From ecc
Diagnoses network interface errors, drops, CRCs, duplex mismatches, flapping, speed negotiation issues, and counter trends on network hardware and Linux hosts.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/ecc:network-interface-healthThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Use this skill when a network symptom might be caused by a physical link, switch
Use this skill when a network symptom might be caused by a physical link, switch port, cable, transceiver, duplex setting, or congested interface.
ifInErrors, ifOutErrors, or ifOutDiscards.Interface counters are evidence, but the trend matters more than the absolute number. Capture a baseline, wait a measurement interval, capture again, then compare increments.
show interfaces <interface>
show interfaces <interface> status
show logging | include <interface>|changed state|line protocol
On Linux hosts:
ip -s link show <interface>
ethtool <interface>
ethtool -S <interface>
| Counter | Meaning | Common cause |
|---|---|---|
| CRC | Received frame checksum failed | Bad cable, dirty fiber, bad optic, duplex mismatch |
| input errors | Aggregate receive-side errors | Check sub-counters before concluding |
| runts | Frames below minimum Ethernet size | Duplex mismatch, collision domain, faulty NIC |
| giants | Frames larger than expected MTU | MTU mismatch or jumbo-frame boundary |
| input drops | Device could not accept inbound packets | Burst, oversubscription, CPU path, queue pressure |
| output drops | Egress queue discarded packets | Congestion, QoS policy, undersized uplink |
| resets | Interface hardware reset | Flapping, keepalive, driver, optic, power |
| collisions | Ethernet collision counter | Half duplex or negotiation mismatch |
Prefer auto-negotiation on modern Ethernet links when both sides support it. If one side must be fixed, configure both sides explicitly and document why. Never mix fixed speed/duplex on one side with auto on the other.
show interfaces <interface> | include duplex|speed
Slice each interface block from one header to the next. Do not use an arbitrary character window; large interface blocks can cause counters to be missed or assigned to the wrong port.
import re
from typing import Any
HEADER_RE = re.compile(
r"^(?P<name>\S+) is (?P<status>(?:administratively )?down|up), "
r"line protocol is (?P<protocol>up|down)",
re.I | re.M,
)
ERROR_RE = re.compile(r"(?P<input>\d+) input errors, (?P<crc>\d+) CRC", re.I)
DROP_RE = re.compile(r"(?P<output>\d+) output errors", re.I)
DUPLEX_RE = re.compile(r"(?P<duplex>Full|Half|Auto)-duplex,\s+(?P<speed>[^,]+)", re.I)
def parse_show_interfaces(raw: str) -> list[dict[str, Any]]:
headers = list(HEADER_RE.finditer(raw))
interfaces = []
for index, header in enumerate(headers):
end = headers[index + 1].start() if index + 1 < len(headers) else len(raw)
block = raw[header.start():end]
errors = ERROR_RE.search(block)
drops = DROP_RE.search(block)
duplex = DUPLEX_RE.search(block)
interfaces.append({
"name": header.group("name"),
"status": header.group("status"),
"protocol": header.group("protocol"),
"duplex": duplex.group("duplex") if duplex else "unknown",
"speed": duplex.group("speed").strip() if duplex else "unknown",
"input_errors": int(errors.group("input")) if errors else 0,
"crc_errors": int(errors.group("crc")) if errors else 0,
"output_errors": int(drops.group("output")) if drops else 0,
})
return interfaces
network-troubleshooternetwork-config-validationhomelab-network-setupnpx claudepluginhub terrytu990/everything-claude-codeDiagnoses network interface errors, drops, CRCs, duplex mismatches, flapping, speed negotiation issues, and counter trends on network hardware and Linux hosts.
Diagnoses router, switch, and Linux host interface errors including CRC, drops, duplex mismatches, jitter, speed negotiation issues, and counter trends. Provides CLI commands and a Python parser.
Analyzes sosreport archives for Linux network configs: extracts interfaces, routing tables, connections, firewall rules (firewalld/iptables), DNS settings to diagnose connectivity issues.