rptrMonTotalOctets OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX Counter32
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"The total number of octets contained in the valid
frames that have been received on the ports in
this group. If an implementation can not obtain
a count of octets as seen by the repeater itself,
this counter may be the summation of the
values of the rptrMonitorPortReadableOctets
counters for all of the ports in the group.
This statistic provides an indicator of the total
data transferred. The approximate minimum time
for rollover of this counter in a 10Mb/s repeater
is 58 minutes divided by the number of ports in
the repeater.
For 100Mb/s repeaters processing traffic at a
maximum rate, this counter can roll over in less
than 6 minutes divided by the number of ports in
the repeater. Since that amount of time could
be less than a management stations poll cycle
time, in order to avoid a loss of information a
management station is advised to also poll the
rptrMonUpper32TotalOctets object, or to use the
64-bit counter defined by rptrMonHCTotalOctets
instead of the two 32-bit counters."
View at oid-info.com
The total number of octets contained in the valid
frames that have been received on the ports in
this group. If an implementation can not obtain
a count of octets as seen by the repeater itself,
this counter may be the summation of the
values of the rptrMonitorPortReadableOctets
counters for all of the ports in the group.
This statistic provides an indicator of the total
data transferred. The approximate minimum time
for rollover of this counter in a 10Mb/s repeater
is 58 minutes divided by the number of ports in
the repeater.
For 100Mb/s repeaters processing traffic at a
maximum rate, this counter can roll over in less
than 6 minutes divided by the number of ports in
the repeater. Since that amount of time could
be less than a management station's poll cycle
time, in order to avoid a loss of information a
management station is advised to also poll the
rptrMonUpper32TotalOctets object, or to use the
64-bit counter defined by rptrMonHCTotalOctets
instead of the two 32-bit counters.
Parsed from file rfc1516.mib.txt
Company: None
Module: SNMP-REPEATER-MIB
The total number of octets contained in the valid
frames that have been received on the ports in
this group. If an implementation can not obtain
a count of octets as seen by the repeater itself,
this counter may be the summation of the
values of the rptrMonitorPortReadableOctets
counters for all of the ports in the group.
This statistic provides an indicator of the total
data transferred. The approximate minimum time
for rollover of this counter in a 10Mb/s repeater
is 58 minutes divided by the number of ports in
the repeater.
For 100Mb/s repeaters processing traffic at a
maximum rate, this counter can roll over in less
than 6 minutes divided by the number of ports in
the repeater. Since that amount of time could
be less than a management station's poll cycle
time, in order to avoid a loss of information a
management station is advised to also poll the
rptrMonUpper32TotalOctets object, or to use the
64-bit counter defined by rptrMonHCTotalOctets
instead of the two 32-bit counters.
Parsed from file SNMP-REPEATER-MIB.mib
Module: SNMP-REPEATER-MIB
Automatically extracted from RFC2108
rptrMonTotalOctets OBJECT-TYPE SYNTAX Counter32 MAX-ACCESS read-only STATUS current DESCRIPTION "The total number of octets contained in the valid frames that have been received on the ports in this group. If an implementation can not obtain a count of octets as seen by the repeater itself, this counter may be the summation of the values of the rptrMonitorPortReadableOctets counters for all of the ports in the group. This statistic provides an indicator of the total data transferred. The approximate minimum time for rollover of this counter in a 10Mb/s repeater is 58 minutes divided by the number of ports in the repeater. For 100Mb/s repeaters processing traffic at a maximum rate, this counter can roll over in less than 6 minutes divided by the number of ports in the repeater. Since that amount of time could be less than a management station's poll cycle time, in order to avoid a loss of information a management station is advised to also poll the rptrMonUpper32TotalOctets object, or to use the 64-bit counter defined by rptrMonHCTotalOctets instead of the two 32-bit counters." ::= { rptrMonEntry 5 }
rptrMonTotalOctets OBJECT-TYPE SYNTAX Counter32 MAX-ACCESS read-only STATUS current DESCRIPTION "The total number of octets contained in the valid frames that have been received on the ports in this group. If an implementation can not obtain a count of octets as seen by the repeater itself, this counter may be the summation of the values of the rptrMonitorPortReadableOctets counters for all of the ports in the group. This statistic provides an indicator of the total data transferred. The approximate minimum time for rollover of this counter in a 10Mb/s repeater is 58 minutes divided by the number of ports in the repeater. For 100Mb/s repeaters processing traffic at a maximum rate, this counter can roll over in less than 6 minutes divided by the number of ports in the repeater. Since that amount of time could be less than a management station's poll cycle time, in order to avoid a loss of information a management station is advised to also poll the rptrMonUpper32TotalOctets object, or to use the 64-bit counter defined by rptrMonHCTotalOctets instead of the two 32-bit counters." ::= { rptrMonEntry 5 }
Internet Assigned Numbers Authority
OID | Name | Sub children | Sub Nodes Total | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
1.3.6.1.2.1.22.2.4.1.1.1 | rptrMonTxCollisions | 0 | 0 | For a clause 9 (10Mb/s) repeater, this counter is incremented every time the repeater state machine enters the TRANSMIT COLLISION… |
1.3.6.1.2.1.22.2.4.1.1.3 | rptrMonTotalFrames | 0 | 0 | The number of frames of valid frame length that have been received on the ports in this repeater and for which the FCSError and C… |
1.3.6.1.2.1.22.2.4.1.1.4 | rptrMonTotalErrors | 0 | 0 | The total number of errors which have occurred on all of the ports in this repeater. The errors included in this count are the s… |