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TrafMeter
What is TrafMeter?
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Description
System requirements
Introduction
Installation Package
Installation Guide
Opening the configuration
Selecting NIC
Capturing the traffic
TrafMeter Service Monitor
User authentication
Sending SMS
NAT
Traffic Shaper
Viewing the Traffic Counters
Processing the captured packet
Logging the Application Events
Logging the denied packets
Firewall
Zeroing counters
Users
Filter Manager
Filter Editor
Rule Editor
IP Address Groups
Database Connection String
XML Traffic Reports
Using XSL formatting
The example of XSL formatting
The example of XSL formatting (2)
Traffic Logging into the Database
Database table
Packet Logging
Into the plaintext file
Filename template
Into the database
Database Table
Microsoft SQL Server Syntax
MySQL Server Syntax
Microsoft Access Syntax
Useful SQL scripts
Host Header Logging
Into the plaintext file
Into the database
Database Table
Microsoft SQL Server Syntax
MySQL Server Syntax
Microsoft Access Syntax
Result Codes
Counting VPN packests
Table for storing Filter Names
Registry Settings
FAQ
TrafMeter FAQ
Traffic counting with TrafMeter FAQ
Configuration examples
Example 1
Example 2
Example 3
Example 4
Example 5
Example 6
Example 7
Example 8
Knowledge base
IP protocol number
Type Of Service (ToS) field
MAC address
Promiscuous mode
Ethernet hub
Ethernet switch
Ethernet
NAT router
HOWTO: Creating an OLE DB Connection String for Microsoft SQL Server
HOWTO: Creating an OLE DB Connection String for an Access
HOWTO: Creating an OLE DB Connection String for MySQL
Manual editing of the XML files
Zeroing counters using TrafReset
How to enable
Reloading the Filterset

Ethernet switch

Q0006

The Ethernet switch serves the same function as a hub, in that it is the center of a star wired network, but it handles traffic much differently. A switch has much more available bandwidth than a hub. On a switch, EACH PORT has its own exclusive allocation of bandwidth. A 12 port 100mbps switch, for example, has 1.2gbps of network bandwidth capacity (12 ports x 100mbps).

The Ethernet switch makes intelligent decisions about where a packet entering a port is supposed to go. As it known, Ethernet is a collision-based protocol. Switches essentially eliminate collisions on an Ethernet network, because the switch is aware of the MAC address of every device on the network. The switch is also capable of analyzing packets as they enter a port, and forwarding them based on the destination MAC address. Hubs are ‘dumb’-- they can’t make these routing decisions.

 

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