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    Bandwidthd problem

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved pfSense Packages
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    • N
      nirovulf
      last edited by

      Try change<url>/bandwidthd" target="_blank</url>->```
      <url>/bandwidthd/index.html" target="_blank</url>

      After that I can watch statistics normally :)
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      • P
        phil.davis
        last edited by

        @nirovulf - what browser+version+settings are you using?
        I am using Firefox (23.0.1). That displays the index.html automatically, without needing it specified. We can easily put your change into the bandwidthd package, as it should not do any harm. I would just like to know what environment causes the problem.

        As the Greek philosopher Isosceles used to say, "There are 3 sides to every triangle."
        If I helped you, then help someone else - buy someone a gift from the INF catalog http://secure.inf.org/gifts/usd/

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        • N
          nirovulf
          last edited by

          phil.davis
          I use Firefox 19.0.2, pfsense version: 2.0.3-RELEASE (i386)
          built on Fri Apr 12 10:22:21 EDT 2013
          FreeBSD pfsense.router 8.1-RELEASE-p13 FreeBSD 8.1-RELEASE-p13 #0: Fri Apr 12 10:47:01 EDT 2013 root@snapshots-8_1-i386.builders.pfsense.org:/usr/obj.pfSense/usr/pfSensesrc/src/sys/pfSense_SMP.8 i386
          Settings: interface - LAN, checked output_cdf, recover_cdf, draw_graphs; Meta Refresh set to 120. All other settings are default

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          • P
            phil.davis
            last edited by

            I am a bit surprised that your Firefox does not go looking for index.html by default. But anyway, it is safer for all old/new/whatever browsers if we explicitly specify index.html like you suggest.
            Pull request: https://github.com/pfsense/pfsense-packages/pull/483
            30 minutes after that is committed you should be able to reinstall bandwidthd XML and it will work.

            As the Greek philosopher Isosceles used to say, "There are 3 sides to every triangle."
            If I helped you, then help someone else - buy someone a gift from the INF catalog http://secure.inf.org/gifts/usd/

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            • C
              cboy2
              last edited by

              How about editing /usr/local/etc/rc.d/bandwidthd.sh to point at /usr/pbi/bandwidthd-amd64/bandwidthd/bandwidthd instead of /usr/local/bandwidthd/bandwidthd?

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              • P
                phil.davis
                last edited by

                @cboy2:

                How about editing /usr/local/etc/rc.d/bandwidthd.sh to point at /usr/pbi/bandwidthd-amd64/bandwidthd/bandwidthd instead of /usr/local/bandwidthd/bandwidthd?

                This code in bandwidthd.inc "should" select/use the new PBI-based directory names based on the pfSense version (>2.0 means it has PBI) and 32 or 64-bit install.

                // Check pfSense version
                $pfs_version = substr(trim(file_get_contents("/etc/version")),0,3);
                switch ($pfs_version) {
                  case "1.2":
                  case "2.0":
                    define('PKG_BANDWIDTHD_BASE', '/usr/local/bandwidthd');
                    break;
                  default:
                    define('PKG_BANDWIDTHD_BASE', '/usr/pbi/bandwidthd-' . php_uname("m") . '/bandwidthd');
                 }
                // End: Check pfSense version
                

                I don't have a 64-bit install to try. What happens now on pfSense 2.1-RELEASE 64-bit?
                Post the bandwidthd.sh that it makes, then hopefully I can see what happens.

                As the Greek philosopher Isosceles used to say, "There are 3 sides to every triangle."
                If I helped you, then help someone else - buy someone a gift from the INF catalog http://secure.inf.org/gifts/usd/

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                • C
                  cboy2
                  last edited by

                  `#!/bin/sh

                  This file was automatically generated

                  by the pfSense service handler.

                  rc_start() {
                  /usr/local/bandwidthd/bandwidthd
                  }

                  rc_stop() {
                  /usr/bin/killall bandwidthd
                  }

                  case $1 in
                  start)
                  rc_start
                  ;;
                  stop)
                  rc_stop
                  ;;
                  restart)
                  rc_stop
                  rc_start
                  ;;
                  esac`   I've had this issue on two different 64 bit systems and one 32 (all I have tried) all running 2.1 or a RC thereof.

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                  • P
                    phil.davis
                    last edited by

                    Now I really looked at the code! It has never worked for a 2.1 PBI-based full install.
                    Edit /usr/local/pkg/bandwidthd.inc to change line 324 from:

                    /usr/local/bandwidthd/bandwidthd
                    

                    to

                    {$bandwidthd_base_dir}/bandwidthd
                    

                    like in this GitHub change: https://github.com/phil-davis/pfsense-packages/commit/c918257082611cc9d9e9f9987a0a317d629885d7

                    That should make it understand full installs for 2.0.n and 2.1 in both i386 and amd64.

                    Then save your bandwidthd settings again and check that bandwidth.sh has better code, and that bandwidthd actually works.
                    If all is well, I will submit the pull request.

                    As the Greek philosopher Isosceles used to say, "There are 3 sides to every triangle."
                    If I helped you, then help someone else - buy someone a gift from the INF catalog http://secure.inf.org/gifts/usd/

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                    • F
                      freehood4all
                      last edited by

                      @kalu:

                      Hello every one

                      I have the latest pfsense build installed:
                      –--------------------
                      2.1-DEVELOPMENT (i386)
                      built on Wed May 2 08:30:27 EDT 2012
                      FreeBSD 8.3-RELEASE

                      installed the latest bandwidthd
                      –-----------------------
                      "bandwidthd 2.0.1.3"

                      and it always shows me Please start bandwidthd to populate this directory.
                      I searched in this forum and was not able to find a proper solution
                      Thanks
                      kalu

                      To anyone running into "Please start bandwidthd to populate this directory."

                      First check to see if it's running:

                      ps auxwww | grep -i bandwidthd
                      

                      If it's running check the directory:

                      ls -al /usr/local/www/bandwidthd
                      lrwxr-xr-x  1 root  wheel    43 Sep 16 12:41 /usr/local/www/bandwidthd -> /usr/pbi/bandwidthd-amd64/bandwidthd/htdocs
                      

                      I can see that the actual files aren't being written there.

                      Check this directory:

                      ls -al /usr/local/bandwidthd/htdocs/
                      

                      If you see files in there, all you need to do is make the correct link

                      rm /usr/local/www/bandwidthd
                      
                      ln -s /usr/local/bandwidthd/htdocs/ /usr/local/www/bandwidthd
                      

                      Note: I ended up installing bandwidthd from pkg_add because I ran into issues originally, so my way is definitely non-standard.  And this probably only affects people who updated through the 2.1 beta, RC development cycle.  I'm sure stable has this working out of the box.

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                      • P
                        pkrnjevic
                        last edited by

                        Just a comment freehood4all's note:

                        "Note: I ended up installing bandwidthd from pkg_add because I ran into issues originally, so my way is definitely non-standard.  And this probably only affects people who updated through the 2.1 beta, RC development cycle.  I'm sure stable has this working out of the box."
                        If I read your note right, you suggest that stable versions shouldn't have this problem.
                        I updated from a recently installed 2.0.3Release to 2.1Release, and definitely do have this problem.

                        Phil.davis describes a fix (previous comment in this thread) that mostly works, except for missing icons.

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                        • W
                          walkman
                          last edited by

                          Hi, I noticed that this only happens when I use firfox, not chrome or IE.

                          Thanks

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • X
                            xerxes
                            last edited by

                            @freehood4all:

                            To anyone running into "Please start bandwidthd to populate this directory."

                            First check to see if it's running:

                            ps auxwww | grep -i bandwidthd
                            

                            If it's running check the directory:

                            ls -al /usr/local/www/bandwidthd
                            lrwxr-xr-x  1 root  wheel    43 Sep 16 12:41 /usr/local/www/bandwidthd -> /usr/pbi/bandwidthd-amd64/bandwidthd/htdocs
                            

                            Check this directory:

                            ls -al /usr/local/bandwidthd/htdocs/
                            

                            If you see files in there, all you need to do is make the correct link

                            rm /usr/local/www/bandwidthd
                            
                            ln -s /usr/local/bandwidthd/htdocs/ /usr/local/www/bandwidthd
                            

                            This one works for me.. Thanks.

