El 06/06/13 16:18, Antonio Quartulli escribió:
On Thu, Jun 06, 2013 at 04:04:35PM -0300, Gabriel Tolón wrote:
El 06/06/13 15:29, Antonio Quartulli escribió:
On Thu, Jun 06, 2013 at 03:19:00PM -0300, Gabriel Tolón wrote:
Hi Antonio,
El 06/06/13 02:51, Antonio Quartulli escribió:
Hello Gabriel,
On Wed, Jun 05, 2013 at 12:27:48PM -0300, Gabriel Tolón wrote:
Sorry, I sent the mail incomplete,
So these are the routes:
Equipo1:
root@Equipo 1:~# batctl o [B.A.T.M.A.N. adv 5ffa8f2, MainIF/MAC: wlan0-1/66:70:02:4e:d9:42 (bat0)] Originator last-seen (#/255) Nexthop [outgoingIF]: Potential nexthops ... E3-5GHz 0.680s (251) E3-5GHz [ wlan1-1]: E3-5GHz (251) E3-2GHz 0.430s (255) E3-5GHz [ wlan1-1]: E3-5GHz (255) E3-2GHz (252)
Equipo3:
root@Equipo 3:~# batctl o [B.A.T.M.A.N. adv 5ffa8f2, MainIF/MAC: wlan0-1/66:70:02:4e:d9:d6 (bat0)] Originator last-seen (#/255) Nexthop [outgoingIF]: Potential nexthops ... E1-2GHz 0.310s (255) E1-5GHz [ wlan1-1]: E1-5GHz (255) E1-2GHz (255) E1-5GHz 0.550s (255) E1-5GHz [ wlan1-1]: E1-5GHz (255)
routing tables look good. I am wondering where the problem can be.. Can you try to do a "batctl td wlan0-1" while pinging? this may help to understand where the process is blocking. It would be helpful if you could do that on both the nodes while pinging in only one direction This way we see who receives what.
I did it, but the text files for the logs of the nodes with "batctl td" have a size of about 250 kB each one, with just 1 or 2 seconds logging. Is that too much for sending them to the list?
maybe you can upload them somewhere and then send the link here?
Yes, should be here:
the batctl ping was from E1 to E3.
Hello Gabriel, there is a lot of noise because you are also generating traffic on the network. However I can see the ICMP Echo Request and then an Echo Reply, therefore the two nodes seem to be exchanging ICMP packets correctly.
I'm checking again to try to understand what went wrong.
Meanwhile, can you please report the output of "batctl l" during a bw test after having set the bw_meter log level by running "batctl ll bwm" ?
To get the exact log of one test, you can first run batctl l (this will print all the past log), then you run the test and then you run batctl l again to obtain the interesting log. Please upload it on pastebin too.
Thanks a lot!
Sure, here they are: