On 10Apr2013 05:35, Bob Goodwin - Zuni, Virginia, USA <bobgoodwin@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: | On 09/04/13 21:07, Cameron Simpson wrote: | >In fact, that's 1MB per second (12Mbps!) That should be glaringly obvious | >with trafshow or similar tools. Which will show you the IP and port involved. | | Yes and the system sometimes runs a lot faster than specified. I yum | installed trafshow, never ran across that application before, and it | works as expected on p4p1 but that not where it needs to be, I need | to find how to point it at the router traffic. It seems that would | show me why my efforts so far have not helped? Well, you could get your DHCP server to make your linux box the default router. Then set you're linux box's default route to be the router by hand, and tell it to forward packets: echo 1 >/proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward Then next time the Mac (or whatever) connects to your LAN you should be able to watch the traffic. Of course, you'll also be burdened with forwarding all the LAN traffic across your linux box, but for purposes of debugging. And of course, Macs are BSD UNIX. Run trafshow there! You might have to install MacPorts (or Fink or HomeBrew etc) to get trafshow installed, but any Mac _wants_ that anyway! And of course you could hand set the default route on the Mac for debugging purposes just as with any UNIX box, and avoid mucking with the router DHCP advertisements until you want to frib with iPhones etc. Cheers, -- Cameron Simpson <cs@xxxxxxxxxx> We're supposed to be the guys with Freedom and Democracy right? Well, how come the Russians get to shell their Parliament and we don't get to do it to ours? Mike Holmes, fofp@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx -- users mailing list users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines Have a question? Ask away: http://ask.fedoraproject.org