[SOLVED] How to read Health -> Quality graph

Started by moonman, March 21, 2019, 03:49:54 AM

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March 21, 2019, 03:49:54 AM Last Edit: March 25, 2019, 07:48:22 AM by franco


I understand that the latency for example is 15ms, but what is 400m for packet loss?

March 21, 2019, 09:53:14 AM #1 Last Edit: April 20, 2021, 11:33:51 AM by franco
Loss is in percent, 400m to 1 is 40% loss. The graph shares the y-axis with the millisecond values so it's a little hard to read indeed.


Cheers,
Franco

Does the graphical package offer a secondary y scale? Maybe it can be easily plotted in, making the graph easier to read?

I don't believe it does. RRD is relatively simplistic and static in these matters.


Cheers,
Franco

Quote from: franco on March 21, 2019, 09:53:14 AM
Loss is in percent, 400m to 1 is 40% loss. The graph shares the x-axis with the millisecond values so it's a little hard to read indeed.


Cheers,
Franco

Thanks. Makes sense.

Quote from: franco on March 21, 2019, 09:53:14 AM
Loss is in percent

Can you please describe what exactly this percentage mean?
For example I have a loss of up to 1.3 with a delay of 15, so 130% loss?. How do I interpret this?
I'm a bit confused  ;D

Quote from: franco on March 21, 2019, 09:53:14 AMLoss is in percent, 400m to 1 is 40% loss.

This seems rather self explanatory? I don't know what "1.3" is. Screenshot please.


Cheers,
Franco

I do such graphs on a daily basis, the y-axis is.. improvable... I would have ms on the left and %loss on the right. Then it would be fool-proof.

Or if you have only one y-axis in your graphing tool, choose ms and %loss on the same y-axis. No "400m" which is ambiguous at best. 
kind regards
chemlud
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April 20, 2021, 11:36:52 AM #8 Last Edit: April 22, 2021, 01:16:14 PM by NKnusperer
Quote from: franco on April 20, 2021, 11:13:41 AM
Quote from: franco on March 21, 2019, 09:53:14 AMLoss is in percent, 400m to 1 is 40% loss.

This seems rather self explanatory? I don't know what "1.3" is. Screenshot please.


Cheers,
Franco

See attached screenshot with a value of 1.9 up to 3.3

*bump*
Might this be a rendering bug in the graph and 1.9 is actually 1.9m or something?
Is there a way to see the raw values generated by dpinger?

Thanks for the screenshot. Depending on the graph interval I get a loss of up to 18 aggregated, basically higher with each interval increase. I think that either rrd is treating these values incorrectly or they are actually set up incorrectly or a mix of both (these are not package counters/bytes that can add up).

Does the value drop if you switch the resolution to "high"?


Cheers,
Franco

Quote from: franco on April 23, 2021, 10:26:18 AM
Does the value drop if you switch the resolution to "high"?

No, it actually increase, see attached screenshots.

Just a quick follow-up on this:
On Monday there was a WAN outage and during this time the loss peaked to 100 (see attached screenshot).
I think this confirms that the reported value is indeed the raw percentage as logged by dpinger ranging from 0 to 100 and not 0 to 1.
What do you think?

...that should be quite easy to simulate, just pull the WAN cable. why does nobody know what the numbers mean? :-O
kind regards
chemlud
____
"The price of reliability is the pursuit of the utmost simplicity."
C.A.R. Hoare

felix eichhorns premium katzenfutter mit der extraportion energie

A router is not a switch - A router is not a switch - A router is not a switch - A rou....