Ethereal-users: RE: [Ethereal-users] Ethereal help

Note: This archive is from the project's previous web site, ethereal.com. This list is no longer active.

From: "David Kuder" <david.kuder@xxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Wed, 16 Apr 2003 19:46:43 -0700
Title: Message
 
also look at
and
-----Original Message-----
From: S. Faizi [mailto:salfaizi@xxxxxxx]
Sent: Wednesday, April 16, 2003 7:32 PM
To: Alistair.McGlinchy@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; braggman@xxxxxxx
Cc: ethereal-users@xxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [Ethereal-users] Ethereal help

Is MRTG a commercial tool? If it is available for free, where does one download it from.
 
Regards,
Sal
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Wednesday, April 16, 2003 7:08 AM
Subject: RE: [Ethereal-users] Ethereal help

Royce,
 
I think you missed the point of my previous email.  Ethereal is an indispensable network management tool but it is not a one-stop shop for network performance analysis. (It ranks second only to perl, in the order I install software on a new PC).
 
Start off by monitoring your servers, routers and switches using MRTG or whatever network monitoring system you prefer.
*    Understand which network devices are the biggest users.
*    Understand when traffic levels are high (and check to see if the problems disappear when traffic levels are not)
*    Understand whether performance problems are to do with errors, packet loss, congestion or (as always happens) is an application issue nothing to do with the network.
 
Once you have a fair idea of knowing *what* is wrong with your network (eg "My server is sending tons of broadcast messages"),  should you a use Ethereal to find out *why* things are going wrong. (eg My server is spamming ARP messages to get the MAC address of another server I removed from the network last week).
 
I like to think of Ethereal as a microscope, where as MRTG is more like a CCTV camera. A daily scan through the CCTV TV tells whether there's a need for forensic research using Ethereal (and Netflow/RMON2/ntop data too).
 
Cheers,
 
Alistair