<disclosure> I don't know anything about vonage or their voip service. I don't know anything about your linksys router. </disclosure> To be able to monitor your net traffic you'd have to indicate your network topology and you didn't really say what you want to monitor specifically with your service. If your linksys supports SNMP i'd recommend enabling it and do an snmpwalk (maybe nagios supports this for scanning devices?) and see what is available and then check the documentation from linksys for vonage to see if they have any specific mibs for their voip service. Unless someone here has done what you're looking for I think you would be best off with contacting vonage support and see if they have any docs or info available on your subject. Sometimes you need to talk to a few different people until you get one of the real knowledgeable folks. Alternatively you can contact their CSR or sales and indicate you're close to dropping the service if you can't figure out a way to monitor it the fashion you want, additionally telling them that you've gotten mixed response from the support people and you just want to get a straight answer. On Sunday 11 June 2006 01:54 pm, Tim Wilson wrote: > Hey everyone, > > I've been busy learning the ins and outs of nagios for a week or so. > We've got it running at school, and I've set it up at home to monitor > various devices around the house. One thing I'd definitely like to > monitor is my VoIP connection to Vonage. > > I seriously doubt that pinging vonage.com would tell me anything > about whether I'm getting a dial tone or not. I can't figure out a > way to get the IP address, port, and protocol that gets used when I > make a call. I messed around a bit with tcpdump to sniff some > packets, but since my Vonage service is built into my Linksys router > I don't think I can sniff anything of relevance. > > Any suggestions? I'm no packet sniffing expert so maybe I can capture > those packets after all. Suggestions welcomed. > > -Tim