Re: Bandwidth Monitoring program

2006-12-07 Thread Paul Koch
On Wednesday 06 December 2006 02:48, Benjamin Adams wrote: I'm on a network that has a normal store firewall, setup as a NAT. I'm trying to find a way to monitor all bandwidth by clients through that firewall. I don't have the ability to just put an inline box to examine packets. Is there a

Re: Bandwidth Monitoring program

2006-12-06 Thread Josh Paetzel
On Tuesday 05 December 2006 23:52, Brett Glass wrote: Add a few IPFW count rules to count the bytes and packets. Then, periodically harvest and reset the counters via a cron job and write the results to a file. You can then prepare tables and charts which are as simple or as fancy as you

Re: Bandwidth Monitoring program

2006-12-06 Thread Julian Elischer
Josh Paetzel wrote: On Tuesday 05 December 2006 23:52, Brett Glass wrote: Add a few IPFW count rules to count the bytes and packets. Then, periodically harvest and reset the counters via a cron job and write the results to a file. You can then prepare tables and charts which are as simple or as

Re: Bandwidth Monitoring program

2006-12-06 Thread Josh Paetzel
On Wednesday 06 December 2006 10:11, Julian Elischer wrote: Josh Paetzel wrote: On Tuesday 05 December 2006 23:52, Brett Glass wrote: Add a few IPFW count rules to count the bytes and packets. Then, periodically harvest and reset the counters via a cron job and write the results to a

Re: Bandwidth Monitoring program

2006-12-06 Thread Julian Elischer
Josh Paetzel wrote: On Wednesday 06 December 2006 10:11, Julian Elischer wrote: Josh Paetzel wrote: On Tuesday 05 December 2006 23:52, Brett Glass wrote: Add a few IPFW count rules to count the bytes and packets. Then, periodically harvest and reset the counters via a cron job and write the

Re: Bandwidth Monitoring program

2006-12-06 Thread Brett Glass
At 10:53 AM 12/6/2006, Josh Paetzel wrote: He specifically said in his original post that putting a machine between the router and his lan wasn't an option. His question was, Is there a program where I can see whats going on from the computer on that network? The answer to that question is,

Re: Bandwidth Monitoring program

2006-12-06 Thread Art Mason
On Wednesday 06 December 2006 11:53, Josh Paetzel wrote: On Wednesday 06 December 2006 10:11, Julian Elischer wrote: Josh Paetzel wrote: On Tuesday 05 December 2006 23:52, Brett Glass wrote: Add a few IPFW count rules to count the bytes and packets. Then, periodically harvest and reset

Re: Bandwidth Monitoring program

2006-12-06 Thread Chuck Swiger
On Dec 6, 2006, at 10:38 AM, Brett Glass wrote: Is adding a hub or a bridge a topology change? I'd argue that it wasn't. Um. Adding a normal client machine to an existing hub or switch does not constitute a topology change. Adding a new hub or bridge most certainly would constitute a

Re: Bandwidth Monitoring program

2006-12-06 Thread Benjamin D Adams
a bandwidth monitoring program on 2.1.24.35. That will monitor all traffic going through 2.1.24.34. I installed bandwidthd but it's only local traffic I can't get all traffic through 2.1.24.34. I think I need to but a middle man between NET and 2.1.24.34. I don't have any more ips to use

Re: Bandwidth Monitoring program

2006-12-06 Thread Julian Elischer
100Mb hub in the location shown, then you should be able to look at all traffic that is headed to the firewall by listenning on .35 There is no DHCP, I don't think it is possablie to do this but I want to install a bandwidth monitoring program on 2.1.24.35. That will monitor all traffic going

Re: Bandwidth Monitoring program

2006-12-06 Thread Benjamin D Adams
35? There is no DHCP, I don't think it is possablie to do this but I want to install a bandwidth monitoring program on 2.1.24.35. That will monitor all traffic going through 2.1.24.34. I installed bandwidthd but it's only local traffic I can't get all traffic through 2.1.24.34. I

Re: Bandwidth Monitoring program

2006-12-06 Thread Julian Elischer
There is no DHCP, I don't think it is possablie to do this but I want to install a bandwidth monitoring program on 2.1.24.35. That will monitor all traffic going through 2.1.24.34. I installed bandwidthd but it's only local traffic I can't get all traffic through 2.1.24.34. I think I need

Bandwidth Monitoring program

2006-12-05 Thread Benjamin Adams
I'm on a network that has a normal store firewall, setup as a NAT. I'm trying to find a way to monitor all bandwidth by clients through that firewall. I don't have the ability to just put an inline box to examine packets. Is there a program where I can see whats going on from the computer on

Re: Bandwidth Monitoring program

2006-12-05 Thread Josh Paetzel
On Tuesday 05 December 2006 11:45, pete wright wrote: On 12/5/06, Benjamin Adams [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I'm on a network that has a normal store firewall, setup as a NAT. I'm trying to find a way to monitor all bandwidth by clients through that firewall. I don't have the ability to just

Re: Bandwidth Monitoring program

2006-12-05 Thread Joe Holden
Benjamin Adams wrote: I'm on a network that has a normal store firewall, setup as a NAT. I'm trying to find a way to monitor all bandwidth by clients through that firewall. I don't have the ability to just put an inline box to examine packets. Is there a program where I can see whats going

Re: Bandwidth Monitoring program

2006-12-05 Thread Brett Glass
Add a few IPFW count rules to count the bytes and packets. Then, periodically harvest and reset the counters via a cron job and write the results to a file. You can then prepare tables and charts which are as simple or as fancy as you please, without resorting to SNMP (which isn't secure). A