On Sun, Jan 27, 2013 at 09:21:32PM -0800, Vijay Subramanian wrote: > > + { "ListenDrops", N_("%u SYNs to LISTEN sockets dropped"), opt_number }, > > > > (see the file debian/patches/CVS-20081003-statistics.c_sync.patch > > in the net-tools src) > > > > i.e., the netstat pkg is printing the value of the TCPEXT MIB counter > > that's counting TCPExtListenDrops. > > > > Theoretically, that number should be the same as that printed by nstat, > > as they are getting it from the same kernel stats counter. I have not > > looked at nstat code (I actually almost always dump the counters from > > /proc/net/{netstat + snmp} via a simple prettyprint script (will send > > you that offline). > > nstat pretty much does what you describe which is to parse the > /proc/net files(s) and print the contents. This is one advantage of > nstat over netstat. When you add a new MIB, you do not need to update > nstat.
Well, something seems to be broken in the nstat I have because using the script to parse the start instead I get the the same values as with netstat. [2 minutes later, and after observing the values of nstat changed in the same server] OK, it looks like nstat is showing some transcient values, using nstat -a I get the "absolute values of counters" (as stated in the man page). By default it seems to print the values for the last 60 seconds, so mistery solved. -- Leandro Lucarella sociomantic labs GmbH http://www.sociomantic.com -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to majord...@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/