It is very easy to setup .
Step by step How to given below.
rpm -ivh bandwidthd-2.0.1-1.i386.rpm
[root@netmonitor ~]# cat /etc/bandwidthd.conf
##############################
######################
# Bandwidthd.conf
#
# Commented out options are here to provide
# documentation and represent defaults
# Subnets to collect statistics on. Traffic that
# matches none of these subnets will be ignored.
# Syntax is either IP Subnet Mask or CIDR
#subnet 10.0.0.0 255.0.0.0
#subnet 192.168.0.0/16
#subnet 172.16.0.0/12
subnet 192.168.101.0 255.255.255.0
subnet 192.168.102.0 255.255.255.0
subnet 192.168.100.0 255.255.255.0
# Device to listen on
# Bandwidthd listens on the first device it detects
# by default. Run "bandwidthd -l" for a list of
# devices.
#dev "eth0"
dev "eth0"
###################################################
# Options that don't usually get changed
# An interval is 2.5 minutes, this is how many
# intervals to skip before doing a graphing run
#skip_intervals 0
skip_intervals 1
# Graph cutoff is how many k must be transfered by an
# ip before we bother to graph it
#graph_cutoff 1024
graph_cutoff 1024
#Put interface in promiscuous mode to score to traffic
#that may not be routing through the host machine.
#promiscuous true
promiscuous true
#Log data to cdf file htdocs/log.cdf
#output_cdf false
output_cdf true
#Read back the cdf file on startup
#recover_cdf false
recover_cdf true
#Libpcap format filter string used to control what bandwidthd see's
#Please always include "ip" in the string to avoid strange problems
#filter "ip"
filter "ip"
#Draw Graphs - This default to true to graph the traffic bandwidthd is recording
#Usually set this to false if you only want cdf output or
#you are using the database output option. Bandwidthd will use very little
#ram and cpu if this is set to false.
#graph true
graph true
#Set META REFRESH seconds (default 150, use 0 to disable).
#meta_refresh 150
meta_refresh 150
[root@netmonitor ~]# cat /etc/httpd/conf.d/bandwidthd.conf
Alias /bandwidth /usr/share/bandwidthd/htdocs
<Location /htdocs>
Order deny,allow
Deny from all
Allow from all
</Location>
/etc/init.d/bandwidthd start
then browse as below
http://ipaddress/bandwidth
# Bandwidthd.conf
#
# Commented out options are here to provide
# documentation and represent defaults
# Subnets to collect statistics on. Traffic that
# matches none of these subnets will be ignored.
# Syntax is either IP Subnet Mask or CIDR
#subnet 10.0.0.0 255.0.0.0
#subnet 192.168.0.0/16
#subnet 172.16.0.0/12
subnet 192.168.101.0 255.255.255.0
subnet 192.168.102.0 255.255.255.0
subnet 192.168.100.0 255.255.255.0
# Device to listen on
# Bandwidthd listens on the first device it detects
# by default. Run "bandwidthd -l" for a list of
# devices.
#dev "eth0"
dev "eth0"
###################################################
# Options that don't usually get changed
# An interval is 2.5 minutes, this is how many
# intervals to skip before doing a graphing run
#skip_intervals 0
skip_intervals 1
# Graph cutoff is how many k must be transfered by an
# ip before we bother to graph it
#graph_cutoff 1024
graph_cutoff 1024
#Put interface in promiscuous mode to score to traffic
#that may not be routing through the host machine.
#promiscuous true
promiscuous true
#Log data to cdf file htdocs/log.cdf
#output_cdf false
output_cdf true
#Read back the cdf file on startup
#recover_cdf false
recover_cdf true
#Libpcap format filter string used to control what bandwidthd see's
#Please always include "ip" in the string to avoid strange problems
#filter "ip"
filter "ip"
#Draw Graphs - This default to true to graph the traffic bandwidthd is recording
#Usually set this to false if you only want cdf output or
#you are using the database output option. Bandwidthd will use very little
#ram and cpu if this is set to false.
#graph true
graph true
#Set META REFRESH seconds (default 150, use 0 to disable).
#meta_refresh 150
meta_refresh 150
[root@netmonitor ~]# cat /etc/httpd/conf.d/bandwidthd.conf
Alias /bandwidth /usr/share/bandwidthd/htdocs
<Location /htdocs>
Order deny,allow
Deny from all
Allow from all
</Location>
/etc/init.d/bandwidthd start
then browse as below
http://ipaddress/bandwidth
On 1/4/07,
abhishek singh <abhishek.rhce@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Hi,I m using linux as a router and proxy on same machine , i want to monitor bandwidth usage per ipaddress , so plz suggest me the tool that i can use to monitor bandwidth used by which every ipaddress.thanks in advance
Abhishek Kr. Singh
System Administrator
DSC. LTD.
Mob.No. +91-9871563248Send free SMS to your Friends on Mobile from your Yahoo! Messenger. Download Now! http://messenger.yahoo.com/download.php
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Thank you
Indunil Jayasooriya
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