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                            • S
                              smilodon
                              last edited by

                              This last method did not work for me.
                              I also upgraded.. from 2.0.3 to 2.1 and had bandwidthd previously installed.

                              So for me this was the fix:

                              #First remove the package via GUI.

                              killall bandwidthd #Just incase it still runs.

                              find / -name "bandwidthd" #You get a list of files and directories related to Bandw.D.

                              #Now delete all of them..
                              rm -rf /directory/you/find

                              #I also removed these.., which seem to be packages..
                              /root/var/db/pbi/installed/bandwidthd-2.0.1_5-i386
                              /root/var/db/pbi/.hashqueue/bandwidthd-2.0.1_5-i386

                              Now install it again via GUI and it worked for me.

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                              • C
                                cboy2
                                last edited by

                                @phil.davis:

                                Now I really looked at the code! It has never worked for a 2.1 PBI-based full install.
                                Edit /usr/local/pkg/bandwidthd.inc to change line 324 from:

                                /usr/local/bandwidthd/bandwidthd
                                

                                to

                                {$bandwidthd_base_dir}/bandwidthd
                                

                                like in this GitHub change: https://github.com/phil-davis/pfsense-packages/commit/c918257082611cc9d9e9f9987a0a317d629885d7

                                That should make it understand full installs for 2.0.n and 2.1 in both i386 and amd64.

                                Then save your bandwidthd settings again and check that bandwidth.sh has better code, and that bandwidthd actually works.
                                If all is well, I will submit the pull request.

                                #!/bin/sh
                                # This file was automatically generated
                                # by the pfSense service handler.
                                
                                rc_start() {
                                	// /usr/local/bandwidthd/bandwidthd
                                /usr/pbi/bandwidthd-amd64/bandwidthd/bandwidthd
                                }
                                
                                rc_stop() {
                                	/usr/bin/killall bandwidthd
                                }
                                
                                case $1 in
                                	start)
                                		rc_start
                                		;;
                                	stop)
                                		rc_stop
                                		;;
                                	restart)
                                		rc_stop
                                		rc_start
                                		;;
                                esac
                                
                                

                                Should the commented out line use # instead of //? ( // /usr/local/bandwidthd/bandwidthd)

                                edit: I believe the // issue was my doing as I commented that line out without verifying it wasn't a standalone line.

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                                • C
                                  cboy2
                                  last edited by

                                  I can confirm that uninstalling the package leaves the old directory intact (/usr/local/bandwidthd) and that removing this directory prior to reinstalling makes the new install function as expected.

                                  The difference appears to be that /usr/local/bandwidthd/bandwidthd is now a symlink to /usr/pbi/bandwidthd-amd64/bandwidthd/bandwidthd, the bandwidthd.inc line 324 is the same.

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                                  • W
                                    williamspinto
                                    last edited by

                                    To resolve this problem (php: /pkg_edit.php: The command '/usr/local/etc/rc.d/bandwidthd.sh stop' returned exit code '1', the output was 'No matching processes were found') on start the bandwidth on new version of pfsense 2.1 and new version off bandwidth 2.0.1 i do just removed the directory "/usr/local/bandwidthd" and reinstalled a bandwidth. Its work fine to me.

                                    Ps.: My english is not good. :( hehe

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                                    • R
                                      rsleegers
                                      last edited by

                                      @kalu:

                                      installed the latest bandwidthd
                                      and it always shows me Please start bandwidthd to populate this directory.

                                      I ran through the troubleshooting and confirmed BandwidthD was running, but when clicking on Services, BandwidthD, the Access BandwidthD, a new page/tab opens to https://192.168.0.1/bandwidthd/index.html with the same error (using Firefox).

                                      If I change the URL to https://192.168.0.1/bandwidthd/ then the summary page appears as expected. It would appear the link is not set correctly, or the index page should be deleted when proper data is found. I'm using the output_cdf method.

