============================================================== Tim Flavin Internet Access for St Louis & Chicago Internet 1st, Inc Toll Free Sales & Support 800-875-3173 http://www.i1.net For more information email info@i1.net ============================================================== ---------- Forwarded message ---------- Date: Sat, 18 Apr 1998 00:09:12 -0500 (CDT) From: Tim Flavin <tim@i1.net> To: cisco-nsp@iagnet.net Subject: cflowd utils After searching for utils to use the data from cflowd and coming up empty, anybody have any pointers to where something useful may be? Lots of cflowd mentions in the NANOG archives, but no utils. ============================================================== Tim Flavin Internet Access for St Louis & Chicago Internet 1st, Inc Toll Free Sales & Support 800-875-3173 http://www.i1.net For more information email info@i1.net ==============================================================
Date: Sat, 18 Apr 1998 00:09:12 -0500 (CDT) From: Tim Flavin <tim@i1.net> To: cisco-nsp@iagnet.net Subject: cflowd utils
After searching for utils to use the data from cflowd and coming up empty, anybody have any pointers to where something useful may be? Lots of cflowd mentions in the NANOG archives, but no utils.
ftp://engr.ans.net/ was enough of a starting point for me. I've spent this week writing perl scripts to chunk up the output, spit it out into useful files, CGI scripts so that management can view the summarized data from web pages, and forms for doing queries against it. Next week I'll start selectively graphing certain AS speaker->listener pairs using MRTG. If people are interested, I can put my scripts up on the web.
============================================================== Tim Flavin Internet Access for St Louis & Chicago Internet 1st, Inc Toll Free Sales & Support 800-875-3173 http://www.i1.net For more information email info@i1.net ==============================================================
Matt Petach
On Sat, 18 Apr 1998, Matthew Petach wrote:
ftp://engr.ans.net/
was enough of a starting point for me. I've spent this week writing perl scripts to chunk up the output, spit it out into useful files, CGI scripts so that management can view the summarized data from web pages, and forms for doing queries against it. Next week I'll start selectively graphing certain AS speaker->listener pairs using MRTG. If people are interested, I can put my scripts up on the web.
I think it would be great if you could share your work with us! I, for one, am very interested. Brad -- Brad Roldan Hewlett Packard Network Engineer Palo Alto, Ca broldan@corp.hp.com 650-236-3005
On Sat, 18 Apr 1998, Matthew Petach wrote:
ftp://engr.ans.net/ was enough of a starting point for me. I've spent this week writing perl scripts to chunk up the output, spit it out into useful files, CGI scripts so that management can view the summarized data from web pages, and forms for doing queries against it. Next week I'll start selectively graphing certain AS speaker->listener pairs using MRTG. If people are interested, I can put my scripts up on the web.
I think it would be great if you could share your work with us! I, for one, am very interested. Brad
Sorry this took so long, between my SO being sick, my mom coming up for a visit, one of the hard drives dying, and me getting sick, it's been a rough week. :-( I haven't gotten as far along in writing up documentation for the scripts, but you can go ahead and read what I've written up thus far, as well as download the scripts, at http://buckaroo.xo.com/CFLOWD/ (yes, that's the same machine that has all my MRTG stuff as well, for those of you that are on the MRTG list as well). Please feel free to give me feedback or suggestions, and I hope to have the rest of the scripts up there when I'm feeling better next week. :-( Again, my apologies for being so behind this week. Hope this helps get some other people started on really tracking their traffic! For those of you that wrote personally, I'll try to get answers to each of you by the end of the weekend. Thanks again! Matt Petach the not-so-anonymous scripter
participants (3)
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Brad Roldan
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Matthew Petach
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Tim Flavin