3

How would I go about retrieving 64 bit counters for network traffic on windows (Server 2008 specifically)? I'm seeing too many rollovers on the 32 bit counters for our polling interval, leading to gaps in the data.

We feed the data through RRDTool, which can successfully handle one rollover per polling period, but can't deal with two. 64bit counters would prevent this issue, but I can't seem to find a way to enable them on windows

1
  • Can your graphing tool only poll SNMP? I had to use WMI or RPC to access perfmon counters in Zenoss, fixed this for me. Apr 5, 2011 at 15:55

3 Answers 3

3

According to Tiger Li, a moderator on Microsoft's TechNet, it's not possible:

http://social.technet.microsoft.com/Forums/en-CA/winservergen/thread/07b62ff0-94f6-40ca-a99d-d129c1b33d70

2
  • If anyone stumbles on this... I believe the only way to do this is via the 3rd party Informant SNMP agent: snmp-informant.com
    – Keith
    Dec 24, 2011 at 5:37
  • snmp-informant won't work well because it doesn't use counters like the natvice 32-bit snmp--it uses deltas (that is, its output is Bytes/sec). So it you poll every 5 min, and download a huge file for the middle 3 minutes of an otherwise idle connection, at both poll times the Bytes/sec value will be 0. You need an absolute like BytesReceived which the 32-bit snmp counter gave you. Mar 18, 2013 at 18:36
0

In general these would be keep in the HC counters: IF-MIB::ifHCInOctets

If you can't pull these from Windows, I think your best bet might to be if your switch has these counters in their IF-MIB table and pull it from there.

0

Although there are no 64-bit SNMP counters on Windows (as Keith mentioned), and perfmon counters won't give reliable information because they are already rate values (bytes/sec) if you don't mind installing nsclient you can pretty easily use WMI

1
  • We ended up writing our own SNMP agent to return the 64bit counters. WMI would have required throwing away all our existing monitoring infrastructure.
    – devicenull
    Mar 20, 2013 at 19:28

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .