Re: SNMP Packet question [7:38824]

2002-03-19 Thread Patrick Ramsey
I think the rrdtool has some of this built into it...it's a great spinoff of mrtg... (it's bascialy the engine and you do with it as you please check out this link. http://people.ee.ethz.ch/~oetiker/webtools/rrdtool/ and look at so of the graphs people are doing there are also some sam

RE: SNMP Packet question [7:38824]

2002-03-19 Thread John Danner
You should take a look at Cricket. http://cricket.sourceforge.net/ We use it to monitor traffic on links, router memory/cpu usage. Here's an example of what it can create: http://cricket.sourceforge.net/support/talks/cricket-examples/route-flap/ It uses the RddTool that someone already mention

RE: SNMP Packet question [7:38824]

2002-03-19 Thread David j
Actually, we are using this OIDs, but they are for switches (number of frames): dot1dBridge.dot1dTp.dot1dTpPortTable.dot1dTpPortEntry.dot1dTpPortInFrames.1 dot1dBridge.dot1dTp.dot1dTpPortTable.dot1dTpPortEntry.dot1dTpPortOutFrames.1 Why don't you try this in a Unix/Linux?: snmpwalk -c public {ip}

Re: SNMP Packet question [7:38824]

2002-03-20 Thread sam sneed
R. Benjamin Kessler had the correct answer. I do use Linux and the problem with your suggestion is that the value given by show interfaces is not the same value as what the snmpget gives. If you have ever cleared the counters on the interface then its definitely not the same. This particular OID i

Re: SNMP Packet question [7:38824]

2002-03-20 Thread David j
Thanks for the information, I think I've read something about this issue in some place. The script I wrote was only for Nortel switches and I hadn't tried to do anything for routers because we're using CW2000 Regards, David. R. Benjamin Kessler had the correct answer. I do use Linux and the probl