User Guide
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Page 78 of 120
rev. 20170131
© 2014-2017 APconnections, Inc. All Rights Reserved
version 8.4
Traffic History by IP Graph
For 192.168.1.113 on Row 1 of the Active Connections Table in our example, a “T” is
displayed below the IP address. This means that 192.169.1.113 has been defined as a
“tracked IP”. See Traffic History -> Manage Tracked IPs section to learn how to set up a
tracked IP or subnet. You also must have Started RTR in order to view Traffic History
(Start/Stop RTR -> Start RTR).
If I
Click on -> “T”
, (Traffic History by IP), for the DST IP on Row 1, 192.168.1.113, the
screen below opens.
By default, a filter is applied so that the traffic displayed is only for the IP selected, in this
case 192.168.1.113. You can see the filter that is set at the bottom left of the graph. In
this case “by IP Address” is selected, and Value is 192.168.1.113. The traffic shown is in
whatever units have been selected under RTR Preferences -> Traffic by IP/Pool/VLAN Graph
Units. In this case, I have selected Megabits per second (Mbps).
The graph defaults to 1 hour for the last hour. Under “Show data for last” on the top left,
you can change the graph to show 10 minutes, 30 minutes, 12 hours, 1 day, 1 week or 4
weeks of data. In this example, I have updated the graph to show the last 10 minutes of
data.
Radio buttons on the top right can be used to select whether you display download traffic,
upload traffic, or both on the graph.
And finally, below the graph on the x-axis, you can see the amount of data uploaded or
download during the time period displayed for the selected filter, in this case 100.39MB
downloaded and 89.18MB uploaded for 192.168.1.113.
This Traffic Report is a good tool to help you to investigate how much traffic any IP is
consuming. You can change the time period displayed to show data from 10 minutes to 4