Clarification of traffic measurement units
Posted: Wed Jan 15, 2014 8:51 am
Hello,
I am a bit confused and could use a little clarification on what units of measurement are used to measure port traffic. I have a Linux server that eth0 is being measured. The Service State perf data is eth0_txbyt=1344.00B and eth0_rxbyt=993.00B. On the host it shows the Service Status info as NET USAGE OK eth0:2.28KB. Am I assuming this is Bytes and Kilobytes and is it per second? I though traffic was measured using bits such as Mbps/Kbps/Bps and such.
I then have a look at a switch port that is being monitored via snmp. The Status Information is Traffic OK - Avg. In = 84.8 KB/s, Avg. Out = 171.9 KB/s. Is this then Kilobytes per second? Is that normal for traffic measuring? When we talk about a port we refer to it in terms of 10/100/1000 Megabits per second or 1 Gigabit per second.
Thanks for any clarification!
Regards,
Shawn
I am a bit confused and could use a little clarification on what units of measurement are used to measure port traffic. I have a Linux server that eth0 is being measured. The Service State perf data is eth0_txbyt=1344.00B and eth0_rxbyt=993.00B. On the host it shows the Service Status info as NET USAGE OK eth0:2.28KB. Am I assuming this is Bytes and Kilobytes and is it per second? I though traffic was measured using bits such as Mbps/Kbps/Bps and such.
I then have a look at a switch port that is being monitored via snmp. The Status Information is Traffic OK - Avg. In = 84.8 KB/s, Avg. Out = 171.9 KB/s. Is this then Kilobytes per second? Is that normal for traffic measuring? When we talk about a port we refer to it in terms of 10/100/1000 Megabits per second or 1 Gigabit per second.
Thanks for any clarification!
Regards,
Shawn