Thanks!
I actually read Alex's tutorial 3 times and the 'm' meaning still eluded 
me. Reading it once again, and I see the blurb under 'graphics with 
math'. I found that adding

 --units-exponent 0

replaced the '100 m' with the 0.1 that I had hoped for. Is this the 
correct way to combat this? Or is there another standard method that 
should be considered the "correct" way?

Thanks,
Charles

On Wed, 23 Oct 2002, H. D. Lee wrote:

> 
> On 2002.10.23_08:24:53_+0000, Charles Menzes wrote:
> > 
> > Hello all,
> 
> Hi Charles,
> 
> > I'm graphing system load information on a linux machine. Typically the 
> > values that I am updating the .rrd with are in the format '0.43' or 
> > something similar, however my y-axis is starting with 0 and increments
> > to '100 m'. I'm not sure just where this value is coming from. Has anyone 
> > seen this before?
> > 
> 
> If you read Alex's rrdtool tutorial, you will see that m is not an
> abbreviation from anything (meter in the example), but /1000. 
> 100/1000 equals 0.1. 
> 
> > Thanks very much for your input,
> 
> You're welcome.
> 
> > Charles
> > 
> 


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