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                                      • P
                                        phil.davis
                                        last edited by

                                        I just checked installing fresh on a new system. The initial "Please start bandwidthd to populate this directory." page is found at index.html, and after a while index.html is updated with the daily data.
                                        I now have the following in /usr/local/www/bandwidthd

                                        -rw-r--r--  1 root  wheel  2230 Dec 13 13:33 10.49.143.1-1-R.png
                                        -rw-r--r--  1 root  wheel  2207 Dec 13 13:33 10.49.143.1-1-S.png
                                        -rw-r--r--  1 root  wheel  2636 Dec 13 13:33 Subnet-1-10.49.143.0.html
                                        -rw-r--r--  1 root  wheel  2242 Dec 13 13:26 Subnet-2-10.49.143.0.html
                                        -rw-r--r--  1 root  wheel  2245 Dec 13 13:16 Subnet-3-10.49.143.0.html
                                        -rw-r--r--  1 root  wheel  2242 Dec 13 13:33 Total-1-R.png
                                        -rw-r--r--  1 root  wheel  2244 Dec 13 13:33 Total-1-S.png
                                        -rw-r--r--  1 root  wheel  2587 Dec 13 13:26 Total-2-R.png
                                        -rw-r--r--  1 root  wheel  2646 Dec 13 13:26 Total-2-S.png
                                        -rw-r--r--  1 root  wheel  1844 Dec 13 13:16 Total-3-R.png
                                        -rw-r--r--  1 root  wheel  1853 Dec 13 13:16 Total-3-S.png
                                        -rw-r--r--  1 root  wheel  3323 Dec 13 13:33 index.html
                                        -rw-r--r--  1 root  wheel  2939 Dec 13 13:26 index2.html
                                        -rw-r--r--  1 root  wheel  2948 Dec 13 13:16 index3.html
                                        -rw-r--r--  1 root  wheel   653 Dec 13 12:16 index4.html
                                        -rw-r--r--  1 root  wheel  1649 Dec 13 11:51 legend.gif
                                        -rw-r--r--  1 root  wheel  7573 Dec 13 11:51 logo.gif
                                        

                                        @rsleegers - If you can reproduce this, what does your system have in /usr/local/www/bandwidthd ?

                                        As the Greek philosopher Isosceles used to say, "There are 3 sides to every triangle."
                                        If I helped you, then help someone else - buy someone a gift from the INF catalog http://secure.inf.org/gifts/usd/

                                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • R
                                          rsleegers
                                          last edited by

                                          @phil.davis:

                                          @rsleegers - If you can reproduce this, what does your system have in /usr/local/www/bandwidthd ?

                                          Yes, after a day or so (I think more than a day), the tab/link worked without modifying.

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                                          • M
                                            millimetrix
                                            last edited by

                                            @freehood4all:

                                            To anyone running into "Please start bandwidthd to populate this directory."

                                            First check to see if it's running:

                                            ps auxwww | grep -i bandwidthd
                                            

                                            If it's running check the directory:

                                            ls -al /usr/local/www/bandwidthd
                                            lrwxr-xr-x  1 root  wheel    43 Sep 16 12:41 /usr/local/www/bandwidthd -> /usr/pbi/bandwidthd-amd64/bandwidthd/htdocs
                                            

                                            I can see that the actual files aren't being written there.

                                            Check this directory:

                                            ls -al /usr/local/bandwidthd/htdocs/
                                            

                                            If you see files in there, all you need to do is make the correct link

                                            rm /usr/local/www/bandwidthd
                                            
                                            ln -s /usr/local/bandwidthd/htdocs/ /usr/local/www/bandwidthd
                                            

                                            Note: I ended up installing bandwidthd from pkg_add because I ran into issues originally, so my way is definitely non-standard.  And this probably only affects people who updated through the 2.1 beta, RC development cycle.  I'm sure stable has this working out of the box.

                                            Nice one freehood4all your fix worked for me on a Netgate box running pfSense 2.1 (amd64).
                                            thanks

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