Hi

Smart switches can do that for you usually (if they're smart enought) so I would rather look here.

Greetings


_________________
Michael Bernardoff
FSE@netapp
+33 679 028 224


De : Fox, Adam
À : ggwalker@mindspring.com ; gtchen@yahoo-inc.com ; filip.sneppe@gmail.com ; toasters@mathworks.com
Envoyé : Thu Sep 18 02:56:41 2008
Objet : Re: Identify traffic per IP address without using pktt

And there's a lun_top tool on the NOW Toolchest for SAN configs.

FYI

-- Adam Fox
------------------------
Typed with my thumbs on a very small keyboard.


----- Original Message -----
From: Glenn Walker <ggwalker@mindspring.com>
To: George T Chen <gtchen@yahoo-inc.com>; Filip Sneppe <filip.sneppe@gmail.com>; Toasters <toasters@mathworks.com>
Sent: Wed Sep 17 21:22:38 2008
Subject: RE: Identify traffic per IP address without using pktt

Similar is 'cifs top' if you have cifs.per_client_stats.enable set to
'on'.  However, it gives you top talkers based on username (you'd have
to use 'cifs sessions' to get the machine name\IP) and only for the last
3 second rolling average (though there are other options).

Not really a way to get what you're looking for, to my knowledge...

Glenn

-----Original Message-----
From: owner-toasters@mathworks.com [mailto:owner-toasters@mathworks.com]
On Behalf Of George T Chen
Sent: Wednesday, September 17, 2008 5:49 PM
To: Filip Sneppe; Toasters
Subject: RE: Identify traffic per IP address without using pktt

If the traffic is nfs, and you have nfs.per_client_stats.enable, then
nfsstats -l gives the number of nfs requests per host.

-George

> -----Original Message-----
> From: owner-toasters@mathworks.com
[mailto:owner-toasters@mathworks.com]
> On Behalf Of Filip Sneppe
> Sent: Wednesday, September 17, 2008 2:21 PM
> To: Toasters
> Subject: Identify traffic per IP address without using pktt
>
> Hi,
>
> When using "sysstat" from the command line, it's very easy to get an
> idea of the network
> throughput that is currently being handled by the filer, and with
> commands like "vif stat"
> it's easy to get an idea on the interfaces that are transmitting or
> receiving this traffic.
>
> However, I am wondering if is it possible to get an idea on the client
> IP addresses that
> are generating most of the network traffic without having to resort to
> pktt every time,
> then copying over the capture file and analyzing it afterwards ?
>
> Are there any counters availble from a command that show how much
traffic
> a
> particular IP address has sent/received ? I tried various commands
> (eg. netstat has a
> few interesting options) but couldn't find anything that solved my
problem.
>
> At the moment, if I need to determine the hosts that are using most of
the
> iSCSI
> or NFS bandwidth, I have to resort to pktt, and I am looking for a
easier
> way to
> achieve what I want. Ideally, I'd like to get information on the
> protocols and ports
> involved too, but having IP addresses would already be very useful.
>
> Best regards,
> Filip