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Date:      Mon, 05 Aug 1996 17:02:06 -0500
From:      Randy Terbush <randy@zyzzyva.com>
To:        Tom Samplonius <tom@uniserve.com>
Cc:        Randy Terbush <randy@zyzzyva.com>, freebsd-stable@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: ep0 problems and the stable tree 
Message-ID:  <199608052202.RAA27788@sierra.zyzzyva.com>
In-Reply-To: tom's message of Mon, 05 Aug 1996 10:52:18 -0700. <Pine.BSF.3.91.960805104646.3871A-100000@haven.uniserve.com> 

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3c509 combo

Would it not evenutally catch up?


> 
> On Mon, 5 Aug 1996, Randy Terbush wrote:
> 
> > I'm would like to add the following to my previous post and
> > bring this on to the current list, since the -stable list appears
> > to be deserted...
> > 
> > I can further pin this behavior down to TCP NFS connections.
> > UDP does not seem to be aflicted, but it is easily recreated
> > over a TCP NFS connection.
> > 
> > Is there any chance that the "grinding to a halt" reports on
> > -current are network related?
> > 
> > > I've seen a lot of discussion about the ep driver getting broken late
> > > in the 2.1.5 release. Should I still be seeing this from sources dated
> > > 
> > > sierra:/sys/i386/isa
> > > #> ll if_ep*
> > > -rw-r--r--  1 root  wheel  36464 Jul 15 23:10 if_ep.c
> > > -rw-r--r--  1 root  wheel  36457 May 26 14:54 if_ep.c.orig
> > > -rw-r--r--  1 root  wheel  13946 Mar 31 23:08 if_epreg.h
> > > 
> > > Aug  3 16:11:25 sierra /kernel: ep0: Status: 2002 (input buffer overflow)
> > > Aug  3 16:13:49 sierra /kernel: ep0: Status: 2002 (input buffer overflow)
> > > Aug  3 16:13:52 sierra /kernel: ep0: Status: 2002 (input buffer overflow)
> > > 
> > > 
> > > The net result is that a new NFS client on the net is suddenly freezing
> > > quite frequently. Killing and restarting the 'nfsd' processes on the
> > > server fix the problem.
> 
>   What kind of 3COM card are you using?  Some 3COM cards have very 
> limited buffer space (8k ?), and will get buffer overflow very easily if 
> your computer can't keep service interupts fast enough.
> 
>   This would explain why TCP would be effect, becasue TCP would transfer 
> a whole window of packets at once, which would flood your buffer space.
> 
>   BTW, I ignored your first message to -stable because your never said 
> what kind of card you were using, because if you are using one of the 
> good cards, I'd wasting your and my time.
> 
> Tom






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