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VNSTAT(1)			 User Manuals			     VNSTAT(1)

NAME
       vnStat - a console-based network traffic monitor

SYNOPSIS
       vnstat  [ -Ddhlmqrstuvw?	 ] [ --cleartop ] [ --config file ] [ --days ]
       [ --delete ] [ --dbdir directory ] [ --debug ] [ --disable ] [ --dumpdb
       ] [ --enable ] [ --help ] [ --hours ] [ -i interface ] [ --iface inter‐
       face ] [ --iflist ] [ --live mode ] [ --locale locale ] [ --longhelp  ]
       [ --months ] [ --nick nickname ] [ --oneline ] [ --query ] [ --rateunit
       ] [ --rebuildtotal ] [ --reset ] [ -ru ] [ --savemerged ] [ --short ] [
       --showconfig ] [ --style number ] [ --sync ] [ --testkernel ] [ --top10
       ] [ -tr time ] [ --traffic time ] [ --update ] [ --version ] [  --weeks
       ] [ --xml ]

DESCRIPTION
       vnStat  is  a  console-based network traffic monitor. It keeps a log of
       hourly, daily and monthly  network  traffic  for	 the  selected	inter‐
       face(s). However, it isn't a packet sniffer. The traffic information is
       analyzed from the proc(5) and sys filesystems depending	on  availabil‐
       ity.  That way vnStat can be used even without root permissions on most
       systems.

OPTIONS
       --cleartop
	      Remove all top10 entries.

       --config file
	      Use file as config file instead  of  using  normal  config  file
	      search function.

       -d, --days
	      Show traffic for days.

       --dbdir directory
	      Use  directory as database directory instead of using the direc‐
	      tory specified  in  the  configuration  file  or	the  hardcoded
	      default if no configuration file is available.

       -D, --debug
	      Show additional debug output.

       --delete
	      Delete the database for the selected interface and stop monitor‐
	      ing it.

       --dumpdb
	      Instead of showing the database with  a  formated	 output,  this
	      output  will  dump the whole database in a format that should be
	      easy to parse with most script languages. Use this  for  example
	      with  PHP,  Perl	or  Python to make a custom  webpage. The dump
	      uses ; as field delimeter.

		    active;1		 activity status
		    interface;eth0	 name for the interface
		    nick;inet		 nick (if given)
		    created;1023895272	 creation date in Unix time
		    updated;1065467100	 when the database was updated
		    totalrx;569605	 all time total received MiB
		    totaltx;2023708	 all time total transmitted MiB
		    currx;621673719	 latest rx value in /proc
		    curtx;981730184	 latest tx value in /proc
		    totalrxk;644	 total rx KiB counter
		    totaltxk;494	 total tx KiB counter
		    btime;1059414541	 system boot time in Unix time

	      Then follows 30 lines like the following

		    d;0;1078696800;559;7433;68;557;1

	      where d = days, 0	 =  day	 number	 in  database  (0  is  today),
	      1077314401  date in Unix time, 559 = rx MiB, 7433 = tx MiB, 68 =
	      rx KiB, 557 = tx KiB and 1 tells that  vnStat  has  filled  this
	      value and it is in use.

		    m;0;1078092000;48649;139704;527;252;1   (x12)
		    t;0;1078351200;5979;47155;362;525;1	    (x10)
		    h;0;1078699800;118265;516545	    (x24)

	      m = months, t = top10 and h = hours, all other fields are in the
	      same order as in days except hours that doesn't have a  separate
	      KiB  value.  For hours the forth and fifth fields have values in
	      KiB.

       --enable, --disable
	      Enable or disable updates for  selected  interface.  Useful  for
	      interfaces  that	aren't	always	available,  like  ppp0. If the
	      interface goes down it should be	disabled  in  order  to	 avoid
	      errors.  Add  something  like vnstat -r --disable -i ppp0 to the
	      script that's executed when the interface goes down  and	vnstat
	      --enable	-i  ppp0  to  the  up script. These two options aren't
	      needed when the daemon is used.

       -h, --hours
	      Show traffic for the last 24 hours.

       -i, --iface interface
	      Select one specific interface and apply actions to only it.

       --iflist
	      Show list of currently available interfaces.

       -l, --live mode
	      Display current transfer rate for the selected interface in real
	      time until interrupted. Statistics will be shown after interrup‐
	      tion if the runtime was more than 10 seconds. An	optional  mode
	      parameter	 can be used to select between the displaying of pack‐
	      ets per second (mode 0) and transfer counters  (mode  1)	during
	      execution.  --style can also be used to affect the layout of the
	      output.

       --locale locale
	      Use locale instead of using the locale setting specified in  the
	      configuration  file  or  the  system default if no configuration
	      file is available.

       --longhelp
	      Show complete options list.

       -m, --months
	      Show traffic for months.

       --nick nickname
	      Set the selected interfaces nickname as an  alias	 the  will  be
	      displayed	 in  queries.  Usage  of  -u  is  required to save the
	      change.

