El día Tuesday, January 31, 2012 a las 11:53:48AM +0100, Milan Obuch escribió:
> Hi, > > I will test it later to see, but AFAIR this should be > running/moving/live graph presentation of signal strength and data > transfer (load/speed) done in ASCII, so a bit rough. Not as nice as > done in 'properly graphical' way, but usable. If you have steady signal > strength, it is not obvious, but when you move a bit, you could see the > change. Just guessing now - # is for signal, v is download momentary > speed and ^ is for upload. Hi, At the end I decided to understand the source code. Btw: the device port /dev/cuaU0.n is hardcoded set to .2, while mine is .3 for the E1750; the -51 dBm value is just nothing more than the best possible RSSI value 31; the #-line (which is in real a fine line of some ncurses(3) symbol, don't know why cut&paste changed this) is a scaled representation of the RSSI values of the last 80x two seconds; the byte value in line 13 of 400kB is always calculated as the max or RX or TX values of the last 80x two seconds history; and finally 'v' and '^' are used to represent the current RX or TX value in scale with this maximum; I will now watch this movie for a while and see if I can draw some clue from that graphic :-) matthias -- Matthias Apitz e <g...@unixarea.de> - w http://www.unixarea.de/ UNIX since V7 on PDP-11, UNIX on mainframe since ESER 1055 (IBM /370) UNIX on x86 since SVR4.2 UnixWare 2.1.2, FreeBSD since 2.2.5 _______________________________________________ freebsd-net@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-net To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-net-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"