Microsoft Knowledge Base Article
This article contents is Microsoft Copyrighted material.
©2005-©2007 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
Terms
of Use |
Trademarks
Article ID: 232044 - Last Review: January 24, 2007 - Revision: 1.3
The Stats Frame in a Network Monitor Capture
This article was previously published under Q232044
This article describes the relevance and some possible uses for the information in the Stats frame of a Network Monitor capture.
When you view a capture using Network Monitor, it is helpful to have additional statistics concerning the data that is captured. In Network Monitor, a Stats frame is added at the end of each capture. This frame contains relevant information concerning the capture. Although the overall contents can change depending on topology, one section that is consistently included is the Stats section.
The following example shows a Stats section of a Network Monitor capture:
STATS: Number of Frames Captured = 917
STATS: Bytes Left = 80 (0x50)
STATS: Version = 0 (0x0)
STATS: Elapsed Time = 4 Seconds 316 Milliseconds
STATS: Total Frames Captured = 917 (0x395)
STATS: Total Bytes Captured = 186342 (0x2D7E6)
STATS: Total Frames Filtered While Capturing = 917 (0x395)
STATS: Total Bytes Filtered While Capturing = 179006 (0x2BB3E)
STATS: Total Frames Seen During Capture = 917 (0x395)
STATS: Total Bytes Seen During Capture = 179006 (0x2BB3E)
STATS: Total MultiCasts Received = 49 (0x31)
STATS: Total BroadCasts Received = 847 (0x34F)
STATS: Total Frames Dropped From Capture = 0 (0x0)
STATS: Total Frames Dropped From Buffer = 0 (0x0)
STATS: MAC Frames Received = 827
STATS: MAC CRC Errors = 0
STATS: MAC Bytes Received = 1662
STATS: MAC Frames Dropped due to No Buffers = 0
STATS: MAC Frames Dropped due to HardWare Errors = 0
STATS: MAC MultiCasts Received = 39
STATS: MAC BroadCasts Received = 776
Some of the more useful pieces of information include:
- Number of Frames Captured
This value is helpful in determining if you are viewing a filtered capture. If this number does not match the number in the capture, the frames are filtered. - Elapsed Time
If this value is small and the Total Bytes Captured value is large, there may be possible throughput saturation on the network. - Total Frames Seen During Capture and Total Bytes Seen During Capture
If a capture filter is used, these values should indicate how much data is not included in the capture.
APPLIES TO
- Microsoft Windows NT Server 3.51
- Microsoft Windows NT Server 4.0 Standard Edition
- Microsoft Windows NT Workstation 3.51
- Microsoft Windows NT Workstation 4.0 Developer Edition
- Microsoft Windows 3.11 Standard Edition
- Microsoft Windows 95
- Microsoft Windows 98 Standard Edition
Community Feedback System
Very often, it takes hours to solve a problem. Very often, you've looked high
and low, and have tried a lot of solutions. When you finally found it, chances
are, it was because someone else helped you. Here's your chance to give back.
Use our community feedback tool to let others know what worked for you and what
didn't.
Please also understand that the community feedback system is not warranted to be
correct, it's simply a system that we've built to let people try and help each
other. If something in a feedback response doesn't make sense to you, or you're
not comfortable making changes that the feedback talks about (like registry
edits), please consult a professional.
Thank you for using kbAlertz.com Feedback System.
-- Scott Cate