On Mon, Oct 20, 2008 at 11:51 AM, Max Pyziur <pyz@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > IPTraf? > >> From the Description: > > IPTraf is a console-based network monitoring utility. IPTraf gathers > data like TCP connection packet and byte counts, interface statistics > and activity indicators, TCP/UDP traffic breakdowns, and LAN station > packet and byte counts. IPTraf features include an IP traffic monitor > which shows TCP flag information, packet and byte counts, ICMP > details, OSPF packet types, and oversized IP packet warnings; > interface statistics showing IP, TCP, UDP, ICMP, non-IP and other IP > packet counts, IP checksum errors, interface activity and packet size > counts; a TCP and UDP service monitor showing counts of incoming and > outgoing packets for common TCP and UDP application ports, a LAN > statistics module that discovers active hosts and displays statistics > about their activity; TCP, UDP and other protocol display filters so > you can view just the traffic you want; logging; support for Ethernet, > FDDI, ISDN, SLIP, PPP, and loopback interfaces; and utilization of the > built-in raw socket interface of the Linux kernel, so it can be used > on a wide variety of supported network cards. > > > fyi, > > MP > pyz@xxxxxxxxx > > > On Mon, 20 Oct 2008, Dan Track wrote: > >> Hi >> >> Does anyone know of a program that I can use to test network >> performance. I've got to devices one linux and the other windows, I'd >> like to see if the linux device is getting nearly the max 100Mbit of >> performance when sending data to the windows box. Any thoughts? >> >> Thanks >> Dan >> Thanks, But that's only for monitoring isn't it? I need something that would generate the traffic aswell. Any thoughts? Thanks Dan -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines