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Date:      Wed, 06 Dec 2006 08:11:09 -0800
From:      Julian Elischer <julian@elischer.org>
To:        Josh Paetzel <josh@tcbug.org>
Cc:        freebsd-net@freebsd.org, Benjamin Adams <freebsdworld@gmail.com>, Brett Glass <brett@lariat.net>
Subject:   Re: Bandwidth Monitoring program
Message-ID:  <4576EB9D.2040300@elischer.org>
In-Reply-To: <200612060313.23621.josh@tcbug.org>
References:  <6199c3dc0612050848g16a0911dga145485ba14bf21f@mail.gmail.com>	<200612060552.WAA04850@lariat.net> <200612060313.23621.josh@tcbug.org>

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Josh Paetzel wrote:
> On Tuesday 05 December 2006 23:52, Brett Glass wrote:
>> Add a few IPFW "count" rules to count the bytes and packets. Then,
>> periodically harvest and reset the counters via a cron job and
>> write the results to a file. You can then prepare tables and charts
>> which are as simple or as fancy as you please, without resorting to
>> SNMP (which isn't secure). A little bit of code in your favorite
>> scripting language will do it. And of course you can output to a
>> graphing package, though for me a simple histogram using asterisks
>> has sufficient precision in most cases.
>>
>> --Brett Glass
>>
> 
> Just curious.....but where is he going to run ipfw?  I seriously doubt 
> his router can run it, and what good is it going to do him to run it 
> on a machine on the network if the network is switched?  It's not 
> going to be able to see any of the traffic other than what that 
> specific machine is sending/receiving.
> 

run ipfw in layer 2 after turning on promiscuous mode and attaching it 
to a hub.

I do it all the time.




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