Whatever you decide to go with, if you are graphing a gigabit
interface, make sure you use 64-bit counters. The standard 32-bit
counters overflow just past 100Mbit/sec and will give you innacurate
readings.

On 12/21/09, Marcelo M. Garcia <marcelo.maia.gar...@googlemail.com> wrote:
> On 21/12/2009 16:05, Thomas Harold wrote:
>>
>> You can also (ab)use MRTG to graph things like CPU usage&  CPU
>> temperature, disk utilization, or anything else that you can query via a
>> remote shell command or SNMP query.
>
> Hi
>
> In this case why not use Ganglia. Look how MediaWiki uses Ganglia with
> Nagios, and other tools:
> http://ganglia.wikimedia.org/
>
> Regards
>
> mg.
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> CentOS@centos.org
> http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
>

-- 
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Jake Paulus
jakepau...@gmail.com
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