On Sun, 2007-11-11 at 14:59 -0500, Bob Goodwin wrote: > I have a system diagram you can view at: > > http://users.wildblue.net/bobgoodwin/sys071031.png Well, looking at your network, you could use MRTG with the 192.168.1.1 device to measure the traffic going through your LAN (and for anything outside that managed to connect to it through your wireless networking). All your LAN traffic (including intruders) goes through it before making out to your microwave internet connection. I think you'd only need to try and directly measure the wildblue receiver if it was capable of wireless connections directly with someone else. Is it wired to the dish, or does it use a wireless link between the receiver box and the dish? You could probably, also, use MRTG on the other wireless LAN switches/bridges, to see which ones are the busy ones. Though that'd mean a plethora of different graphs. If you wanted to trace out where the traffic was coming from, I think you'd want to log your 192.168.1.1 device quite thoroughly, when run a logging analysis tool on it, rather than just a MRTG graph. -- (This box runs FC5, my others run FC4 & FC6, in case that's important to the thread.) Don't send private replies to my address, the mailbox is ignored. I read messages from the public lists. -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list