I’ve always wondered whether network interfaces that have these flashing lights flash as a gimmick or do they actually indicate the flow of traffic? Perhaps one flash per packet in or out? I wish I could remember what my call up modem looked like to make a historical comparison too.

TL-SG105E

    • WaterWaiver@aussie.zone
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      10 days ago

      Something to be wary of when interpreting the datasheet:

      • Act10 = LED blinking when Ethernet packets transmitted/received at 10Mbps.
      • Act100 = …
      • Act1000 = …

      Bad wording on their part. What they really mean is: “LED blinking when Ethernet packets transmitted/received AND the link is currently in a XYZMbps link speed mode”. The mode is negotiated once after you plug a cable in and usually does not change after that, regardless of how much data you try to send.

      Technically each linkspeed/mode is a whole ethernet standard of its own, but we mostly gloss over that and pretend to end users that they’re backwards compatible.

      • emotional_soup_88OP
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        9 days ago

        Very insightful! Are those the speeds that I can cat from /sys/class/net/[interface name]/speed? Assuming you know Linux, that is. Those negotiated speeds, are they hardcoded into the NIC and selected/negotiated based on what category cable I’m using and other such hardware related factors? Also, is there any “wiggle room”? As in, does it do a speed test to check the limits of the physical layer or does it just follow some vendor specifications?