Packets/sec is the rate the Redirector is processing data packets. One packet includes (hopefully) many bytes. We say hopefully here because each packet has protocol overhead. You can determine the efficiency of this path by dividing the Bytes/sec by this counter to determine the average number of bytes transferred/packet. You can also divide this counter by Operations/sec to determine the average number of packets per operation, another measure of efficiency.
Packets That Failed UDP-ESP Validation is the number of packets received that failed UDP-ESP validation (used for NAT traversal) ...
Packets That Failed UDP-ESP Validation per Second is the rate of packets received that failed UDP-ESP validation (used for ...
Packets Transmitted/sec is the rate at which the Redirector is sending packets (also called SMBs or Server Message Blocks). ...
Packets/sec is the rate at which packets are processed by the computer. This count is the sum of Packets Sent and Packets ...
Packets/sec is the rate the Redirector is processing data packets. One packet includes (hopefully) many bytes. We say hopefully ...
Packets: %1!d! Objects: %2!d! Object Additions: %3!d! Object Modifications: %4!d! Object Deletions: %5!d! Object Moves: %6!d! ...
Page Faults/sec is the average number of pages faulted per second. It is measured in number of pages faulted per second because ...
Page Faults/sec is the rate at which page faults by the threads executing in this process are occurring. A page fault occurs ...
Page File Bytes is the current amount of virtual memory, in bytes, that this process has reserved for use in the paging file(s). ...