not everyone uses SNMP, so clearing stats can still be useful.  Even
if it is not implemented perfectly (ie, no locking, so it's possible that a 
clear
will not totally clear some stats), it will still be right most of the time, and
that will help the casual user who is trying to diagnose network errors with 
only
console access to the system... (ie, ifconfig -a).

Ben

--
Ben Greear <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Candela Technologies Inc  http://www.candelatech.com

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