On 2012-02-28 21:06, Alexander Lesle wrote:
Hello Robin Axelsson,
please send the links to that blogs.
Thx.
On Januar, 27 2012, 13:51 wrote in [1]:
Try "man ifconfig", "man ipmpstat", "man if_mpadm". Those should be
reasonable starting points.
Thanks, these man pages exists. I saw in the i
Hello Robin Axelsson,
please send the links to that blogs.
Thx.
On Januar, 27 2012, 13:51 wrote in [1]:
Try "man ifconfig", "man ipmpstat", "man if_mpadm". Those should be
reasonable starting points.
>>> Thanks, these man pages exists. I saw in the ifconfig that there is some
>>> inf
Robin Axelsson wrote:
> On 2012-01-27 16:45, James Carlson wrote:
>> Robin Axelsson wrote:
>>> On 2012-01-27 15:32, James Carlson wrote:
What NWAM is supposed to do is configure only one usable interface
(guided by user selection criteria) for the system. The fact that you
got multi
On Wed, Jan 25, 2012 at 10:03 AM, James Carlson wrote:
>> I'll see if there is something more up-to-date. There are no man entries
>> for 'ipmp' in OI and 'apropos' doesn't work for me.
>
> Try "man ifconfig", "man ipmpstat", "man if_mpadm". Those should be
> reasonable starting points.
The man
On 2012-01-27 16:45, James Carlson wrote:
Robin Axelsson wrote:
On 2012-01-27 15:32, James Carlson wrote:
What NWAM is supposed to do is configure only one usable interface
(guided by user selection criteria) for the system. The fact that you
got multiple interfaces configured is indeed an ano
Robin Axelsson wrote:
> On 2012-01-27 15:32, James Carlson wrote:
>> What NWAM is supposed to do is configure only one usable interface
>> (guided by user selection criteria) for the system. The fact that you
>> got multiple interfaces configured is indeed an anomaly, and one I can't
>> explain.
On 2012-01-27 15:32, James Carlson wrote:
On 01/27/12 08:28, Robin Axelsson wrote:
One way to make the system user-friendly is to make nwam automatically
configure IPMP when it detects two properly working ethernet connections
within the same subnet.
My recollection is that automatic configurat
On 01/27/12 08:28, Robin Axelsson wrote:
> One way to make the system user-friendly is to make nwam automatically
> configure IPMP when it detects two properly working ethernet connections
> within the same subnet.
My recollection is that automatic configuration of IPMP was on the list
of things t
On 01/27/12 08:37, Robin Axelsson wrote:
> If VirtualBox and OpenIndiana did what they promised without hickups I
> wouldn't even need two network interfaces to ensure the operation of the
> system. But when bugs occur we try to get around them until they are
> fixed, and that requires at least som
a zone on the global zone
before the zone can use it.
Ooops, sorry
-Original Message-
From: Robin Axelsson [mailto:gu99r...@student.chalmers.se]
Sent: vrijdag 27 januari 2012 14:38
To: openindiana-discuss@openindiana.org
Subject: Re: [OpenIndiana-discuss] CIFS performance issues
On 2012-0
On 2012-01-26 14:05, James Carlson wrote:
Open Indiana wrote:
Please skip the whole ifconfig and plumb this or that discussion.
Virtualbox works on any interface that is "plumbed" since only then the
interface is visible in the menu.
Oh, yuck. It should be using the libdlpi interfaces (see
dl
On 2012-01-26 09:32, Open Indiana wrote:
Please skip the whole ifconfig and plumb this or that discussion.
Virtualbox works on any interface that is "plumbed" since only then the
interface is visible in the menu. A working IP-adress is not necessary.
Please put your interfaces on manual IP-assig
On 01/27/12 07:51, Robin Axelsson wrote:
> On 2012-01-25 21:50, James Carlson wrote:
>> By default, the first IP layer object created on a given datalink layer
>> object has the same name as that datalink layer object -- even though
>> they're distinct ideas. The second and subsequent such objects
On 26/01/2012 08:32, Open Indiana wrote:
Please skip the whole ifconfig and plumb this or that discussion.
Virtualbox works on any interface that is "plumbed" since only then the
interface is visible in the menu.
That is untrue. All interfaces are visible in VB regardless of whether
they are
On 2012-01-25 21:50, James Carlson wrote:
Robin Axelsson wrote:
I'm confused. If VirtualBox is just going to talk to the physical
interface itself, why is plumbing IP necessary at all? It shouldn't be
needed.
Maybe I'm the one being confused here. I just believed that the IP must
be visible t
Open Indiana wrote:
> Please skip the whole ifconfig and plumb this or that discussion.
>
> Virtualbox works on any interface that is "plumbed" since only then the
> interface is visible in the menu.
Oh, yuck. It should be using the libdlpi interfaces (see
dlpi_walk(3DLPI)), at least on OpenIndi
Please skip the whole ifconfig and plumb this or that discussion.
Virtualbox works on any interface that is "plumbed" since only then the
interface is visible in the menu. A working IP-adress is not necessary.
Please put your interfaces on manual IP-assignment and disable nwam.
Give an IP-address
Robin Axelsson wrote:
>> I'm confused. If VirtualBox is just going to talk to the physical
>> interface itself, why is plumbing IP necessary at all? It shouldn't be
>> needed.
