Quote from: hushcoden on Today at 04:12:49 PMThanks guys, and how do you understand it's actually a bot?The way the posts were written and all the wrong things they contained on the Pi-Hole Discourse in my case :)
QuoteYour issue is a well-documented hardware/driver bug with the Intel I226-V and the FreeBSD igc driver. The root cause is a TX hang quirk in the I226 hardware that the Linux driver handles via automatic recovery, but the FreeBSD driver does not — causing the NIC to silently freeze while the OS thinks the link is still up.
Looking at your specific sysctl output, there are several clear indicators and actionable fixes:
What Your sysctl Reveals
dev.igc.0.eee_control: 1 — Energy Efficient Ethernet (EEE) is enabled. This is a primary known trigger for I226-V link hangs.
dev.igc.0.fc: 3 — Flow control is set to bidirectional (TX+RX both on). This has been associated with link drops under traffic on this NIC family.
dev.igc.0.watchdog_timeouts: 0 — The FreeBSD driver's watchdog never fires, confirming it lacks the TX hang detection/reset logic that Linux's igc_main.c has at line ~3150. Traffic stops silently.
dev.igc.0.link_irq: 8 — 8 link state interrupts over the session; the hang doesn't necessarily show as a link-down event.
dev.igc.0.mac_stats.missed_packets: 297 — Minor but consistent with the NIC entering a degraded state over time.
fw_version: EEPROM V2.25-0 — You're on the latest
# ping google.com
PING google.com (142.251.46.142): 56 data bytes
ping: sendto: Host is down
ping: sendto: Host is down
ping: sendto: Host is down
ping: sendto: Host is down
ping: sendto: Host is down
ping: sendto: Host is down
^C
--- google.com ping statistics ---
6 packets transmitted, 0 packets received, 100.0% packet loss
ping google.com
PING google.com (142.251.46.142): 56 data bytes
64 bytes from 142.251.46.142: icmp_seq=0 ttl=119 time=3.047 ms
64 bytes from 142.251.46.142: icmp_seq=1 ttl=119 time=2.780 ms
64 bytes from 142.251.46.142: icmp_seq=2 ttl=119 time=2.550 ms
^C
--- google.com ping statistics ---
3 packets transmitted, 3 packets received, 0.0% packet loss
round-trip min/avg/max/stddev = 2.550/2.793/3.047/0.203 ms
Quote from: hushcoden on Today at 11:53:17 AMMany thanks for your explanation, much appreciated.You can not talk to "him" since it's some kind of SPAMbot that has started posting "Machine Learning Chatbot"-like answers on Forums of which many are also outdated and incorrect so watch out !! ;)