'Urro... What the other folks said, it's the default... You get used to it. :-).
And it's all good over this way, although litle busy for my liking right now. Cheers, Me. On Thu, 2006-11-09 at 17:14 +1300, Zane Gilmore wrote: > Chris, > howzit? > > I was just looking at those graphs and noticed that you Time axis > appears to be backwards. > > Is there a "sysadminy" reason for this? > > Regards, > Zane > > > > Chris Hellyar wrote: > > Have you tried mrtg? It's cfgmaker tool will scrape the snmp oid's from > > most things. For that matter it's a good tool all round if you just > > want pretty graphs of traffic... > > > > for e.g: http://weather.selwyn.govt.nz/mrtg is some of the stuff at > > work. > > > > Cheers, Me. > > > > > > > > On Tue, 2006-11-07 at 09:14 +1300, Jamie Dobbs wrote: > >> I've been tearing my hair out for the last 24 hours trying to get one of > >> the various snmp tools available on Linux to be able to extract data from > >> my Netgear DG834 ADSL router. > >> Tools in Windows can access the device fine and get stats (and is doing so > >> at the moment), but in Linux I do not seem to be able to get information > >> bvack from the router using `snmpwalk -Os 192.168.1.1 public system` or > >> similar commands. Is there a firewall in Ubuntu that could be stopping the > >> information being sent back? Am I doing something wrong? > >> As I said I can get information using tools in Windows on the same PC that > >> Linux is on, but not in Linux. > >> Any and all help appreciated as I really need to have some way to monitor > >> the real connect speeds I am getting as I am having major issues where my > >> connect speed keeps dropping back to 64Kbps and despite multiple resets > >> etc. does not get much better than around 448Kbps with it should be 3.5Mbps > >> > >> > >> > >> > > > >