>
> Maybe I'm the one being confused here. I just believed that the IP must
> be visible to the host for VirtualBox to b
On 2012-01-25 19:03, James Carlson wrote:
Robin Axelsson wrote:
On 2012-01-24 21:59, James Carlson wrote:
Well, unless you get into playing tricks with IP Filter. And if you do
that, then you're in a much deeper world of hurt, at least in terms of
performance.
Here's what the virtualbox manul
Robin Axelsson wrote:
> On 2012-01-24 21:59, James Carlson wrote:
>> Well, unless you get into playing tricks with IP Filter. And if you do
>> that, then you're in a much deeper world of hurt, at least in terms of
>> performance.
> Here's what the virtualbox manul says about bridged networking:
>
On 2012-01-24 21:59, James Carlson wrote:
Robin Axelsson wrote:
If you have two interfaces inside the same zone that have the same IP
prefix, then you have to have IPMP configured, or all bets are off.
Maybe it'll work. But probably not. And was never been supported that
way by Sun.
The idea
Robin Axelsson wrote:
>> If you have two interfaces inside the same zone that have the same IP
>> prefix, then you have to have IPMP configured, or all bets are off.
>> Maybe it'll work. But probably not. And was never been supported that
>> way by Sun.
> The idea I have with using two NICs is to
On 2012-01-24 19:14, James Carlson wrote:
Robin Axelsson wrote:
On 2012-01-24 16:52, Gary Mills wrote:
On Tue, Jan 24, 2012 at 04:39:42PM +0100, Robin Axelsson wrote:
ifconfig -a returns:
...
e1000g1: flags=1004843mtu
1500 index 2
inet 10.40.137.185 netmask ff00 broadcast 10.
Robin Axelsson wrote:
> On 2012-01-24 16:52, Gary Mills wrote:
>> On Tue, Jan 24, 2012 at 04:39:42PM +0100, Robin Axelsson wrote:
> ifconfig -a returns:
> ...
> e1000g1: flags=1004843 mtu
> 1500 index 2
> inet 10.40.137.185 netmask ff00 broadcast 10.40.137.255
>>>
On 2012-01-24 16:52, Gary Mills wrote:
On Tue, Jan 24, 2012 at 04:39:42PM +0100, Robin Axelsson wrote:
ifconfig -a returns:
...
e1000g1: flags=1004843 mtu
1500 index 2
inet 10.40.137.185 netmask ff00 broadcast 10.40.137.255
e1000g2: flags=1004843 mtu
1500 index 3
inet 1
Robin Axelsson wrote:
> I looked into the /var/adm/messages and found the
>
> nwamd[99]: [ID 234669 daemon.error] 3: nwamd_door_switch: need
> solaris.network.autoconf.read for request type 1
>
> errors during the time. I'll look more carefully next time and see if
> the time-stamps of these entr
On Tue, Jan 24, 2012 at 04:39:42PM +0100, Robin Axelsson wrote:
> >>ifconfig -a returns:
> >>...
> >>e1000g1: flags=1004843 mtu
> >>1500 index 2
> >> inet 10.40.137.185 netmask ff00 broadcast 10.40.137.255
> >>e1000g2: flags=1004843 mtu
> >>1500 index 3
> >> inet 10.40.137.196
ed while running ZFS on Ubuntu, and
I'm pretty new to OI.
On Mon, Jan 23, 2012 at 16:17, Open Indiana wrote:
What happens if you disable nwam and use the basic/manual ifconfig setup?
-Original Message-
From: Robin Axelsson [mailto:gu99r...@student.chalmers.se]
Sent: maandag 23
t;outside world".
>
> Robin.
>
>
> On 2012-01-23 11:40, Open Indiana wrote:
> > Ok,
> >
> > So if I read it correct your virtual machine is playing an audio file
> > and then the server stops responding. That could mean the hardware
> > that virt
What happens if you disable nwam and use the basic/manual ifconfig setup?
-Original Message-
From: Robin Axelsson [mailto:gu99r...@student.chalmers.se]
Sent: maandag 23 januari 2012 15:10
To: openindiana-discuss@openindiana.org
Subject: Re: [OpenIndiana-discuss] CIFS performance issues
he server stops responding. That could mean the hardware that
virtualbox uses to play the soundfile if flooded or that the drivers of the
soundcard in your server/PC are not working very well?
What soundcard are you using?
-Original Message-
From: Robin Axelsson [mailto:gu99r...@stude
you using?
-Original Message-
From: Robin Axelsson [mailto:gu99r...@student.chalmers.se]
Sent: zondag 22 januari 2012 23:38
To: openindiana-discuss@openindiana.org
Subject: Re: [OpenIndiana-discuss] CIFS performance issues
I don't understand what you mean with PCI-x settings and whe
I don't understand what you mean with PCI-x settings and where to check
them out. The hardware is not PCI-X, it is PCIe. The affected LSI HBA is
a discrete PCIe card that operates in IT-mode. As in system logs I
assume you mean /var/adm/messages and I could not find anything there.
If this was
A very stupid answer, but have you looked at the bios and inspected the
settings of the network devices and /or PCIx ? How is your bios setup (AHCI
or raid or ??) ?
Do you see any error in the system logs?
To my opinion your system swallows in the datatransfers. Either on the
NIC<->montherboard s
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