Systat -ifstat : some HOT network cards!
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I thought I'd share the output of systat -ifstat on my BSD gateway. I'd better go check if the network cards have melted!
/0 /1 /2 /3 /4 /5 /6 /7 /8 /9 /10
Load Average
Interface Traffic Peak Total
lo0 in 0.214 KB/s 16777216.000 TB/s 90.108 MB
out 0.214 KB/s 16777216.000 TB/s 90.108 MB
xl0 in 6.444 KB/s 16777216.000 TB/s 1.793 GB
out 32.264 KB/s 16777216.000 TB/s 9.228 GB
dc0 in 27.881 KB/s 16777216.000 TB/s 7.796 GB
out 43.068 KB/s 16777216.000 TB/s 1.384 GB
re0 in 0.000 KB/s 0.092 KB/s 15.557 MB
out 0.041 KB/s 16777216.000 TB/s 30.232 MBDo we welcome our 64-bit-overflow overlords???
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If displaying console output/code please use code or pre html tags. nbsp only works so well.
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I tried both <pre> and [ code ], and neither had any effect in the preview. TRWTF = forum, I guess.
None of the nbsp;s were my addition.
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@robbak said:
I tried both <pre> and [ code ], and neither had any effect in the preview. TRWTF = forum, I guess.
None of the nbsp;s were my addition.
I know. You are excused. It's not your fault.
Let me give it a shot.
/0 /1 /2 /3 /4 /5 /6 /7 /8 /9 /10
Load Average
Interface Traffic Peak Total
lo0 in 0.214 KB/s 16777216.000 TB/s 90.108 MB
out 0.214 KB/s 16777216.000 TB/s 90.108 MB
xl0 in 6.444 KB/s 16777216.000 TB/s 1.793 GB
out 32.264 KB/s 16777216.000 TB/s 9.228 GB
dc0 in 27.881 KB/s 16777216.000 TB/s 7.796 GB
out 43.068 KB/s 16777216.000 TB/s 1.384 GB
re0 in 0.000 KB/s 0.092 KB/s 15.557 MB
out 0.041 KB/s 16777216.000 TB/s 30.232 MB
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# ping -s 1 10.164.71.150
PING 10.164.71.150 (10.164.71.150): 1 data bytes
9 bytes from 10.164.71.150: icmp_seq=0 ttl=255 time=370729508.6 ms
9 bytes from 10.164.71.150: icmp_seq=1 ttl=255 time=370730508.4 ms
9 bytes from 10.164.71.150: icmp_seq=2 ttl=255 time=370731508.4 ms
--- 10.164.71.150 ping statistics ---
3 packets transmitted, 3 packets received, 0% packet loss
round-trip min/avg/max = 370729508.6/84399355.4/370731508.4 msNetwork stats is always fun.
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@robbak said:
Do we welcome our 64-bit-overflow overlords???
Nah, you just plugged the network cable in the wrong way round. Data's coming out the inputs and going into the outputs, making the calculations look negative. But actually you're only transmitting one byte per second. Guess there must be a lot of back-pressure when you hook 'em up the wrong way round like that.