Wow, spacing got lost... The example line should look like this: Unscaled[ezwf]: ym
Eric Brander Eric_Mailing_List at rednarb dot com ----- Original Message ----- From: "Eric Brander" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: "MRTG List" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Friday, April 16, 2004 1:23 PM Subject: [mrtg] Re: locking the graph's scale I think this section taken from the manual may be your answer: Unscaled By default each graph is scaled vertically to make the actual data visible even when it is much lower than MaxBytes. With the Unscaled variable you can suppress this. It's argument is a string, containing one letter for each graph you don't want to be scaled: d=day w=week m=month y=year. There is also a special case to unset the variable completely: n=none. This could be useful in the event you need to override a global configuration. In the example scaling for the yearly and the monthly graph are suppressed. Example: Unscaled[ezwf]: ymHTH,Eric Brander Eric_Mailing_List at rednarb dot com ----- Original Message ----- From: "Nejaa Halcyon" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: "MRTG List" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Friday, April 16, 2004 1:03 PM Subject: [mrtg] locking the graph's scale Greetings, Here's a graph scale question: I'm monitoring my server room's switch and would like to lock the scale of the MRTG graph to the bandwidth of my upstream (2 T1s). That way, when the bandwidth spikes up with a LAN transfer the bandwidth spikes off the graph with the graph maximum still at 3 megabit. I've got MaxBytes set to 3 megabit so I get the cool red line and the percentages are based on 3 meg. I've got AbsMax set to 100 megabit so that mrtg takes the spikes a valid data. The only link I'm missing is locking the graph scale. Is this possible? Any ideas on how? I found this in the archives: http://www.ee.ethz.ch/~slist/mrtg/msg20507.html It talks about a perl script called '95th Percentile.' The idea sounds cool, but that's not what I'm looking for in this implementation. Any help would be greatly appreciated. Nejaa -- "Hackers and academics have uncovered one Windows security hole after another, turning Microsoft into a frantic little Dutch boy at the dike without enough fingers." -- David Pogue, The New York Times -- Unsubscribe mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Archive http://www.ee.ethz.ch/~slist/mrtg FAQ http://faq.mrtg.org Homepage http://www.mrtg.org WebAdmin http://www.ee.ethz.ch/~slist/lsg2.cgi -- Unsubscribe mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Archive http://www.ee.ethz.ch/~slist/mrtg FAQ http://faq.mrtg.org Homepage http://www.mrtg.org WebAdmin http://www.ee.ethz.ch/~slist/lsg2.cgi -- Unsubscribe mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Archive http://www.ee.ethz.ch/~slist/mrtg FAQ http://faq.mrtg.org Homepage http://www.mrtg.org WebAdmin http://www.ee.ethz.ch/~slist/lsg2.cgi
