I am trying to find out Cisco`s definition of txload and rxload amount on a interface serial or lan. example 66/255. What does it represent?
Does anyone of a answer?
Well I figured that was it-- however, if I run the Solorwinds real time monitor on the exact same router, I can get info that say`s the link ( it`s a T1 ) serial- or lan ( depending on which one I am monitoring ) is running say @ 137% over the 1.54 T1 for example , Yet when I look at the router sh interface ,txload or rxload it shows maybe 66/255????
Now I am not sure if the Cisco info is correct- or Solorwinds is right?
I have not seen Solarwinds make that kind of mistake other then when either the wrong MIB is used or the interface bandwidth is not set correctly on Solarwinds. Do you have the full T or is solarwinds thinking it's a fractional T?
Which tool are you using? There are several to pick from. The router counter is an average, not real time so it has been misleading in the past if the problem is "bursty" and not sustained traffic flow.
The Network Performance tool is the one I use the most and has been very reliable. It will save all the data to a data base and allow you to drill into the data to as far as the router can supply data points, generally about every 2 minutes.
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