LSL trending is only good for trending linear data. I have trend lines on all 
my graphs by default and find them useful even when the data is not linear. 
If the data you are trending is total MB in the last 30 days until you get over 
30 days of data the trend will be invalid. 

Vnstat is great and setting an hrule from the estimate is a great idea. If it 
were me I would still put a LSLTrend line on the graph just as an aid. 

-----Original Message-----
From: rrd-users [mailto:[email protected]] 
On Behalf Of Ondrej
Sent: Thursday, August 13, 2015 7:36 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [GRAYMAIL] Re: [rrd-users] RE: RE: Question about trend line

Thank you again for great explanation. My graph shows total consumed data on
WAN0 interface, so not units/sec but total Megabytes that went over this 
interface in range of 30 days.

Reading all this about LSL* I think I should maybe reconsider using LSL 
functions here and find another way of predicting. 

vnstat linux tool gives me prediction that if far different than LSL* ( 9.81 
GiB currently is predicted whereas LSL gives almost 12GiB.)

Maybe using HRULE and the predicted value from vnstat would be a direction.





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