Firstly, you want to set scaled mode on the target, which means Unscaled[_]: n
(The n means 'none' -- this only works on MRTG 2.16 or later though). If you have any Unscaled[] directives in there already then remove them. If using Routers2, then interfaces default to Unscaled mode unless oyu do this. The previous poster had the instructions backwards... If you are using Routers2 as a frontend to MRTG/RRD, then the 'Rescale' button will cycle through a set of different scaling options to show you the detail. Also, the 'Compact' display allows you to list all active interfaces on the device and sort them by traffic descending, so you can see the interfaces in order of usage. Finally, the Incoming and Outgoing summary graphs will display all interfaces on the same graph to allow you to make comparisons. Steve ________________________________________ From: [email protected] [[email protected]] On Behalf Of Travis Rabe [[email protected]] Sent: Saturday, 9 January 2010 7:01 a.m. To: [email protected] Subject: [mrtg] Scaling The Graphs For More Meaningful Results Hello, I use MRTG on the three interfaces of my firewall. I have a WAN, DMA and LAN. The WAN interface has a max speed of 1Mbps and while the LAN and DMA have a max speed og 100Mbps. When my T1 is maxed out it would be nice to see which interface is using the bandwidth; however, when I look at the MRTG graphs for the LAN and the DMZ, they both scale so large that 1Mbs is a little bump so I cannot determine anything of any value. My question is, is there anyway to scale an interface exponentially or in some other fashion to make these more useful when comparing interfaces with different maximum values? Thanks, Travis _______________________________________________ mrtg mailing list [email protected] https://lists.oetiker.ch/cgi-bin/listinfo/mrtg _______________________________________________ mrtg mailing list [email protected] https://lists.oetiker.ch/cgi-bin/listinfo/mrtg