       --oneline
	      Show traffic summary for selected interface using one line  with
	      a parseable format. The output contains 15 fields with ; used as
	      field delimeter. The 1st field contains the version  information
	      of  the output that will be changed in future versions of vnStat
	      if the field structure changes. The following fields in order 2)
	      interface	 name,	3) timestamp for today, 4) rx for today, 5) tx
	      for today, 6) total for  today,  7)  average  traffic  rate  for
	      today,  8) timestamp for current month, 9) rx for current month,
	      10) tx for current month, 11) total for current month, 12) aver‐
	      age  traffic rate for today, 13) all time total rx, 14) all time
	      total tx, 15) all time total traffic.

       -q, --query
	      Force database query mode.

       -r, --reset
	      Reset the internal counters in the  database  for	 the  selected
	      interface. Use this if the interface goes down and back up, oth‐
	      erwise that interface will get some extra traffic to  its	 data‐
	      base.

       --rebuildtotal
	      Reset  the  total	 traffic  counters  and	 recount  those	 using
	      recorded months.

       -ru, --rateunit
	      Swap the configured rate unit. If rate has been configured to be
	      shown in bytes then rate will be shown in bits if this option is
	      present. In the same way, if rate	 has  been  configured	to  be
	      shown  in bits then rate will be shown in bytes when this option
	      is present. Alternatively 0 or 1 can be given as	parameter  for
	      this  option  in	order to select between bytes (0) and bits (1)
	      regardless of the configuration file setting.

       --savemerged
	      Write the end result of a database merge to  the	file  mergeddb
	      that  can then be used as a new database if renamed. Top10 traf‐
	      fic days isn't included in the merge and will start empty in the
	      new database.

       -s, --short
	      Use  short  output mode. This mode is also used if more than one
	      database is available.

       --style number
	      Modify the content and style of outputs. Set number to 0	for  a
	      more  narrow  output,  1	for enabling bar column, 2 for same as
	      previous but with average traffic rate visible  in  summary  and
	      weekly  outputs  and  3 for enabling average traffic rate in all
	      outputs where it is supported. 4 disables the  use  of  terminal
	      control characters in -l / --live mode.

       --sync Synchronize  internal  counters  in  the database with interface
	      counters for the selected interface. Use this if the  system  is
	      rebooted	but  interface counters aren't reseted. Such can occur
	      when suspend to ram/disk is used.

       --testkernel
	      Test if the kernel boot time information always stays  the  same
	      like it should or if it's shifting.

       -t, --top10
	      Show all time top10 traffic days.

       -tr time
	      Calculate	 how  much traffic goes through the selected interface
	      during the given time seconds. The time will be 5 seconds	 if  a
	      number parameter isn't included.

       -u, --update
	      Update  all  enabled databases or only the one specified with -i
	      parameter.

       -v, --version
	      Show current version.

       -w, --weeks
	      Show traffic for 7 days, current and previous week.

       --xml  Show database content for selected interface or  all  interfaces
	      in xml format. All traffic values in the output are in KiB.

       -?, --help
	      Show a command summary.

FILES
       /var/lib/vnstat/
	      This  directory  contains	 all databases the program uses. Files
	      are named according to the monitored interfaces.

       /etc/vnstat.conf
	      Config file that will be used unless $HOME/.vnstatrc exists. See
	      vnstat.conf(5) for more information.

EXAMPLES
       vnstat Display traffic summary for the default interface.

       vnstat -i eth0+eth1+eth3
	      Display traffic summary for a merge of interfaces eth0, eth1 and
	      eth3.

       vnstat -i eth2 --xml
	      Output all information about interface eth2 in xml format.

       vnstat -u -i eth0
	      Force a database update for interface eth0 or create  the	 data‐
	      base if it doesn't exist. This is usually the first command used
	      after a fresh install.

       vnstat -u -i eth0 --nick local
	      Give interface eth0 the nickname "local". That information  will
	      be  later	 later	visible	 as  a label when eth0 is queried. The
	      database will also be updated when this command is  executed  or
	      created if the database doesn't exist.

       vnstat -i eth2 --delete
	      Delete database of interface eth2 and stop monitoring it.

RESTRICTIONS
       Updates	needs  to  be executed at least as often as it is possible for
       the interface to generate enough traffic to wrap the  kernel  interface
       traffic	counter.  Otherwise  it is possible that some traffic won't be
       seen. This isn't an issue for 64 bit kernels but at  least  one	update
       every  hour  is always required in order to provide proper input.  With
       32 bit kernels the maximum time between two updates depends on how fast
       the interface can transfer 4 GiB. Calculated theoretical times are:

	      10 Mbit:	      54 minutes
	      100 Mbit:	       5 minutes
	      1000 Mbit:      30 seconds

       However, for 1000 Mbit interfaces updating once every minute is usually
       still a working option.

       Estimated traffic values are likely to be somewhat inaccurate if	 daily
       traffic	is  low	 because only the MiB counter is used to calculate the
       estimate.

       Virtual and aliased interfaces cannot be monitored because  the	kernel
       doesn't	provide	 traffic information for that type of interfaces. Such
       interfaces are usually named eth0:0, eth0:1, eth0:2 etc. where eth0  is
       the actual interface being aliased.

AUTHOR
       Teemu Toivola <tst at iki dot fi>

SEE ALSO
       vnstatd(1), vnstati(1), vnstat.conf(5), proc(5), ifconfig(8), units(7)

version 1.11			   JUNE 2011			     VNSTAT(1)
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