On Fri, 29 Aug 2003 13:00:12 +0200, André Franke <dump.it RemoveThis @digital-filestore.de> wrote:
> So where is your information on how to solve the problem?
What problem? Fredrik was asking why sometimes things work together
and sometimes they don't. You talked about how they work, I added
more information correcting you where you were wrong.
Further, I confirmed your only suggestion about locking down as a
good way to isolate problems in link negotiation.
> You only state, I said this or that wrong, and it works somewhat
> different from what I explained. It won't help you much if you know
> exactly how things work,
But that was the question Fredrik asked and which you answered.
Further, not enough info was provided to do more than guess.
Want more troubleshooting tips? If so, you should have asked. Of
course, you might be told to quit asking FAQs. Here's some tips you
can find on just about any google search of networking groups or on
networking basic info sites:
What do the link lights indicate? If they indicate a problem, what
problem? Does that change when you lock down to a specific rate (10
or 100) or duplex (half or full) on one end? What about the other
end? What about both ends? If locking to a specific rate and
duplex makes it work, then you know that negotiation implementation
is broken by one or both vendors. Often a driver or firmware update
can fix this.
Did you use the exact same cables for each test? If not, the cables
are suspect.
What happens if you wiggle the wires at the crimped on connections?
Wiggle back and forth and push in and pull out on the wire. If the
connection goes flaky, your cables are bad.
Is your cable plant sure to meet cat-5 specifications in all wiring
and terminations? If not, you are finding out why it is good to
meet specifications -- if you don't, sometimes things work,
sometimes they don't.
sdb
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