WAN Interfacce Traffic Graph with LAN Host Name / IP.
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Hi averyone.
I have three WAN Interfaces in my pfSense and a LAN.
If I see Traffic Graph and select Interface: LAN and Filter: Local, I can show the Hosts (Internal IP's) that are consuming the Bandwith.
But since I have three WAN Interfaces, I would like see the Bandwith consumed by Internal Hosts on each WAN Interface.
If I see Traffic Graph and select Interface: WAN1 and Filter: Local, all traffic destined / originated to/from my LAN appears destined / originated by the WAN IP and not appear the Internal Hosts that really originated the traffic.
Could you tell me if there is any way to see the Internal Hosts that are consuming the Bandwith in each WAN Interface by Console or WEB Interface?
Regards,
Ramses
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@ramses-sevilla said in WAN Interfacce Traffic Graph with LAN Host Name / IP.:
If I see Traffic Graph and select Interface: WAN1 and Filter: Local, all traffic destined / originated to/from my LAN appears destined / originated by the WAN IP and not appear the Internal Hosts that really originated the traffic.
Natted or NAT!
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Not directly on a graph like that.
You can see the open states and the traffic that's used them in the state table.
You might want to just use ntop-ng which probably has a suitable display.Though I've never attempted to use it precisely for that.
https://docs.netgate.com/pfsense/en/latest/monitoring/monitoring-bandwidth-usage.html#ntopngSteve
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@NollipfSense said in WAN Interfacce Traffic Graph with LAN Host Name / IP.:
@ramses-sevilla said in WAN Interfacce Traffic Graph with LAN Host Name / IP.:
If I see Traffic Graph and select Interface: WAN1 and Filter: Local, all traffic destined / originated to/from my LAN appears destined / originated by the WAN IP and not appear the Internal Hosts that really originated the traffic.
Natted or NAT!
@NollipfSense, thanks so much by your answer.
I know that is because the NAT applied in the WAN Interface but I ask if there is any way to see the Bandwidth consumed between the LAN Interface and each WAN Interface "pre-natted".
Best regards,
Ramsés