
Also, there is no way at all that that page ever refreshed to the rolling window as displayed unless you already edited the URL yourself.
On 2/14/2018 9:55 PM, Adam Armstrong wrote:
So, looking at the code history, this page has never really operated in any other way. It's used UNIX timestamps for from and to variables in the URL as far back as revision 2500 in 2012.
The one way it would have behaved as a "rolling" display is that if you go to the page without any timestamps set, it uses the default of "from one day ago to now".
It would be possible to modify the page to accept periods (we have an number of these defined) and/or allow rrdtool-style non-numeric time strings (like -1d, -1y).
adam.
On 2018-02-14 20:17:26, Adam Armstrong adama@observium.org wrote:
That page only auto refreshes because every page does.
We didn't make every page auto refresh just so that one would for no reason, obviously.
adam.
On 2018-02-14 20:15:00, Ian Armstrong ian.armstrong@weltec.ac.nz wrote:
Hi,
I have some large TV screens where we monitor network traffic. So we want to see a the most recent traffic of course.
In the previous version of Observium it worked like a charm - I clicked whatever graph of traffic I was interested in and it updated every minute so I could see traffic throughout the day.
I don't want this to sound like a dumb question but what is the point of have the page refresh then - if the graph data isn't being refreshed?
Is there a way to cause Observium to behave as it did - the "rolling time-window" style?
Ian