Add bandwidth xxxx and it worked perfectly.  Thanks!

 

From: observium [mailto:observium-bounces@observium.org] On Behalf Of Tom Laermans
Sent: Monday, August 04, 2014 5:13 PM
To: Observium Network Observation System
Subject: Re: [Observium] adjusting bandwidth graphs to what the client is paying for

 

They should be there, but I wouldn't call it a workaround as such; the question is "graph what the client is paying for". If you need accurate data, you want traffic accounting and not (just) rrdtool :)

Tom

On 05/08/2014 02:11, Matthew A Harper wrote:

Yeah that’s a workaround… but bandwidth statements should be on any port that has a rate limit anyway.

 

 

From: observium [mailto:observium-bounces@observium.org] On Behalf Of Tom Laermans
Sent: Tuesday, 5 August 2014 10:03 AM
To: Observium Network Observation System
Subject: Re: [Observium] adjusting bandwidth graphs to what the client is paying for

 

Yup, or use the traffic accounting feature :-)

On 05/08/2014 01:52, Matthew A Harper wrote:

Use a bandwidth statement on the port.

 

On a Cisco with a 4mbps link:

 

interface GigabitEthernet0/1

description herpa-derp-derp

bandwidth 4000

duplex full

speed 100

 

Kind regards,

Matt Harper

Network Analyst | ICT Operations
Information Technology Branch | Department of Transport and Main Roads

 

Floor 4 | Transport House | 230 Brunswick Street | Fortitude Valley Qld 4006
PO Box 673 | Fortitude Valley Qld 4006
P: (07) 30661125 | F: (07) 30662044
E: matthew.a.harper@tmr.qld.gov.au
W: www.tmr.qld.gov.au



 

From: observium [mailto:observium-bounces@observium.org] On Behalf Of Anthony Polselli
Sent: Tuesday, 5 August 2014 9:34 AM
To: observium@observium.org
Subject: [Observium] adjusting bandwidth graphs to what the client is paying for

 

Hi,

 

Just checking out the software for the first time and really liking it.  We are using PRTG now and of the things we like about it is per interface we are monitoring, we can set the max x-axis value.  It helps our tech’s to know what speed Internet connection a client is paying for.  We will hand off a 100Mbps interface to the client, but if they are only paying for 20Mbps, we will shape the traffic down to 20Mbps on the router.  When you look at the percent graph in Observium, it’s based on a 100Mbps max possible speed instead of 20Mbps. 

 

Thanks!

 

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