Number of packets not forwarded from a “hidden” network or duplicating a packet already queued for transmission.
Number of packets destined for an unknown network.
Number of packets destined for a disabled or otherwise invalid port.
Number of packets the router failed to transmit due to a transmission error.
Number of packets forwarded by the router from the source network to another network.
Number of NBP Lookups sent from the router, including the derivatives of BrRqs In.
Number of packets containing invalid DdpLong checksums, caused by corruption while in-transit through an intermediary router or incorrect query response formulation.
Number of packets whose hop counts, or distance factors, exceeded the maximum limit of 15.
Number of times the router could not accept a packet (usually for forwarding) because all its buffers were allocated.
Number of packets that encountered an error while being received by the router elements of the AppleTalk protocol stack. This does not include packets aborted by higher level services.
Number of router maintenance (Rtmp, Zip, etc.) packets received.
Number of NBP Broadcast Requests the router has been asked to resolve.
To clear the routing statistics, click this button.
To save the the Routing Table data (including the routing statistics) to a tab-delimited text file, click this button.
This column lists the amount of traffic the device has received from the indicated network, expressed as packets.
This column lists the amount of traffic the device has received from the indicated network, expressed as a percentage of total traffic.
This column lists the router port address the router transmits through if Hops = 0, or the router port address the router transmits to if Hops > 0.
This column lists which one of the router’s ports is used to communicate with the indicated network.
This column lists how many additional routers packets must pass through to travel from this router to the indicated network.
This column lists how recently the router has received router information packets from a network. “Good” indicates recent traffic, “Suspect” indicates that there may be communication problems, and “Bad” indicates definite communication problems.
This column lists the AppleTalk network number or range of numbers for each network.