[olug] victory and defeat w/Linux router @work
Charles Bird
thebirdman at operamail.com
Thu Oct 14 23:26:35 UTC 2004
ya I was afraid of RF being involved because I "swore" I
checked the pinouts over and over. I guess I missed it and
needed a night of sleep to finally notice.
I thought it mighta been the amp for our uplink dish which
is not too far away from the start of the 100M run, I mean
the waveguide plumming is about 5 ft away. Not my doing or
control. I was so sure that there was some sort of 6.5Ghz
RFI going on, but nope. Its all good now.
Theres some low-end Linux machines gonna be making their
home there soon hopfully. I'm stoked.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Daniel Linder" <dan at linder.org>
To: "Omaha Linux User Group" <olug at olug.org>
Subject: Re: [olug] victory and defeat w/Linux router @work
Date: Thu, 14 Oct 2004 11:03:51 -0500 (CDT)
>
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> <quote who="Charles Bird">
> > Yep, cant get signal from cross over or straight on the
> > 100m leg
>
> When you say "signal" do you mean a link-light, a
tone-generator, a
> continuity tester, or something else?
>
> Neither the tone-generator nor continuity tester prove
much on an ethernet
> connection other than you have connectivity from
pin-to-pin.
>
> I have seen a number of cases where the link-light test
is just about as
> worthless. Most NICs just check for a voltage across
certain pins -- in
> most cases the NIC on the far end will bring up the
DC-voltage enough to
> turn on the remote sides link light, but once you start
sending the
> modulated signal across the wire then the RF component of
the wiring comes
> into play.
>
> Here is the testing methodology I would try. If posible,
can you bring
> the complete cable back to your desk? This will help
eliminate a lot of
> unknowns. If so, then try options 1 and 2...
> 1: Using either a continuity tester or checking the
colors on the
> individual wires, ensure that your wiring is correct.
Since a lot of
> cable manufacturers have gone to the muted coloring on
the strands, I like
> the continuity tester -- that ensures there is an
eletronic connection
> from pin-to-pin.
>
> 2: Once the pin-outs are verified, try plugging each end
into known good
> devices (PC and switch, or PC-to-PC if it is a crossover
cable).
>
> If you are able to bring up a good connection with this,
then you'll have
> to put the cable back in place and continue
troubleshooting.
>
> 3: With the cable in place, do a visual inspection of the
cable route.
> = Does it pass over/under/near any flourescent or
high-voltage lighting?
> = How about near any non-grounded electrical frames or
machines?
> = Does it pass near power cords or high-voltage
powerlines?
> = Near any other electronic equipment that might have a
large transformer
> inside it (photo copiers, laser printers, etc)?
>
> If all this checks out, you might have to
purchase/beg/borrow/steal a
> decent cable tester (Fluke, WireScope, etc) to do
in-depth testing.
>
> At my previous job (network engineer at IPRevolution.net)
we had a
> WireScope testing tool. It was really nice, but I
believe it had a cost
> of around $20,000 for the base system. It had two smart
ends that plugged
> into the RJ45 and the auto-test feature would test all
aspects of the
> cabling and give a certification as to the level the
cable works (10bT,
> 100bT, 1000bT, Fiber, etc). These high-end tools will do
the indepth
> testing you might need, but are quite costly if you don't
do this on a
> regular basis.
>
> If this it turns out that RF is causing the problem, or
the run is going
> through an electronically uncontrolled environment (i.e.
outside, in a
> manufacturing plant, etc) you might want to look at
running a fiber
> connection. Purchasing a 100+ ft fiber jumper
(~$150.00), and two
> Fiber-to-100bT transceiver/media-converter (~$60.00) will
be in the
> $300-$350 ballpark, and the benefit is that the bump to
Gig speeds would
> just require a replacement of the trancievers.
>
> Good luck!
>
> Dan
>
> Found this tranciever on TigerDirect for $60.00:
>
http://biz.tigerdirect.com/applications/SearchTools/item-details.asp?EdpNo=548196&CatId=203
>
> - - - - -
> "I do not fear computer,
> I fear the lack of them."
> -- Isaac Asimov
>
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