Re: bandwidth usage limits with pf, etc.

2016-01-28 Thread Mihai Popescu
I was using trafshow from ports, it is not so geeky but it works. Maybe there are better tools.

Re: bandwidth usage limits with pf, etc.

2016-01-25 Thread Luke Small
man pf.conf set limit

Re: bandwidth usage limits with pf, etc.

2016-01-02 Thread Stuart Henderson
On 2015-12-31, Mark Carroll wrote: > I was wondering recently what the biggest bandwidth hogs were on my home > network at a certain moment. On Linux I use iftop on the router for > this, but I wonder in OpenBSD if, rather than install the iftop package, > there's something different -- more OpenB

Re: bandwidth usage limits with pf, etc.

2015-12-31 Thread Michel Behr
AFAIK systat displays info, it doesn't allow to limit bandwidth for example On Thursday, 31 December 2015, Brian Conway wrote: > systat will show you most of what pftop does, no package necessary. > > > http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi/OpenBSD-current/man1/systat.1?query=systat&sec=1 > > B

Re: bandwidth usage limits with pf, etc.

2015-12-31 Thread Brian Conway
systat will show you most of what pftop does, no package necessary. http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi/OpenBSD-current/man1/systat.1?query=systat&sec=1 Brian Conway On Dec 31, 2015 2:30 PM, "Mark Carroll" wrote: > I was wondering recently what the biggest bandwidth hogs were on my home > n

Re: bandwidth usage limits with pf, etc.

2015-12-31 Thread Lists
pftop is what youbare looking for. pkg_add pftop > On Dec 31, 2015, at 2:28 PM, Mark Carroll wrote: > > I was wondering recently what the biggest bandwidth hogs were on my home > network at a certain moment. On Linux I use iftop on the router for > this, but I wonder in OpenBSD if, rather than

bandwidth usage limits with pf, etc.

2015-12-31 Thread Mark Carroll
I was wondering recently what the biggest bandwidth hogs were on my home network at a certain moment. On Linux I use iftop on the router for this, but I wonder in OpenBSD if, rather than install the iftop package, there's something different -- more OpenBSD-ish -- I should be doing with clients to