Install slurm on Ubuntu / Debian distributions by using the following command: sudo apt-get install slurm slurm -s -i enp0s3īwm-ng – Keeps track of the real-time network loadīwm-ng stands for ‘Bandwidth Monitor Next Generation’ used to monitor the network bandwidth and keep track of the real-time network load. This is a simple tool only used to monitor the network load without displaying any other details about the network. The slurm tool generates three types of graphs that you can manage using c (classic mode), s (split graph mode), and l (large) options. Slurm is another command-line utility used to monitor the network load by showing the device statistics and ASCII graph. Slurm – Monitors the network load by showing the device statistics and ASCII graph To install bmon on Ubuntu/ Debian distributions, use the following command: sudo apt-get install bmon bmon The bmon utility can be installed on almost all Linux distributions. To explore more options for bmon, visit the man pages. Using bmon, you can generate reports in HTML format. It can also show the output in the graph format that shows the packet-level traffic details. It shows the traffic load within the network interface on your system. This is also a command-line tool like the nload. To install the nload utility on the Linux Ubuntu/ Debian system, use the following command: sudo apt-get install nload nloadīmon – Bandwidth monitor shows packet-level detailsīmon stands for ‘Bandwidth monitor’. This tool is sufficient where you want to display the general use of bandwidth. Using the nload command-line tool, you can monitor the overall bandwidth usage without displaying the details of each process. It shows the traffic output in the graphical format with an adjustable scale. The nload is a command-line tool that monitors all incoming and outgoing individual network traffic. Nload – Monitors overall bandwidth, incoming and outgoing individual traffic Collectl – Collects statistics from different system resources.Netstat command – Prints all network connections, routing tables, network interface statistics, multicast membership details.dstat – Monitors the system statistics and displays output in the form of a report in batch-style mode.Ifstat – Displays network bandwidth report in batch-style mode.Netwatch – Displays the network connections between the local host and other remote hosts.Pktstat – Prints a real-time report of all active connections.Trafshow – Display information about active connections, transfer speed, and protocol of each connection.Iptraf – Displays complete traffic summary based on the traffic protocol.Tcptrack – Captures the packet’s movement using pcap library.Iftop – Monitors the data flows through the socket connections.Nethogs – Displays the network bandwidth usage per process.Netload – Displays current traffic load.Speedometer – Displays network traffic on all network interfaces.Color Bandwidth Meter (Cbm) – Displays the real-time updated traffic volume statistics.Bwm-ng – Keeps track of the real-time network load.Slurm – Monitors the network load by showing the device statistics and ASCII graph.Bmon – Bandwidth monitor shows packet-level details.Nload – Monitors overall bandwidth, incoming and outgoing individual traffic.For more information on user authorizations for monitoring, see the Authentication and Authorization section for the related service: Monitoring or Notifications. If you try to perform an action and get a message that you don’t have permission or are unauthorized, confirm with your administrator the type of access you've been granted and which compartment you should work in. The policy must give you access to the monitoring services as well as the resources being monitored. To monitor resources, you must be given the required type of access in a policy written by an administrator, whether you're using the Console or the REST API with an SDK, CLI, or other tool. One or more individual tunnels associated with that IPSec connection (each identified by the tunnel's publicIp in the following discussion).An IPSec connection, which you can think of as the parent resource (identified by parentResourceId in the following discussion).
Site-to-Site VPN includes these resources: The available metrics help you determine quickly if your Site-to-Site VPN is up, how much data is flowing over theĬonnection, and if packets are being dropped for unexpected errors.