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Re: link level connectivity on RHEL!!

 
astra
Frequent Advisor

link level connectivity on RHEL!!

Hello All,

I am doing channel bonding on RHEL 4.0. But I am not able check link level connectivity. Is there any command like "linklloop" as on HP-ux?? Please suggest how easily i can check the link level connectivity on Linux?

Regards,
Amit
4 REPLIES 4
smatador
Honored Contributor

Re: link level connectivity on RHEL!!

Ivan Ferreira
Honored Contributor

Re: link level connectivity on RHEL!!

With linux, normally you use the ethtool command to identify if link was detected. Also, check the input packets on the output of ifconfig command. You should always get increasing input packets even without IP configured.
Por que hacerlo dificil si es posible hacerlo facil? - Why do it the hard way, when you can do it the easy way?
rick jones
Honored Contributor

Re: link level connectivity on RHEL!!

After you have tried, and hopefully liked, the Linux implementation of the HP-UX linkloop functionality, contact Red Hat and ask them when/if they will make it available in a release. I can guarantee it will never happen with something as ancient as RHEL4, but it could conceivably happen for RHEL5 and one would hope it were possible for RHEL6. However, Red Hat needs to hear the desire from customers.

I'm told, but have not confirmed myself, that "managed" ProCurve switches will respond to the type of IEEE-defined frames the linkloop command will issue - if you happen to know the MAC address being used by the switch :)
there is no rest for the wicked yet the virtuous have no pillows
rick jones
Honored Contributor

Re: link level connectivity on RHEL!!

Ivan - linkloop goes beyond a simple reporting of link state for an interface. It attempts to exchange a certain type of ethernet frame (IEEE 802.3 frame actually) with a specified MAC address over a specified interface. Think of it as a link-level (layer 2) version of ping (layer 3) one can use without having to worry about IP addresses. Modulo of course, being confined to the same broadcast domain, unlike ping.
there is no rest for the wicked yet the virtuous have no pillows