Date: Wed, 03 Nov 2010 07:36:42 +0100 From: Bas Smeelen <b.smeelen@ose.nl> To: Gary Kline <kline@thought.org> Cc: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: is there a utillity...? Message-ID: <4CD102FA.1080604@ose.nl> In-Reply-To: <20101103055527.GA11737@dan.emsphone.com> References: <20101102034203.GA4799@thought.org> <20101102085003.58ce8202@gumby.homeunix.com> <20101103011700.GB3490@thought.org> <201011030144.37369.bruce@cran.org.uk> <20101103055000.GB4073@thought.org> <20101103055527.GA11737@dan.emsphone.com>
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On 11/03/2010 06:55 AM, Dan Nelson wrote: > In the last episode (Nov 02), Gary Kline said: >> On Wed, Nov 03, 2010 at 01:44:37AM +0000, Bruce Cran wrote: >>> On Wednesday 03 November 2010 01:17:00 Gary Kline wrote: >>>> The Bps Down is supposed to me 1M. Up is 864Kbps. I spent hours >>>> googling around and trying things. So far, not much. ---It occured >>>> that I _might_ be geting the full thru-put; that it is data that is >>>> flowing in via the background that stalls things. (I have just shut >>>> off the automated flow.) >>> You can run "systat -if" to see how much bandwidth is being used by the >>> computer. At 1M you should see around 120KB/s downlink. >> Yes... outstanding. Is there any sort of GUI app tat has this in a geaph >> or histogram? > Not a gui app, but I use "netstat -I em0 1" a lot to watch my network > activity. Replace em0 with your nic device. Gkrellm is a gui app that > gives you little network histograms for each interface, but they're little :) Or in Gnome put the system monitor thing on a panel I used to use vnstat for this on servers Path: /usr/ports/net/vnstat Info: A console-based network traffic monitor DISCLAIMER: This e-mail is for the intended recipient(s) only. Access, disclosure, copying, distribution or reliance on any of it by anyone else is prohibited. If you have received it by mistake please let us know by reply and then delete it from your system.
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