> I was pleased to see that our results appear similar. The actual data in the sceenshots is not supposed to mean anything in your situation. I took them at a time when most of my users were offline.
> Two other unexpected results > Packet Size: > Shortest 42 bytes > Average Size 452 bytes > Longest 1,514 bytes > Size <= 64 bytes 7.6% 178,682 > 64 < Size <= 128 bytes 57.3% 1,344,164 > 128 < Size <= 256 bytes 1.5% 34,816 > 256 < Size <= 512 bytes 1.4% 33,974 > 512 < Size <= 1024 bytes 3.9% 90,418 > 1024 < Size <= 1518 bytes 28.3% 664,374 > Size > 1518 bytes 0.0% 0 > > > WHAT Can I set to move this more towards 256 - 512 bytes ? I don't think it is something you do ;-) ... it is rather the quirks in the operation of TCP/IP on the hosts and intervening L3 devices. > > My Biggest Question is on the Network Load Statistics Graphs > What is or causes the Yellow Anomalia ? Whenever the trend as predicted by the graphing algorithm goes out of the bounds of the upper and lower limits of traffic .....usually some quirk in operation .... in my case .... always accompanies abrupt power failure. > > Thank to you > Barry > _______________________________________________ > Ntop mailing list > [email protected] > http://listgateway.unipi.it/mailman/listinfo/ntop > -- ___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ M.A. TAMON B.Eng, CCNP, CCNA "A man owns nothing, not land or money, only his character, the loyalty & courage in his heart" My BLOGs: [ICT Business Integration] - http://ibiztech.wordpress.com [Leadership Lessons from Movies] - http://thbs.wordpress.com [In Search of Excellence & Perfection] - http://perfexcellence.wordpress.com [Technical How Tos & Stuff-at-a-Glance] - http://techowto.wordpress.com _______________________________________________ Ntop mailing list [email protected] http://listgateway.unipi.it/mailman/listinfo/ntop
