On Tue, 2003-03-18 at 16:04, debian-security wrote:
> >
> >check out flowscan
> >
> >http://www.caida.org/tools/utilities/flowscan/
> >
> >it gets close to what you want, assuming all the traffic is
> >passing through a cisco router.
A better choice (IMHO) would be flow-tools at
http://www.spl
On Tue, 2003-03-18 at 16:04, debian-security wrote:
> >
> >check out flowscan
> >
> >http://www.caida.org/tools/utilities/flowscan/
> >
> >it gets close to what you want, assuming all the traffic is
> >passing through a cisco router.
A better choice (IMHO) would be flow-tools at
http://www.spl
>
>check out flowscan
>
>http://www.caida.org/tools/utilities/flowscan/
>
>it gets close to what you want, assuming all the traffic is
>passing through a cisco router.
Something like this for Linux would bei really cool !
Nik
>
>check out flowscan
>
>http://www.caida.org/tools/utilities/flowscan/
>
>it gets close to what you want, assuming all the traffic is
>passing through a cisco router.
Something like this for Linux would bei really cool !
Nik
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On Fri, Mar 14, 2003 at 08:03:17PM +0100, Nils wrote:
> How do you monitor what network traffic you have and how much? I want to
> be able to see the origin and destination, type and volume.
Try looking for "netflow". It's a traffic accounting protocol invented
by Cisco and supported by most Cisco
On Fri, Mar 14, 2003 at 08:03:17PM +0100, Nils wrote:
> How do you monitor what network traffic you have and how much? I want to
> be able to see the origin and destination, type and volume.
Try looking for "netflow". It's a traffic accounting protocol invented
by Cisco and supported by most Cisco
also sprach Adrian 'Dagurashibanipal' von Bidder <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
[2003.03.15.0135 +0100]:
> Hmmm. As long as you have specific protocols, you could always parse the
> server logs. ftp and http should be no problem, most daemons write a
> sensible log, I guess. Others (especially IMAP) I don't
also sprach Adrian 'Dagurashibanipal' von Bidder <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2003.03.15.0135
+0100]:
> Hmmm. As long as you have specific protocols, you could always parse the
> server logs. ftp and http should be no problem, most daemons write a
> sensible log, I guess. Others (especially IMAP) I don't
Am Saturday 15 March 2003 00:15 schrieb Stefan Neufeind:
> You might want to try out the packat "iptraf" and monitor the
> interface ipsec0. It gives you various overwiews on traffic going
> over each port in / out as well as other statistics. Only drawback:
> It only counts as long as you leave it
Am Saturday 15 March 2003 00:15 schrieb Stefan Neufeind:
> You might want to try out the packat "iptraf" and monitor the
> interface ipsec0. It gives you various overwiews on traffic going
> over each port in / out as well as other statistics. Only drawback:
> It only counts as long as you leave it
On Sat, 2003-03-15 at 00:22, Stefan Neufeind wrote:
> Is there any good way to account traffic on one computer by user? I
Hmmm. As long as you have specific protocols, you could always parse the
server logs. ftp and http should be no problem, most daemons write a
sensible log, I guess. Others (es
On Fri, Mar 14, 2003 at 08:03:17PM +0100, Nils wrote:
> Hello everybody!
>
> I have small but complicated problem.
>
> How do you monitor what network traffic you have and how much? I want to
> be able to see the origin and destination, type and volume.
>
try ntop traffic-vis darkstat
regards
On Fri, Mar 14, 2003 at 10:39:59PM +0100, Christoph Moench-Tegeder wrote:
> If you are using kernel 2.4, you can use ulogd.
I never got ulogd running properly. I'm running 0.97-1 from woody, and
I was never able to get it to information to any files. Anyone want to
comment on the following u
On Sat, Mar 15, 2003 at 12:22:11AM +0100, Stefan Neufeind wrote:
> While we're still in the field of counting and monitoring traffic:
> Is there any good way to account traffic on one computer by user? I
> searched several times for this but didn't find any good solution.
> Some people said it sh
While we're still in the field of counting and monitoring traffic:
Is there any good way to account traffic on one computer by user? I
searched several times for this but didn't find any good solution.
Some people said it should be do-able with kernel-modules but nobody
knew who had already done
You might want to try out the packat "iptraf" and monitor the
interface ipsec0. It gives you various overwiews on traffic going
over each port in / out as well as other statistics. Only drawback:
It only counts as long as you leave it running on console. But I
guess leaving it running for e.g.
On Sat, 2003-03-15 at 00:22, Stefan Neufeind wrote:
> Is there any good way to account traffic on one computer by user? I
Hmmm. As long as you have specific protocols, you could always parse the
server logs. ftp and http should be no problem, most daemons write a
sensible log, I guess. Others (es
On Fri, Mar 14, 2003 at 08:03:17PM +0100, Nils wrote:
> Hello everybody!
>
> I have small but complicated problem.
>
> How do you monitor what network traffic you have and how much? I want to
> be able to see the origin and destination, type and volume.
>
try ntop traffic-vis darkstat
regards
On Fri, 14 Mar 2003 at 08:03:17PM +0100, Nils wrote:
> Hello everybody!
>
> I have small but complicated problem.
>
> How do you monitor what network traffic you have and how much? I want to
> be able to see the origin and destination, type and volume.
>
> We have two computer labs, with its res
On Fri, Mar 14, 2003 at 10:39:59PM +0100, Christoph Moench-Tegeder wrote:
> If you are using kernel 2.4, you can use ulogd.
