I am looking for something like webalizer, but more encompassing.
It has to run on a webserver. It should show a summary of various
different types of network traffic.
Things that come to mind that are close to what I am looking for:
http://awstats.sourceforge.net/http://oss.oetiker.ch/mrtg/http://humdi.net/vnstat/
Something that analyzes the packets passing through and keeps statistics; ie.
-most active IP addresses on the network in terms of traffic
-stats on the types of traffic, www, ftp, etc/
Something that can provide insight into what applications and services
are being used on the network.
Does anything come to mind that fits this description?
can someone please volunteer to add this to the wiki?
On Sun, May 11, 2014 at 7:00 AM, <44net-request(a)hamradio.ucsd.edu> wrote:
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> 1. Re: 44Net Digest, Vol 3, Issue 89 (David Ranch)
>
>
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Message: 1
> Date: Sat, 10 May 2014 09:22:32 -0700
> From: David Ranch <amprgw(a)trinnet.net>
> To: AMPRNet working group <44net(a)hamradio.ucsd.edu>
> Subject: Re: [44net] 44Net Digest, Vol 3, Issue 89
> Message-ID: <536E5248.2020404(a)trinnet.net>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed
>
>
> > Do we need a standard ruleset, and documentation to use it, and have this
> > in the wiki? iptables or iproute2? Does anyone HAVE a working iproute2
> > setup?
>
> There are tons of example iptables examples out there though I always
> recommend people to review and tailor the ruleset for their own needs.
> One such non-AMPR example is the IP Masquerade HOWTO example:
>
>
> http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/IP-Masquerade-HOWTO/stronger-firewall-examples.ht…
>
> The above example is distribution agnostic so it should work on your
> preferred flavor but there can be benefits of adapting it to either your
> distribution's native firewall syntax or to some higher level tool that
> incorporates features like QoS, etc (shorewall, etc). I'm willing to
> take a stab at putting a baseline config into the Wiki but give me a bit
> to troll through the archives, review various people's submitted
> configs, etc. and hopefully come up a config that will work for most
> base deployments.
>
> --David
> KI6ZHD
>
>
>
> ------------------------------
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>
> End of 44Net Digest, Vol 3, Issue 96
> ************************************
>
--
Meshnetworks - Rangitaiki Plains Rural Broadband Internet Providers
+64 21 040 5067
On 5/11/14, 9:58 PM, Tom Hayward wrote:
> What speeds are you seeing between these cards?
>
> What host board would you recommend?
I've not got them setup outside just yet, but I have them in a routerboard
rb532 where I was getting 30mbit/s in a 20mhz channel.
http://44.98.254.227/ is the SU
http://44.98.254.226/
44net is the user and no password.
You can play around with them if you want, as they are connected with an 80
dB pad, you can see it on my gallery.
73's
--
Bryan Fields
727-409-1194 - Voice
727-214-2508 - Fax
http://bryanfields.net
I've bought a lot of these cards (over 200), and am making them available for
8.50 per card. They are tested for TX/RX being with in 3db of each other to a
known good card on 3410 MHz, which you will not find on eBay :)
These cover 3400 to 3700 mhz, and do 5, 10, 20 and 40 mhz channel sizes with
+25dBm (600mW) output. These cover the top 100 mhz of the 9cm ham band in the
US (3300-3500), and this is one of the few bands that is not shared with ISM
users. Mikrotik sees them as 5ghz cards, and you just subtract 2ghz from the
frequency to get the real operating frequency.
Pictures of the innards: http://gallery.keekles.org/v/Radio_stuff/UBNT-XR3/
The UBNT website on them http://www.ubnt.com/xr3
Bart, AE7SJ, from the hamwan project has done some testing on them across the
entire band and has the results up here
https://www.hamwan.org/t/tiki-index.php?page=Ubiquiti+XR3&structure=HamWAN
If you want some please email me offlist. I'll be bringing some with to
Dayton and can meet people Thursday afternoon till Friday night to get them to
you. If you want to do this I need your cell number and the number you want.
