That looks suspect to me; that seems like a lot for cable modem level traffic.
I'd check if your mbufs number ever goes down. -----Original Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Matthew R. Dempsky Sent: Friday, September 15, 2006 4:46 PM To: misc@openbsd.org Subject: Re: mbuf leak with rl On Thu, Sep 14, 2006 at 10:38:35AM -0500, Karle, Chris wrote: > If you're using a "rl*" can you take a look at your mbuf usage (netstat -m)? On my OpenBSD 3.9 firewall, sis0 is connected to my internal network, and rl0 is connected to my cable modem. $ netstat -m 2546 mbufs in use: 2525 mbufs allocated to data 5 mbufs allocated to packet headers 16 mbufs allocated to socket names and addresses 630/648/6144 mbuf clusters in use (current/peak/max) 1952 Kbytes allocated to network (97% in use) 0 requests for memory denied 0 requests for memory delayed 0 calls to protocol drain routines $ dmesg | grep -e GENERIC -e rl -e sis OpenBSD 3.9 (GENERIC) #617: Thu Mar 2 02:26:48 MST 2006 [EMAIL PROTECTED]:/usr/src/sys/arch/i386/compile/GENERIC sis0 at pci0 dev 4 function 0 "SiS 900 10/100BaseTX" rev 0x91: irq 11, address 00:14:2a:b7:c9:17 rlphy0 at sis0 phy 9: RTL8201L 10/100 PHY, rev. 1 rl0 at pci0 dev 11 function 0 "Accton MPX 5030/5038" rev 0x10: irq 11, address 00:e0:29:58:9b:eb rlphy1 at rl0 phy 0: RTL internal PHY