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https://www.google.com/search?q=nagios+plugin+network+byte+counter&oq=nagios+plugin+network+byte+counter I haven't used any of them in ages (I'm back to hardware design, thank Science), but I had a plugin (or plugin + SNMP?) that monitored all the interface stats back when. * Drew Van Zandt Cam # US2010035593 (M:Liam Hopkins R: Bastian Rotgeld) Domain Coordinator, MA-003-D. Masquerade aVST * On Wed, Feb 6, 2013 at 1:59 PM, David Rosenstrauch <darose at darose.net>wrote: > ??? I use Nagios extensively on our system to monitor for uptime on > machines/daemons, and alert us when something breaks. But I'm not aware of > it having the capability to show cumulative network usage, by remote host, > across a span of time, for every machine on a network. If it does, could > you point me to which plugin one might use for that? > > Thanks, > > DR > > > On 02/06/2013 12:21 PM, Drew Van Zandt wrote: > >> Cacti, Nagios, and Intellipool are all solid for this. >> >> * >> Drew Van Zandt >> Cam # US2010035593 (M:Liam Hopkins R: Bastian Rotgeld) >> Domain Coordinator, MA-003-D. Masquerade aVST >> * >> >> >> >> On Wed, Feb 6, 2013 at 12:11 PM, David Rosenstrauch <darose at darose.net >> >wrote: >> >> We've got some machine (or machines) sucking up a lot of bandwidth on our >>> network. I'm trying to pin down exactly what, but not having much luck >>> so >>> far. >>> >>> The network's got about a dozen machines, behind a firewall. What I'd >>> like to see is a high-level view of the whole network's bandwidth usage >>> over the span of, say, 24 hours. I.e., which machines are using the most >>> bandwidth (i.e., in Gb), and connections to which external sites are >>> causing most of the hogging. >>> >>> Clearly, micro-level tools like iftop aren't going to cut it here, as >>> they >>> only show me a) what's using bandwidth right now, and b) an individual >>> machine basis. >>> >>> I tried running darkstat on each machine in the network, but it didn't >>> really give me what I was looking for. Again, the reporting was >>> per-machine, and so didn't provide a comprehensive view. (Among other >>> problems.) >>> >>> Bandwidthd looks like it might have some promise, but would take some >>> time >>> to set up to give me a comprehensive view. (I.e., configure a pgsql >>> database.) >>> >>> >>> Anyone have any particular recommendations for a situation like this? >>> >>> Thanks, >>> >>> DR >>> ______________________________****_________________ >>> Discuss mailing list >>> Discuss at blu.org >>> http://lists.blu.org/mailman/****listinfo/discuss<http://lists.blu.org/mailman/**listinfo/discuss> >>> <http://**lists.blu.org/mailman/**listinfo/discuss<http://lists.blu.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss> >>> > >>> >>> >> > ______________________________**_________________ > Discuss mailing list > Discuss at blu.org > http://lists.blu.org/mailman/**listinfo/discuss<http://lists.blu.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss> >
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