Thanks for the answers Wei. Is the public traffic broken down by public IP then? Lets say we have 3 public IPs setup on a network; the source nat ip, a port forwarding ip and a static nat ip. Would each of these ips track its own traffic and only the traffic which goes through that IP? If so, we would then have three rows in the user_statistics table for that network, one row corresponding to the aggregation for each public ip?
Thanks On Mon, Jun 3, 2013 at 4:18 PM, Wei ZHOU <ustcweiz...@gmail.com> wrote: > Hi Will, > > Commencts inline: > > > Is this only for traffic between the public and the private network? > yes. > > > Does private traffic affect these numbers if the traffic does not go > through the public? > No. > > > So if two VMs on the same network send traffic between them selves on > their vlan without it being routed through the public ip, will that traffic > show up in the bytes_in and bytes_out data? > No. > > -Wei > > > 2013/6/3 Will Stevens <wstev...@cloudops.com> > > > I have spent some time looking at the usage data in the database and > > looking over the code. > > > > When 'bytes_in' and 'bytes_out' are reported, they are reported for a > > specific network. Is this only for traffic between the public and the > > private network? Does private traffic affect these numbers if the > traffic > > does not go through the public? So if two VMs on the same network send > > traffic between them selves on their vlan without it being routed through > > the public ip, will that traffic show up in the bytes_in and bytes_out > > data? > > > > Thanks... > > > > > > On Fri, May 31, 2013 at 3:08 PM, Will Stevens <wstev...@cloudops.com> > > wrote: > > > > > Hey All, > > > I am trying to get my head around this. From what I understand, if I > am > > > implementing an external firewall I am forced to implement the > > > 'ExternalNetworkResourceUsageCommand'. I have not found a way to not > > > support the collection of usage data. Is that possible? If so, how? > > > > > > My current problem is that the Palo Alto does report usage, but only > per > > > interface. All of the public IPs are configured on one interface (for > > > routing), so I can not determine usage 'per public ip' which is how all > > the > > > other external networks are tracking usage. > > > > > > Any ideas? > > > > > > Thanks, > > > > > > Will > > > > > >