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Date:      Mon, 8 Jun 1998 12:38:54 -0700 (PDT)
From:      Doug White <dwhite@gdi.uoregon.edu>
To:        Satoshi Asami <asami@cs.berkeley.edu>
Cc:        mobile@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: No buffer space available
Message-ID:  <Pine.BSF.3.96.980608123809.6080C-100000@gdi.uoregon.edu>
In-Reply-To: <199806080522.WAA03134@silvia.HIP.Berkeley.EDU>

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On Sun, 7 Jun 1998, Satoshi Asami wrote:

> What does this mean?  My laptop (running PAO of about 1/2 year ago,
> with 48MB of mem and 256MB of swap) suddenly started getting this
> recently.  It usually goes away after I exit one or two memory-hungry
> apps (netscape, emacs) but there pstat -s, vmstat -m and netstat -m
> all show there are plenty of memory still available.
> 
> ===
> >> ping silvia
> PING silvia (192.168.0.9): 56 data bytes
> ping: sendto: No buffer space available

This generally means that your ethernet card isn't reading the packet
buffer, so the queue is full.  Make sure your routing is correct and your
card was correctly found, attached, and configured.


Doug White                              | University of Oregon  
Internet:  dwhite@resnet.uoregon.edu    | Residence Networking Assistant
http://gladstone.uoregon.edu/~dwhite    | Computer Science Major
NOTICE:  gdi.uoregon.edu is going down, please use dwhite@resnet!


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