On Tue, 2007-01-23 at 10:19 -0500, Bob Goodwin wrote: > > My ISP Wildblue limits me to 5 gig's upload and 17 down over a thirty > day period. For the last nine months this has not been a problem, > however last month they made a system change and said they were > measuring usage more accurately. Now we are running perilously close to > the limits for the last thirty days and I'm not certain why. > > We have four computers [FC6, Mac, and W2k] running on the wireless LAN > which appears as eth0 to my computer. The system is comprised of the > satellite receiver/modem, a Netgear wireless router, and some Linksys > wireless bridges and/or adapters. Can someone tell me how I can track > usage and determine how much each user is consuming? > I do not have a good answer to this question, but I have suggestions. Each device should, hopefully, keep interface statistics. It might be possible to gather those statistics, periodically, using snmp, if the device allows snmp. Another possibility depends on your configuration. Does all the traffic between you and the ISP Wildblue go through a router or bridge you control? It is a long-shot, depending on what devices you have and what features they support, but, if the router or bridge you control, that is the point of connection with Wildblue, supports VLANs, you might be able to configure that device to have a VLAN for each of the devices on your LAN, and then gather statistics based on VLANs. Another possibility is to use a program, such as iptraf, for monitoring LAN traffic. "yum install iptraf" Please be certain to force promiscuous mode in any LAN traffic monitor so you see all traffic that gets to the interface, and not just traffic that is unicast to/from the PC, or traffic that is multicast or broadcast, where you are running the LAN traffic monitor. Also, please be careful if you have any switches or bridges in your LAN because a switch or bridge will "learn" which port on the switch or bridge is the way to reach a unicast MAC address and will only send the unicast packet out that port. Your PC, running the LAN traffic monitor might never see the packet on any of its interfaces. It is best you run a LAN traffic monitor as close as possible to the point of connection between your ISP and your local LAN. I would also be suspicious if your ISP is a Cable company. Your local neighbors and you share the Cable to the Cable company. A few years ago I had reason to put ethereal (wireshark) between my NAT/firewall box and the Cable Modem box, I saw lots of traffic. Besides multicast and broadcasts from my neighbors, the Cable company was sending a flood (I hate to say it, but I thought it was a flood) of ARP requests for ranges of IP addresses. I would hope the Cable company is not counting such a flood of ARP packets against your limits because the Cable company would be the one to generate the flood. It might be a good idea to look for this condition, just in case. > Thanks. > > Bob Goodwin Zuni, Virginia > -- Rick Sewill tel:+1-218-287-1075 mailto:rsewill@xxxxxxxxxxxx 1028 7th St. N. mailto:rsewill@xxxxxxxxx Moorhead, MN 56560-1568 ymsgr:rsewill sip:628497@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx U. S. A. tel:+1-701-866-0266 xmpp:rsewill@xxxxxxxxxx