On Fri, Jul 08, 2005 at 06:03:28PM +0200, BOUDON, Laurent wrote: > Hi everybody, > > Is it possible to alarm bandwidth physical interface, like cpu or disk > space. Yes, you can alarm on an absolute amount or a percentage of the bandwidth (or both). We use the absolute amount to help detect when a server gets hacked. A colo customer who does < 200kbps consistently who suddenly does 1 Mbps is probably hit by a worm.
> For example, if input or output traffic is > 20% (for testing), i want > to make an alarm. You want to make a SLA for it that raises an *event* on an interface which will, in turn, alarm that interface. > SLA INTERFACE 1 Output Traffic < 20% > yes > SLA INTERFACE 2 Input Traffic < 20% > yes > SLA INTERFACE 3 OR > No Assuming the conditions are what they say they are, that looks fine. > On Interface&Events page, no alarm is detected. Did you change the interface config so it has this SLA applied? Did you either wait half an hour or ran the rrd_analyzer by hand? If by hand, what does it say for this interface on the console? - Craig -- Craig Small GnuPG:1C1B D893 1418 2AF4 45EE 95CB C76C E5AC 12CA DFA5 Eye-Net Consulting http://www.enc.com.au/ MIEE Debian developer csmall at : enc.com.au ieee.org debian.org ------------------------------------------------------- This SF.Net email is sponsored by the 'Do More With Dual!' webinar happening July 14 at 8am PDT/11am EDT. We invite you to explore the latest in dual core and dual graphics technology at this free one hour event hosted by HP, AMD, and NVIDIA. To register visit http://www.hp.com/go/dualwebinar _______________________________________________ jffnms-users mailing list [email protected] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/jffnms-users
