# ntop -i bridge0
bridge0: no IPv4 address assigned
Unless I am misunderstanding the concept of a bridge, I don't think a
bridge can even have an IP address. Any ideas?
A bridge *interface* can have an IP address, though that's not a common
configuration. Try assigning an address to one
# ntop -i bridge0
bridge0: no IPv4 address assigned
and it stops running... try darkstat but read on.
Unless I am misunderstanding the concept of a bridge, I don't think a
bridge can even have an IP address. Any ideas?
A bridge *interface* can have an IP address,
to clarify - an
# ntop -i bridge0
bridge0: no IPv4 address assigned
and it stops running... try darkstat but read on.
Unless I am misunderstanding the concept of a bridge, I don't think a
bridge can even have an IP address. Any ideas?
this is the contents of my /etc/bridgename.bridge0
add xl0
add
Monitoring the total bandwidth through the bridge is easy with `bwm-ng`
or `ifstat`. The problem is that I want to see the bandwidth on a per-IP
address basis. I can do this with `ntop` on an interface that has an IP
address, but when I try to use it on the bridge I get:
# ntop -i bridge0
Check out bandwidthd, i dont think its in ports or pkgs, however it
does an excellent job, gives per IP graphs and total bandwidth used.
never tried it on a bridge thou
On 22/02/07, Ross Davis [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I am running OpenBSD 4.0 and have a bridge set up between two
interfaces:
I am running OpenBSD 4.0 and have a bridge set up between two
interfaces: fxp0 and xl0. I would like a program that gives a fairly
basic report on the traffic flowing through this bridge. I am primarily
interested in knowing which IPs on the xl0 side of the bridge are
pulling the most bandwidth.
On Thu, Feb 22, 2007 at 11:53:33AM -0500, Ross Davis wrote:
I am running OpenBSD 4.0 and have a bridge set up between two
interfaces: fxp0 and xl0. I would like a program that gives a fairly
basic report on the traffic flowing through this bridge. I am primarily
interested in knowing which IPs
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