Hi Imesh,

Following is one of the sample statistics values.IMO we can get the "Conns"
as for our statistic purposes.Here  192.168.56.60 is the access IP of the
service and 192.168.56.41, 192.168.56.42
are real server IPs that we are load balancing.

IP Virtual Server version 1.2.1 (size=4096)
Prot LocalAddress:Port               Conns   InPkts  OutPkts  InBytes
OutBytes
  -> RemoteAddress:Port
TCP  192.168.56.60:8080                4  1262079        0 75724740        0
  -> 192.168.56.41:8080                  1        4        0      240
 0
  -> 192.168.56.42:8080                  3  1262075        0 75724500
 0

Thanks,
Gayan

On Mon, May 25, 2015 at 9:24 PM, Imesh Gunaratne <im...@apache.org> wrote:

> Hi Gayan,
>
> Can you please share some sample statistic values? Will us be able to find
> in-flight request count?
>
> Thanks
>
> On Mon, May 25, 2015 at 7:19 PM, Gayan Gunarathne <gay...@wso2.com> wrote:
>
>> For the LVS load balancer extension statistics generation , we can use
>> the Linux Virtual Server administration[1] command.
>>
>> ipvsadm -L -n --stats
>>
>> There we can get the in request weight of the LVS server.We can integrate
>> this to the LVS load balancer extension as well. WDYT?
>>
>> [1] http://linux.die.net/man/8/ipvsadm
>>
>> Thanks,
>> Gayan
>> --
>>
>> Gayan Gunarathne
>> Technical Lead
>> WSO2 Inc. (http://wso2.com)
>> email  : gay...@wso2.com  | mobile : +94 766819985
>>
>>
>
>
>
> --
> Imesh Gunaratne
>
> Senior Technical Lead, WSO2
> Committer & PMC Member, Apache Stratos
>



-- 

Gayan Gunarathne
Technical Lead
WSO2 Inc. (http://wso2.com)
email  : gay...@wso2.com  | mobile : +94 766819985

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