I never got ulogd running properly. I'm running 0.97-1 from woody, and
I was never able to get it to information to any files. Anyone want to
comment on the following u
On Sat, Mar 15, 2003 at 12:22:11AM +0100, Stefan Neufeind wrote:
> While we're still in the field of counting and monitoring traffic:
> Is there any good way to account traffic on one computer by user? I
> searched several times for this but didn't find any good solution.
> Some people said it sh
## Nils ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
> How do you monitor what network traffic you have and how much? I want to
> be able to see the origin and destination, type and volume.
If you are using kernel 2.4, you can use ulogd.
If not, there is net-acct. net-acct might apear broken in debian stable,
you may ne
While we're still in the field of counting and monitoring traffic:
Is there any good way to account traffic on one computer by user? I
searched several times for this but didn't find any good solution.
Some people said it should be do-able with kernel-modules but nobody
knew who had already done
You might want to try out the packat "iptraf" and monitor the
interface ipsec0. It gives you various overwiews on traffic going
over each port in / out as well as other statistics. Only drawback:
It only counts as long as you leave it running on console. But I
guess leaving it running for e.g.
On Fri, Mar 14, 2003 at 08:03:17PM +0100, Nils wrote:
>We have two computer labs, with its respective ISP-connections, both with
>volume based rates. These two sites are also connected to each other
>through a VPN. The volume between the two sites should really be marginal.
>Due to what we get cha
On 2003/03/14 08:03:17PM +0100, Fri, Nils wrote:
>
> How do you monitor what network traffic you have and how much? I want to
> be able to see the origin and destination, type and volume.
>
> We have two computer labs, with its respective ISP-connections, both with
> volume based rates. These two
On Fri, 14 Mar 2003 at 08:03:17PM +0100, Nils wrote:
> Hello everybody!
>
> I have small but complicated problem.
>
> How do you monitor what network traffic you have and how much? I want to
> be able to see the origin and destination, type and volume.
>
> We have two computer labs, with its res
Nils wrote:
Hello everybody!
I have small but complicated problem.
How do you monitor what network traffic you have and how much? I want to
be able to see the origin and destination, type and volume.
We have two computer labs, with its respective ISP-connections, both with
volume based rates.
## Nils ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
> How do you monitor what network traffic you have and how much? I want to
> be able to see the origin and destination, type and volume.
If you are using kernel 2.4, you can use ulogd.
If not, there is net-acct. net-acct might apear broken in debian stable,
you may ne
On Fri, Mar 14, 2003 at 08:03:17PM +0100, Nils wrote:
>We have two computer labs, with its respective ISP-connections, both with
>volume based rates. These two sites are also connected to each other
>through a VPN. The volume between the two sites should really be marginal.
>Due to what we get cha
Hello everybody!
I have small but complicated problem.
How do you monitor what network traffic you have and how much? I want to
be able to see the origin and destination, type and volume.
We have two computer labs, with its respective ISP-connections, both with
volume based rates. These two site
On 2003/03/14 08:03:17PM +0100, Fri, Nils wrote:
>
> How do you monitor what network traffic you have and how much? I want to
> be able to see the origin and destination, type and volume.
>
> We have two computer labs, with its respective ISP-connections, both with
> volume based rates. These two
Nils wrote:
Hello everybody!
I have small but complicated problem.
How do you monitor what network traffic you have and how much? I want to
be able to see the origin and destination, type and volume.
We have two computer labs, with its respective ISP-connections, both with
volume based rates. The
Hello everybody!
I have small but complicated problem.
How do you monitor what network traffic you have and how much? I want to
be able to see the origin and destination, type and volume.
We have two computer labs, with its respective ISP-connections, both with
volume based rates. These two site
On Thu, Dec 06, 2001 at 12:33:46AM -0800, Alvin Oga wrote:
[snip]
>
> root# trafshow
> - shows in a small table ( more readable) the ongoing traffic
> ( keeps a ongoing total traffic
>
Or try ntop .
It has a web insterface and shows loads of various statistics.
> for the rest of the
On Thu, Dec 06, 2001 at 12:33:46AM -0800, Alvin Oga wrote:
[snip]
>
> root# trafshow
> - shows in a small table ( more readable) the ongoing traffic
> ( keeps a ongoing total traffic
>
Or try ntop .
It has a web insterface and shows loads of various statistics.
> for the rest of th
--
Patrick Hsieh--<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Hi,
try iptraf,
apt-get install iptraf
--
Patrick Hsieh--<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
hi cho
easiest way is to run the simple tests first...
root# tcpdump
- watch for the ip# and between which 2 machines
root# trafshow
- shows in a small table ( more readable) the ongoing traffic
( keeps a ongoing total traffic
for the rest of the network monitoring too
Hi,
My network has been very slower than before.
Someone suspected the virus like nimda.
So I have to found out who makes very high traffic..
I am not network engineer now.
What things I have to know?
and Which softwares I can select?
I'm asking advice for you.
Have a nice day.
byebye
--
Patrick Hsieh--<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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Hi,
try iptraf,
apt-get install iptraf
--
Patrick Hsieh--<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
hi cho
easiest way is to run the simple tests first...
root# tcpdump
- watch for the ip# and between which 2 machines
root# trafshow
- shows in a small table ( more readable) the ongoing traffic
( keeps a ongoing total traffic
for the rest of the network monitoring to
Hi,
My network has been very slower than before.
Someone suspected the virus like nimda.
So I have to found out who makes very high traffic..
I am not network engineer now.
What things I have to know?
and Which softwares I can select?
I'm asking advice for you.
Have a nice day.
byebye
--
T
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