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Windows senagent network traffic

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Technical Note

Please note that this article recreates Technical Note 214, originally posted May 10, 2006.

Senagent Network Traffic

After writing out the instructions for monitoring ntcpio.exe and COSserver.exe yesterday, I decided to monitor how much data senagent.exe pumps out and across the network. You have always been concerned on the impact senagent has on the network.

Well, now I know. My test environment involved a Linux host (for the host monitor and event manager) and a Windows 2000 host (running senagent.exe). As there were no other Windows hosts on the network, Windows chatter would be minimal or non-existent. I left the test running all last night.

Results:

   * Senagent.exe is recorded as consistently pumping out close to 400 bytes of data every 2nd poll - that is, a peak of 400 bytes every 3 minutes approx.  The intermediate poll shows zero or very close to zero bytes.  I don't actually understand why there is this behaviour, but that is what the recorded data per poll shows.
   * Data written from the Windows network card across the network shows a little different.  Over the test period, data written remained constant (flat line) at 0.1Kb/sec - no peaks and no troughs.  That is 100 bytes/sec - not much at all.
   * See attached graphs.

Since it is the network impact we are concerned about, the above results mean: We can have up to 100 000 Windows hosts on a single network segment before we saturate a 100M network - remember 100M network is capable of 10Mb/sec throughput. Or given a more realistic number of say 100 Windows hosts being monitored, it would account for only 10Kb/sec - or 0.1% of the capable network throughput on a 100M network.

In short any concerns regarding the impact on the network by senagent.exe are unfounded. The impact is neglegable.