Adjust the nicstat man page to just be Solaris specific.
These changes will be passed back upstream, to see if there is a way for
a Solaris or Linux man page to be obtained from a merged version
--- nicstat.1.orig 2015-10-27 15:04:24.672109098 -0700
+++ nicstat.1 2015-10-27 15:05:16.958756640 -0700
@@ -14,7 +14,7 @@
.SH NAME
-nicstat, enicstat \- print network traffic statistics
+nicstat \- print network traffic statistics
.\" ========================================================================
.SH SYNOPSIS
.B nicstat
@@ -23,9 +23,6 @@
.RI [-S int:mbps[fd|hd]]
.I [interval
.I [count]]
-.PP
-.B enicstat
-\fI<same options & operands>
.\" ========================================================================
.SH DESCRIPTION
@@ -106,17 +103,7 @@
Show statistics for only the interface(s) listed. Multiple interfaces
can be listed, separated by commas (,).
.TP 1i
-.BI \-S int:speed[fd|hd]
-(Linux only).
-Specify the speed (and optionally duplex mode) of one or more interfaces.
-The given speed(s) are in megabits/second.
-The duplex mode will default to "full" unless a suffix beginning with
-"h" or "H" is specified.
-Speed and duplex mode are obtained automatically on Solaris using the
-"ifspeed" and "link_duplex" kstat values.
-.TP 1i
.B \-k
-(Solaris only).
Search for active network interfaces by looking for kstat "link_state"
statistics with a value of 1. This is only of value on systems
running Solaris 10 (or early releases of Solaris 11 Express), with
@@ -294,37 +281,18 @@
.fi
.\" ========================================================================
.SH SEE\ ALSO
-.BR netstat (1M)
-.BR kstat (1M),
+.BR netstat (8)
+.BR kstat (8),
.BR kstat (3KSTAT),
-.BR mibiisa (1M),
-.BR ethtool (8)
+.BR mibiisa (8)
"nicstat - the Solaris and Linux Network Monitoring Tool You Did Not Know You Needed"
.RI - http://blogs.oracle.com/timc/entry/nicstat_the_solaris_and_linux
.\" ========================================================================
.SH NOTES
.PP
-On Linux, the NoCP, Defer, TCP InKB, and TCP OutKB statistics are
-always reported as zero.
-.PP
The way that saturation is reported is a best effort, as there is no
standardized naming to capture all errors related to an interface's
inability to receive or transmit a packet. Monitoring %Util and
packet rates, along with an understanding of the specific NICs may be
more useful in judging whether you are nearing saturation.
-.PP
-The
-.B \-S
-option is provided for the Linux edition as nicstat requires
-super-user privilege to obtain speed and duplex mode information for
-interfaces.
-If you are unable to set up nicstat as setuid-root, a script named
-.B enicstat
-is available, which uses the
-.B ethtool
-utility then calls nicstat with an
-.B \-S
-value.
-.B ethtool
-itself requires super-user privilege for this to work.