Bandwidth graph: Transmit and Receive swapped?
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 Hi Tom, what do you mean by “on the same setup”? These are two physically distinct boxes in two different rooms. 
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 @dolf I was only guessing. If they had been on the same setup, it likely would’ve looked a lot stranger (like both nodes would’ve had equal bandwidth usage (slightly delayed because they have to check in two different urls). 
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 Please update, at the least the version will be fixed. 
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 When I scpfromlab2-servertoGleeble, it still shows an orange line instead of a blue one. When I copy something fromgleebleto another PC, it shows thatlab2-serveris transmitting (the blue spike): Maybe toe transmit/receive is not swapped, but rather the server names? 
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 @dolf I found this to be a bug, read here: https://forums.fogproject.org/topic/8076/bandwidth-chart-and-location-plugin 
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 Great! Sorry for the re-post then. 
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 I’m hoping a newer commit has addressed this. I’m not “overly” concerned with the graph as all it does is give you an overview. Basically, yes I want to fix, no I don’t know why it’s coming back reversed considering the “failsafe’s” are already in place and should be operational. I hope by using ksort rather than asort that this would now be fixed. 
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 Yep, it works now. Just for fun: This is the command I use to pull random data from a remote host (and monitor the speed): $ ssh user@remote "cat /dev/urandom" | pv > /dev/null
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 @dolf That is a pretty sweet command. However, have you heard of iPerf? Or even Flent? 
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 Nope. I’ll check it out. But piping stuff around in linux is simple and effective. 
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 @dolf Simple doesn’t get the job done when you’re trying to measure bufferbloat, or other multi-variable problems  Check out Flent: https://flent.org/ 


