Date: Tue, 14 Feb 2006 09:50:58 +0100 (CET) From: Harti Brandt <hartmut.brandt@dlr.de> To: Gleb Smirnoff <glebius@FreeBSD.org> Cc: freebsd-net@FreeBSD.org, Anders Nordby <anders@FreeBSD.org>, kuriyama@FreeBSD.org, demon@FreeBSD.org Subject: Re: 64-bit SNMP counters for FreeBSD && graphing bandwidth usage Message-ID: <20060214094812.T5083@beagle.kn.op.dlr.de> In-Reply-To: <20060214084459.GL86448@cell.sick.ru> References: <20060206092443.GA61116@totem.fix.no> <20060207141131.GU877@FreeBSD.org> <20060213173008.GA14643@totem.fix.no> <20060214090531.X5083@beagle.kn.op.dlr.de> <20060214083010.GB41864@totem.fix.no> <20060214093513.F5083@beagle.kn.op.dlr.de> <20060214084459.GL86448@cell.sick.ru>
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On Tue, 14 Feb 2006, Gleb Smirnoff wrote: GS>On Tue, Feb 14, 2006 at 09:39:00AM +0100, Harti Brandt wrote: GS>H> AN>I changed port to 163 cause I am actually using net-snmp snmpd on port GS>H> AN>161 still. Anyway, it seems bsnmpd insists these are 10 mbps interfaces? GS>H> AN>Why so? GS>H> GS>H> The driver reports a speed of 10Mbits/sec. ifHighSpeed is ifi_baudrate GS>H> divided by 10^6 (and rounded). This is the default set by ether_ifattach() GS>H> if the driver did not set another value. It seems that bge never sets that GS>H> value so you end up with the default. This looks like a bug. GS> GS>Harti, we are thinking in parallel :) :-) GS>Andres, pls try the attached patch. I wonder however, whether this could be done somewhere in mii? When setting ifmedia also the speed could be set. In this case SNMP would report the actual current speed. hartihome | help
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