Date: Tue, 21 Feb 2006 16:14:51 +0000 From: Robin Becker <robin@reportlab.com> To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: traffic analysis Message-ID: <43FB3C7B.2000307@chamonix.reportlab.co.uk> In-Reply-To: <43FAEC1C.7060103@jeremykister.com> References: <43FAE72D.4000208@chamonix.reportlab.co.uk> <43FAEC1C.7060103@jeremykister.com>
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Jeremy Kister wrote: > On 2/21/2006 5:10 AM, Robin Becker wrote: >> Our freeBSD 6.0 host is not yet in production, but appears to have outgoing >> traffic of around 140Mb/day; the http logs say 16 hits etc. The host provider >> said this > > 140Mb/day is really not that much. > > Unless my math is wrong because it's past bed time: > 140Mb/day divided by 86400 seconds per day = 0.001 Mb/second (average) > 0.001 Mb/second = 1.659 Kb/second > > this means a dialup modem could handle your average traffic. > > and remember Mb is Megabits, not MegaBytes. > >> "The server is on a /20-network, and this leads to high amounts of >> background traffic (ARP, broadcast, etc.). These traffic types are >> likely to be the reason for most of your outbound traffic." > > Is your server's netmask 255.255.240.0 ??? If it is, call your > provider, laugh at them, and then call a new provider. If your netmask > is not 255.255.240.0, call the person who gave you that line, laugh at > them, and try to find someone more intelligent :) > > You're surely not on a subnet with 4000 hosts. > ifconfig says this vr0: flags=8843<UP,BROADCAST,RUNNING,SIMPLEX,MULTICAST> mtu 1500 inet6 xxxx::xxx:xxxx:xxxx:xxxx%vr0 prefixlen 64 scopeid 0x1 inet xx.zz.yy.vv netmask 0xfffff000 broadcast xx.zz.ww.255 ether .............. media: Ethernet autoselect (100baseTX <full-duplex>) status: active so should I be seeking another provider? >> I'm not sure I follow this argument. Does this mean I'm responding to large >> number of spurious requests? The provider's analysis of the input volume is >> pretty small (0Mb). > > If you were on a network with 4000 other machines, it could certainly > cause problems. But i'd bet that someone is just confused -- i'd bet > that their entire network space is a /20, and they have allocated a > small part of it for your network. -- Robin Becker
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