Hi Darren,

Normally, Inbound is packets coming in from the wire to the card,
and Outbound is packets coming out of the card to the wire.

So, its Inbound/Outbound from the Router/Switch perspective (ie. The SNMP Agent Perspective).

JFFNMS also adds an option to the Physical Interfaces to invert (flip) the In/Out graphs.

This is useful if you want to show a customer the traffic from their point of view. In our case, we monitor our Core Routers, and for customers wer show the graph 'flipped' so they see it from their perspective.

Hope that helps.

Javier


Darren Gibbs wrote:
Folks.

I'm just getting a little confused with regard to graphs,
and I was wondering if someone could help me get my head
around the way JFFNMS graphs data.

I monitor the performance of a number of ports on Cisco
switches, to which I have connected servers & other
devices.

When JFFNMS generates a graph, it maps inbound & outbound
data rates on the ports.

Where I am getting confused is how JFFNMS defines "inbound"
& "outbound"

It's just occurred to me that "inbound" measuring on a port would be data sent FROM the device or server in question - in other words, data going OUT of the device.

"Outbound" data would be data being sent TO the device out
of the port - in other words, data going IN to the device.

Is this correct, or have I got my head on backwards?

The reason I stumbled on this is because I noticed a device
which I expected to have a large amount of data going IN to
(I.E. being sent TO the server) was showing a huge "outbound" data stream where I was expecting a huge "inbound" stream.


Comments, anyone?

Thanks.

Darren Gibbs
Senior Network Engineer
Sky Channel Pty LTD

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