It's been a few years, but a simple windows version...

http://oss.oetiker.ch/mrtg/


From: List [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Walter Parker
Sent: April-07-14 2:06 PM
To: pfSense Support and Discussion Mailing List
Subject: Re: [pfSense] Network Traffic Monitoring w/o Webgui

Sorry,

FOSS = Free/Open Source Software (what MRTG, Linux, FreeBSD, pfSense are, as 
different from what Microsoft or HP sell)

Cacti is a web based system, from http://www.cacti.net/, that uses the 
technology that powers MRTG to build a nice web based system that monitors 
network equipment. Unlike MRTG, which has to be configured by hand, Cacti 
allows you to add hosts through the web interface (like how pfSense does all 
the pf stuff through the web rather than requiring you to edit config files). 
It is pretty simple to setup, assuming you have a FreeBSD or Linux systems and 
can install the package or port.

I've used it on networks to monitor all of the traffic on the routers, on the 
servers and even on the switch ports (that requires a switch with SNMP 
counters, usually known as a "managed switch").

There are also commercial systems that do the same thing, but they quickly 
become expensive (1000's to 10,000's dollars) as the size of your network grows.


Walter



On Mon, Apr 7, 2014 at 10:47 AM, Brian Caouette 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
What is Cacti? FOSS?


On 4/7/2014 1:42 PM, Walter Parker wrote:
I'd expect that you should be able to enable SNMP, set a non default password 
(please don't use public) and add a firewall rule to allow UDP on port 161 
to/from your mrtg server. I'd recommend using Cacti as your mrtg server (if you 
want a FOSS solution).


Walter

On Mon, Apr 7, 2014 at 10:23 AM, Brian Caouette 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
What about using mrtg to graph the various interfaces? Does PF support this?


On 4/7/2014 12:54 PM, Jim Pingle wrote:
On 4/7/2014 12:29 PM, James Caldwell wrote:
Happy Monday list...

Does anyone have a preferred way of monitoring over all traffic throughput for 
various interfaces via shell/putty instead of having to remain logged in to the 
webgui?  I have several alix based appliances that have had their ISP 
connections upgraded and I am trying to remain outside the web interface as 
much as possible due to the load that it puts on the system.

Any thoughts or experience is appreciated.
The "iftop" package is great for this.

Install it from the GUI and then from the shell run it like so:

iftop -nNpPi vr0

(Serving suggestion, salt to taste)

Jim

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The greatest dangers to liberty lurk in insidious encroachment by men of zeal, 
well-meaning but without understanding.   -- Justice Louis D. Brandeis
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