Hello misc@,
hosting a lan party yesterday I started to play around with MRTG and
SNMP, but I didn't quite get where I wanted.
I guess somebody using OpenBSD already has a nice MRTG configuration
showing:
IN/OUT traffic
[CPU] load
memory usage
some stuff about pf
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* Andreas Bihlmaier [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2007-02-04 14:04]:
I guess somebody using OpenBSD already has a nice MRTG configuration
showing:
IN/OUT traffic
[CPU] load
memory usage
some stuff about pf (states, blocks/pass)
(using this patch:
John wrote:
And, as far as getting the obsd box to talk to the modem was concerned,
that's it! There is other stuff involved in getting the box to talk to
the lan and v/v. I found it useful getting just the box to work with the
modem, it's not clear in your message if that is also your
Hi,
I just downloaded cd40.iso from ftp://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/snapshots and
installed openbsd on my laptop because I thought the kernel would be -current
but when booting I tried bsd -c and then UKC enable acpi but nothing happened,
so that I went to the site and downloaded bsd and
On Sunday 04 February 2007 12:50, Pau Amaro-Seoane wrote:
Hi,
I just downloaded cd40.iso from ftp://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/snapshots
and installed openbsd on my laptop because I thought the kernel would be
-current but when booting I tried bsd -c and then UKC enable acpi but
nothing
On 2007/02/04 19:50, Pau Amaro-Seoane wrote:
I just downloaded cd40.iso from ftp://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/snapshots
and
installed openbsd on my laptop because I thought the kernel would be -current
but when booting I tried bsd -c and then UKC enable acpi but nothing
happened,
...
Then
On Sun, 4 Feb 2007 19:50:26 +0100
Pau Amaro-Seoane [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I just downloaded cd40.iso from
ftp://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/snapshots and installed openbsd on
my laptop because I thought the kernel would be -current but when
booting I tried bsd -c and then UKC enable acpi
On 2007 Feb 04 (Sun) at 19:50:26 +0100 (+0100), Pau Amaro-Seoane wrote:
:I wait until it's up and then make sudo apmd -f /dev/acpi with the hope that I
:could get apm to work over acpi but when I type zzz or apm -S nothing
:happens...
suspend is not yet supported in acpi.
--
Horses are
On 2/4/07, J. Alfred Prufrock [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
John wrote:
And, as far as getting the obsd box to talk to the modem was concerned,
that's it! There is other stuff involved in getting the box to talk to
the lan and v/v. I found it useful getting just the box to work with the
modem,
Darren Spruell wrote:
It's curious that the outside interface address on the cable modem
is showing up for any reason on the internal network.
Right, this is what first puzzled me too.
You might use tcpdump or similar on your internal network to
determine what kind of traffic it relates to.
On Sunday 04 February 2007 18:37, J. Alfred Prufrock wrote:
Darren Spruell wrote:
It's curious that the outside interface address on the cable modem
is showing up for any reason on the internal network.
Right, this is what first puzzled me too.
Possibly a silly question -- how are you
On 2/4/07, J. Alfred Prufrock [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
tcpdump -vv -x -l results attached below.
I just ran tcpdump; here's the line at which I get the
error/warning/log message:
19:14:03.562039 arp who-has rock tell 24.aaa.bbb.ccc
[Note: 24.aaa.bbb.ccc is the cable-modem box's WAN address.]
On 2/4/07, J. Alfred Prufrock [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
PS: I notice that when I reply-all to Vijay, Darren's and John's email
addresses also show up. What's the etiquette here? Should I reply
to just Vijay and misc, or to everyone whose address is included?
Or will the
Vijay Sankar wrote:
Possibly a silly question -- how are you connecting the cable modem to your
OpenBSD server's external interface? Are they all plugged into a switch or
hub or are you using a cable from the external interface directly to the
cable modem?
The external NIC connects directly
Darren Spruell wrote:
Grab that exchange again with the -n flag to tcpdump. Include the MAC
address(es) of the cable modem if you can get them.
Here it is:
00:14:04.475261 arp who-has 192.168.0.10 tell 24.aaa.bbb.ccc
0001 0800 0604 0001 000b 06bc 7b0e 1891
The high interrupt load vanished after removing the CD-ROM drives from
both V210, as suggested by Mark Kettenis.
Now the CPU load is down to 0%, as one expects, and the systems are
much more performant and responsive than before :-)
# iostat -w 1
ttycd0 sd0
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