In and Out both the same
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In and Out both the same
Anyone ever seen this before? In and Out traffic is the same on my graphs.
debug
RRDTool Command:
/usr/bin/rrdtool graph - \
--imgformat=PNG \
--start=-86400 \
--end=-300 \
--title="8620 - Ethernet Interface in slot 19 - |query_ifAlias|" \
--rigid \
--base=1000 \
--height=120 \
--width=500 \
--alt-autoscale-max \
--lower-limit=0 \
--vertical-label="bits per second" \
DEF:a="/usr/share/cacti/site/rra/8620_traffic_in_23901.rrd":traffic_in:AVERAGE \
DEF:b="/usr/share/cacti/site/rra/8620_traffic_in_23901.rrd":traffic_out:AVERAGE \
CDEF:cdefa=a,8,* \
CDEF:cdefe=b,8,* \
AREA:cdefa#00CF00:"Inbound" \
GPRINT:cdefa:LAST:" Current\:%8.2lf %s" \
GPRINT:cdefa:AVERAGE:"Average\:%8.2lf %s" \
GPRINT:cdefa:MAX:"Maximum\:%8.2lf %s\n" \
LINE1:cdefe#002A97:"Outbound" \
GPRINT:cdefe:LAST:"Current\:%8.2lf %s" \
GPRINT:cdefe:AVERAGE:"Average\:%8.2lf %s" \
GPRINT:cdefe:MAX:"Maximum\:%8.2lf %s"
RRDTool Says:
OK
/usr/bin/rrdtool graph - \
--imgformat=PNG \
--start=-86400 \
--end=-300 \
--title="8620 - Ethernet Interface in slot 19 - |query_ifAlias|" \
--rigid \
--base=1000 \
--height=120 \
--width=500 \
--alt-autoscale-max \
--lower-limit=0 \
--vertical-label="bits per second" \
DEF:a="/usr/share/cacti/site/rra/8620_traffic_in_23901.rrd":traffic_in:AVERAGE \
DEF:b="/usr/share/cacti/site/rra/8620_traffic_in_23901.rrd":traffic_out:AVERAGE \
CDEF:cdefa=a,8,* \
CDEF:cdefe=b,8,* \
AREA:cdefa#00CF00:"Inbound" \
GPRINT:cdefa:LAST:" Current\:%8.2lf %s" \
GPRINT:cdefa:AVERAGE:"Average\:%8.2lf %s" \
GPRINT:cdefa:MAX:"Maximum\:%8.2lf %s\n" \
LINE1:cdefe#002A97:"Outbound" \
GPRINT:cdefe:LAST:"Current\:%8.2lf %s" \
GPRINT:cdefe:AVERAGE:"Average\:%8.2lf %s" \
GPRINT:cdefe:MAX:"Maximum\:%8.2lf %s"
RRDTool Says:
OK
Not uncommon to have both inbound and outbound the same on an interface if that particular interface is both the inbound and outbound path for the traffic in question.
An example is the classic 'router on a stick' scenario, where all traffic goes to the router, only to be routed back out the same interface in situations where multiple IP subnets are in use on the same physical environment, or where Vlans are used, and the interface has sub-interfaces that route between each other, but, again, the physical path is via the same link.
What kind of device is this?
Based upon the name of the rrd file, is that a carrier class chassis? (slot19 ??!!) Is that an old Cisco BPX or something
I guess the question(s) would be: What is the expected graph result? Is that not the expected traffic flow?
An example is the classic 'router on a stick' scenario, where all traffic goes to the router, only to be routed back out the same interface in situations where multiple IP subnets are in use on the same physical environment, or where Vlans are used, and the interface has sub-interfaces that route between each other, but, again, the physical path is via the same link.
What kind of device is this?
Based upon the name of the rrd file, is that a carrier class chassis? (slot19 ??!!) Is that an old Cisco BPX or something
I guess the question(s) would be: What is the expected graph result? Is that not the expected traffic flow?
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