The colours do actually match!



Though these graphs aren't really intended for you to be able to pick out individual ports, there are usually too many for that to be possible.

It looks like there's a bug in the colour generating code which is generating one too few colours and the last one is wrapping back to the first colour. The code is supposed to generate $entries number of colours between two points to make a gradient.

adam.

Tony Guadagno wrote on 27/09/2023 14:52:

Adam, I think I am starting to understand, however, here is a snippet of the total traffic graph since 6am and another of gig0/0/0 same time period:

 

Total:                                                 gig0/0/0

  

 

On the total graph, the transmits and receives from gig0/0/0 are lt-purple and lt-green.  But in the legend for the total traffic, those colors don’t match…I guess that is what I am confused about, how do I know (on the total traffic graph) which interface is contributing if the color on the graph does not match the color on the legend?

 


 

 

 

Tony Guadagno

O +1 585 577 1003

C +1 585 703 6700

E tonyg@guadagnoconsulting.com

cid:image001.jpg@01D84DD6.FC9912E0

 

From: Adam Armstrong via observium <observium@lists.observium.org>
Sent: Wednesday, September 27, 2023 8:56 AM
To: Tony Guadagno via observium <observium@lists.observium.org>
Cc: Adam Armstrong <adama@observium.org>
Subject: [Observium] Re: sorry if this is a dumb question, but how do i read traffic graphs???

 

Hi Tony,

This is a stacked graph for a single device's total traffic, the layers are stacked in the order they're presented on the legend. The legend shows the "out" colours as lines because they're "fake" drawn as lines to get positive values in the legend.

Gi0 and Gi0/0/2 in on this system have no traffic, so aren't really relevant as they aren't visible on the graph. It's a little odd the colours have cycled with only 4 entries, that's likely just a quirk of the colour deciding function.

Anything positive on the axis is in/receive, and anything negative is out/transmit, the same as our other graphs.

adam.

Tony Guadagno via observium wrote on 27/09/2023 13:45:

Hi, after several years of using Observium, it just occurred to me recently that I am not sure how to read the traffic graphs.  For example, I always thought that above “0” on the horizontal axis was transmit and below was receive.  But as I look closer, that cannot be.  Also, the colors on the graph do not seem to line up with the legend…for example in this graph, I see 4 colors, light/dark green and light/dark purple.  But the legend seems to have the same color for g0/0/0 as g0.

I guess my questions are:

How are transmits and receives represented on the traffic graphs?

Why are the colors in the graph not lining up with the legend?

What does negative 100M represent?

 

thanks

 


 

 

 

 

Tony Guadagno

O +1 585 577 1003

C +1 585 703 6700

E tonyg@guadagnoconsulting.com

cid:image001.jpg@01D84DD6.FC9912E0

 




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