I believe there's an ability to set a "fake" port speed in device -> settings (right hand side of device navbar) -> port.

I'm not sure when it was added, but I think it should solve this issue (a better solution would be for vendors to not be so rubbish, but lets not get carried away!)

adam.

On 30/12/2015 21:19:02, Jeffrey d'Ambly <jeffrey.dambly@jasper.com> wrote:

So after looking at this more this interface is a back plane connected to an ASA firewall module, and snmp just reports these things improperly :/

What is the best way to ignore this interface for traffic usage alert checks?

Note that because this is a back plane interface there is not way to set a description :/ (because Cisco)

—Jeff

From: observium <observium-bounces@observium.org> on behalf of Tony Marquardt <tomarquardt@kern.org>
Reply-To: Observium Network Observation System <observium@observium.org>
Date: Wednesday, December 30, 2015 at 1:05 PM
To: 'Observium Network Observation System' <observium@observium.org>
Subject: Re: [Observium] TenG port shows up as 1g

This will happen is you have a 1gbps SFP / connection.  It will show actual connection speed.  Verify at the device you actually have 10gbps connection.

 

 

Thank you,

 

Tony Marquardt

Network Operations Coordinator

Kern County Superintendent of Schools

V: 661-636-4545

E: tomarquardt@kern.org

 

From: observium [mailto:observium-bounces@observium.org] On Behalf Of Jeffrey d'Ambly
Sent: Wednesday, December 30, 2015 1:03 PM
To: observium@observium.org
Subject: [Observium] TenG port shows up as 1g

 

 

I’m using Observium Enterprise and it seems to think this port is 1g (port speed is displayed as 1Gbps) , clicking on the data button shows the following for int speed, and int hight speed. Are these the right values for a 10g port?

 

fSpeed=>1000000000

ifHighSpeed=>1000