On Mon, 8 Jan 2001, Chris Wedgwood wrote:
> I would like to determine the banwidth the card is getting from
> the network.
> /proc/net/dev exports counters; you can monitor those -- I'm sure
> there are perfomance program that do exactly this.
I have this little script for monitoring int
from pcmcia-cs-3.1.22/PCMCIA-HOWTO
4.3.2. Comments about specific cards
o 16-bit PCMCIA cards have a maximum performance of 1.5-2 MB/sec.
That means that any 16-bit 100baseT card (i.e., any card that uses
the pcnet_cs, 3c574_cs, smc91c92_cs, or xirc2ps_cs driver) will
never achi
>
> On Sat, Jan 06, 2001 at 08:20:02PM -0500, Sourav Ghosh wrote:
>
> I was wondering how I can determine the speed of a network device
> inside the kernel.
>
> what kind of network card?
>
> In case of ethernet, the "name" field of device structure will
> only give eth0 o
Hello,
I was wondering how I can determine the speed of a network device inside
the kernel.
In case of ethernet, the "name" field of device structure will only
give eth0 or something. But the speed could be either 10Mbps or 100Mbps.
Thanks,
--
Sourav
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