Dear JFFNMS author or experienced users, We would like to know how JFFNMS calculates the average interface performance data value. To our understanding, is it: (total (sum of) performance data over a specific period) / (no. of sampling). Where can we find the formula from the JFFNMS configuration file? Could you plase help explain how the average is calulated over different time duration?
We're testing the functionality and data accuracy of JFFNMS. We've provisioned a Cisco c2924 switch port object (or "Interface", in JFFNMS's terminology) at about 6:00pm yesterday. For the traffic graph, we're checking the data collected and calculated by JFFNMS up to 11:30am today (07-Apr-06). The average values are shown as below: Graph 1 (all the data are colleted within a time period) : from : today 10:30 to : today 11:30 Inbound average : 1.32 kbps Outbound average : 79.82 kbps Graph 2 (with some undefined period/the time during which the monitored object hasn't been provisoned yet(10:30-18:00)) : from : 2006-04-06 10:30 to : today 10:30 Inbound average : 2.89 kbps Outbound average : 7.04 kbps Graph 3 (with most of the time during which the monitored object hasn't been provisoned yet(2006-03-31 to yesterday 2006-04-06 18:00) from : 2006-03-31 10:30 (last week) to : today 10:30 Inbound average : 2.92 kbps (which is close to Graph 2) Outbound average : 7.55 kbps Graph 4 (with most of the time during which the monitored object hasn't been provisoned yet(2006-03-31 to yesterday 2006-04-06 18:00) from : 2006-03-31 10:30 (last week) to : today 10:30 Inbound average : 2.92 kbps (which is close to Graph 2) Outbound average : 7.55 kbps Graph 5 (with almost all of the time during which the monitored object hasn't been provisioned yet (2005-04-07 to yesterday 2006-04-06 18:00) from : 200-04-07 10:30 (last year) to : today 10:30 Inbound average : 7.97 kbps (??? why is it larger ???) Outbound average : 16.29 kbps (??? why is it larger ???) Thanks in advance! __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around http://mail.yahoo.com ------------------------------------------------------- This SF.Net email is sponsored by xPML, a groundbreaking scripting language that extends applications into web and mobile media. Attend the live webcast and join the prime developer group breaking into this new coding territory! http://sel.as-us.falkag.net/sel?cmd=lnk&kid=110944&bid=241720&dat=121642 _______________________________________________ jffnms-users mailing list jffnms-users@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/jffnms-users