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Capture problems with Intel quad cards?
One more note.... it is a bridging chip, not switching, that is resident
on the board that is the communicator to the other NIC chipsets.
Jay Murphy
IP Network Specialist
NM Department of Health
ITSD - IP Network Operations
Santa Fe, New Mexico 87502
Bus. Ph.: 505.827.2851
"We move the information that moves your world."
-----Original Message-----
From: Mr. James W. Laferriere [mailto:babydr at baby-dragons.com]
Sent: Monday, February 16, 2009 11:39 AM
To: John A. Kilpatrick
Cc: nanog at nanog.org
Subject: Re: Capture problems with Intel quad cards?
Hello John ,
On Sun, 15 Feb 2009, John A. Kilpatrick wrote:
> Has anyone had problems with using current Intel quad ethernet cards
for
> packet capture? As a proof-of-concept test we bought an Intel
PWLA8494GT and
> hooked it up to some Network Critical taps. There was a very strange
issue
> with corruption of the captured packets. The *only* issue (but it's a
big
> one) is that the source IP on some captured packets is munged. As far
as I
> can tell that's the *only* issue with the packet captures - no other
data is
> corrupted.
>
> Oh, and to rule out other issues:
>
> 1. Corruption seen both when using network taps and when using a port
> span/mirror (so it's not the taps).
> 2. Corruption *not* seen using the on-board broadcom nics of the test
> host (so it's not the box).
>
> So I'm pretty sure we narrowed it down to the card. We tried the card
in
> an indentical host and saw the same problems.
>
> I thought it might be a driver issue - I tried both gentoo and FreeBSD
(not
> sure how different the drivers are) just to see if it mattered at all
and it
> didn't. Much googling didn't show this to be a known issue - just
wondering
> if anyone else has seen it? Other recommendations welcome - the next
step
> is, I suppose, a broadcom-based PCI-X card. (I've got some old pizza
boxes
> I'm trying to repurpose as network probes.)
>
> Thanks,
> John
Does this device provide 4 unique mac-addresses ? Reason for
the
question is some old(I mean old) multiport cards presented a single
mac-address
because the were driven by a single 'Switch chip' . Just a thought .
I've been
looking a the Intel site gandering over the overview & have not seen
anything to
relieve my concern . But one Hopes they have learned not to create
themselves
such a problem .
Hth , JimL
--
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| James W. Laferriere | System Techniques | Give me VMS |
| Network&System Engineer | 2133 McCullam Ave | Give me Linux |
| babydr at baby-dragons.com | Fairbanks, AK. 99701 | only on AXP |
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