> Peak hour... as in: a high consumer of bandwidth is present? > that's why I asked: > Why would such fluctuations be a problem? Are there devices > with gigabit ethernet (or similar) on the network?
Yes, there are devices with gig interfaces on my network... > Many different consumers will create tiny fluctuations which are > hardly visible. Also, they tend to cancel each other out. tiny? it's not tiny!! look at the graphs again please! it's about 2.5 - 3gb !!! every day at the same time? > One consumer with a fluctuating bandwidth demand will create > fluctuations on each of the three channels. When added, those > fluctuations will not cancel each other out but rather will > amplify the result. > When two sinus waves are out of sync, the sum is a flat line. > When they are in sync, the sum is a sinus wave with double the > amplitude. This is what I'm thinking about. I could be wrong, > but it is certainly a possibility. > Have you looked at the data in the logfiles and done the math? Yes and i see important differences! Anyway... i will go home now, and i will check it again tomorrow morning after some changes i did today (threshold wise..) _______________________________________________ mrtg mailing list [email protected] https://lists.oetiker.ch/cgi-bin/listinfo/mrtg ____________________________________________________________________________________ Looking for a deal? Find great prices on flights and hotels with Yahoo! FareChase. http://farechase.yahoo.com/ _______________________________________________ mrtg mailing list [email protected] https://lists.oetiker.ch/cgi-bin/listinfo/mrtg
