On Friday,  7 May at 20:02, Hendrik Boom wrote:
(...)

My home network accesses the rest of the world using a Linux box, whch
also hosts a website, does SMTP, does firewalling/masquerading, and has
a file server for the LAN.  That Linux box is the only thing connected
directly to the DSL modem, which operates in bridge mode.

What tools does Linux have to measure this, so I can find out
what's going on in my network and why.  And maybe even correlate
measurable activity with the perceived hiatuses.

I'd be surprisd if there were none, Linux being born on the net.
(I'd even be more surprised if they were easy to use.)

Maybe I do ned to replace my DSL with a higher-capacity connection of
some kind.  But I'd like to see the numbers.

-- hendrik

When nethogs is overkill, I use bandwidthd. It might not be granular enough for you, though. It's also designed to work through a web interface.

- Antoine

--
Friends are the people who know you, and who like you anyway.
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