73's and lets get some high speed packet going on 9cm!
--
Bryan Fields
727-409-1194 - Voice
727-214-2508 - Fax
http://bryanfields.net
> Warning to 'echo', 'discard' and 'daytime' services too
> since as per the 'chargen' they can otherwise be
> used for some nasty denial-of-service attacks.
This is a frequently encountered problem, stemming either from lazyness or
inexperience.
Do we need a standard ruleset, and documentation to use it, and have this
in the wiki? iptables or iproute2? Does anyone HAVE a working iproute2
setup?
This stuff can be a pain I know - a bit like mowing your lawns, but if you
don't do it, eventually you'll be sorry.
On Tue, May 6, 2014 at 7:00 AM, <44net-request(a)hamradio.ucsd.edu> wrote:
>Client modems will scan for the three frequencies in use by the three
sectors, and connect to whichever cell site is available. (Generally one
you have pointed your antenna at.)
Hehehe, then its not "cellular" is it.. hehe, it's going to connect to the
only signal it can see - the AP (sorry, cell site) that it's pointed at.
> Far be it for Steve Write, a newcomer to the field of packet radio,
> who hasn't even successfully built and connected his own TCP/IP node,
> to embarrass himself on a mailing list by correcting the terminology
> used by someone with more technical experience in the field than he.
> No, that wouldn't be right would it? After all he hasn't even finished
> reading all those unwritten Wiki's - and corrected them, loudly and at
> great personal sacrifice - since newcomers are a fount of knowledge
> and wisdom about the errors and omissions in the documentation by
> those who have gone before them.
Hehehe, no I said "point taken and conceded", you read back and see! I
AGREED with the man, AND conceded the point.
Actually, I had allocated a 44/30 25 years ago, ran NOS over laggy 1200bd
AFSK links on a 386 PC with one floppy, and my Internet connection was
VT100 unix shell until I was allowed to run a SLIP link, so I am no
newcomer, as you incorrectly state as fact. Egg on face again!
Actually, hehehe there is also the situation where I have connected many
many TCP/IP units in remote areas over wireless links, but the professional
equipment I use is not really supported by the piecemeal approach so far
with the 44net crowd - I hope to change that. What do you hope to achieve?
Your sarcasm regarding the wiki is also noted. Why you might attack me
about this is very surprising. Quite frankly, there was nothing of value
in the wiki before I pointed out the glaringly obvious fact, and now that
is changing fast, and it will keep changing until the path forward for all
people is abundantly clear.
I think you would just like to take the opportunity to be abusive. I
address the issue concisely, learn from what is said, retract when
incorrect, yet you evade all logic and pursue your ad hominem approach. I
offer regret for offence taken, but you offer more offence?
I don't think you are part of the solution, or part of any solution. For
anything. 8-/
Hi All,
Does any one know if there is a problem with UDP port 520 and
rip44d, I am monitoring it but I see no data arriving here at all.
Have tested from an outside source and the port is receiving all ok.
Comments ?
--
Regards ..... Peter ZL2BAU
ZL2BAU - Waimate BBS - South Canterbury APRS iGate
Located In - Waimate - South Island - New Zealand
Grid Location : RE55MG ( 44.44.26S / 171.03.23E )
New Zealand / World Wide Telnet BBS Forwarding
E-Mail : peter.zl2bau(a)gmail.com
Skype : ZL2BAU or Peter Mallett
Packet Mail : ZL2BAU @ ZL2BAU.#79.NZL.OC
NZART Member Number : 104431
Internet LinBBS : telnet://118.82.200.153:6303
Internet Xrouter Node : telnet://118.82.200.153
Internet Xrouter Node : BAUNOD:ZL2BAU-3 (44.147.210.26)
Xrouter Chat Server : telnet://118.82.200.153:3600
Xrouter APRS Server : telnet://118.82.200.153:1448
LinFBB HTTP Server : http://118.82.200.153:8085
Tcp/Ip Routing : 44.147.210.0/24 (Gateway 44.147.210.26)
Default UDP Port : 93 (Other ports to suite)