From owner-freebsd-questions Thu May 11 15:37:14 2000 Delivered-To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Received: from illiad.adhesivemedia.com (illiad.adhesivemedia.com [207.202.159.74]) by hub.freebsd.org (Postfix) with ESMTP id E99F037B6D8 for ; Thu, 11 May 2000 15:37:12 -0700 (PDT) (envelope-from philip@illiad.adhesivemedia.com) Received: (from philip@localhost) by illiad.adhesivemedia.com (8.9.3/8.9.3) id PAA97827; Thu, 11 May 2000 15:37:38 -0700 (PDT) (envelope-from philip) Message-Id: <200005112237.PAA97827@illiad.adhesivemedia.com> From: philip@adhesivemedia.com (Philip Hallstrom) To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Date: Thu, 11 May 2000 15:34:03 -0700 Subject: Re: Bandwidth Analyser/Monitor X-Mailer: Tiny NNTPD v0.2 Sender: owner-freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG Precedence: bulk X-Loop: FreeBSD.ORG Yeah, MRTG is pretty good... you can monitor just about anything with it. At one point I was watching bandwidth, apache processes, mysql processes, load, etc... Out of the box it's meant to monitor a router, but it's pretty easy to make it watch a particular interface on any machine. Take a look at the following url for info on that. http://www.adhesivemedia.com/~philip/mrtg/ In article , wrote: >MRTG is a good one. Or you can use ntop. >Keith >On Thu, 11 May 2000, Andy Coates wrote: >> Hi, >> >> Can anyone recommend a free, decent tool for monitoring the >> incoming/outgoing bandwidth on my machine. I'm after one which will give a >> graphical/web interface so I can tell whats been happening at a quick >> glance. I'd also (if its possible) like to monitor what users make use of >> the bandwidth, so I can slap the wrists of people who download hundreds of >> megabytes of stuff. To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-questions" in the body of the message