1Smokeping_probes_CiscoRTTMonEchoICMPS(m3o)keSPmionkgeping_probes_CiscoRTTMonEchoICMP(3)
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6 Smokeping::probes::CiscoRTTMonEchoICMP - Probe for SmokePing
7
9 *** Probes ***
10
11 +CiscoRTTMonEchoICMP
12
13 forks = 5
14 offset = 50%
15 step = 300
16 timeout = 15
17
18 # The following variables can be overridden in each target section
19 ioshost = RTTcommunity@Myrouter.foobar.com.au # mandatory
20 iosint = 10.33.22.11
21 packetsize = 56
22 pings = 5
23 timeout = 15
24 tos = 160
25 vrf = INTERNET
26
27 # [...]
28
29 *** Targets ***
30
31 probe = CiscoRTTMonEchoICMP # if this should be the default probe
32
33 # [...]
34
35 + mytarget
36 # probe = CiscoRTTMonEchoICMP # if the default probe is something else
37 host = my.host
38 ioshost = RTTcommunity@Myrouter.foobar.com.au # mandatory
39 iosint = 10.33.22.11
40 packetsize = 56
41 pings = 5
42 timeout = 15
43 tos = 160
44 vrf = INTERNET
45
47 A probe for smokeping, which uses the ciscoRttMon MIB functionality
48 ("Service Assurance Agent", "SAA") of Cisco IOS to measure ICMP echo
49 ("ping") roundtrip times between a Cisco router and any IP address.
50
52 Supported probe-specific variables:
53
54 forks
55 Run this many concurrent processes at maximum
56
57 Example value: 5
58
59 Default value: 5
60
61 offset
62 If you run many probes concurrently you may want to prevent them
63 from hitting your network all at the same time. Using the probe-
64 specific offset parameter you can change the point in time when
65 each probe will be run. Offset is specified in % of total interval,
66 or alternatively as 'random', and the offset from the 'General'
67 section is used if nothing is specified here. Note that this does
68 NOT influence the rrds itself, it is just a matter of when data
69 acqusition is initiated. (This variable is only applicable if the
70 variable 'concurrentprobes' is set in the 'General' section.)
71
72 Example value: 50%
73
74 step
75 Duration of the base interval that this probe should use, if
76 different from the one specified in the 'Database' section. Note
77 that the step in the RRD files is fixed when they are originally
78 generated, and if you change the step parameter afterwards, you'll
79 have to delete the old RRD files or somehow convert them. (This
80 variable is only applicable if the variable 'concurrentprobes' is
81 set in the 'General' section.)
82
83 Example value: 300
84
85 timeout
86 How long a single 'ping' takes at maximum
87
88 Example value: 15
89
90 Default value: 5
91
92 Supported target-specific variables:
93
94 ioshost
95 The (mandatory) ioshost parameter specifies the Cisco router, which
96 will execute the pings, as well as the SNMP community string on the
97 router.
98
99 Example value: RTTcommunity@Myrouter.foobar.com.au
100
101 This setting is mandatory.
102
103 iosint
104 The (optional) iosint parameter is the source address for the pings
105 sent. This should be one of the active (!) IP addresses of the
106 router to get results. IOS looks up the target host address in the
107 forwarding table and then uses the interface(s) listed there to
108 send the ping packets. By default IOS uses the (primary) IP address
109 on the sending interface as source address for a ping. The RTTMon
110 MIB versions before IOS 12.0(3)T didn't support this parameter.
111
112 Example value: 10.33.22.11
113
114 packetsize
115 The packetsize parameter lets you configure the packetsize for the
116 pings sent. The minimum is 8, the maximum 16392. Use the same
117 number as with fping, if you want the same packet sizes being used
118 on the network.
119
120 Default value: 56
121
122 pings
123 How many pings should be sent to each target, if different from the
124 global value specified in the Database section. Note that the
125 number of pings in the RRD files is fixed when they are originally
126 generated, and if you change this parameter afterwards, you'll have
127 to delete the old RRD files or somehow convert them.
128
129 Example value: 5
130
131 timeout
132 How long a single RTTMonEcho ICMP 'ping' take at maximum plus 10
133 seconds to spare. Since we control our own timeout the only purpose
134 of this is to not have us killed by the ping method from basefork.
135
136 Example value: 15
137
138 Default value: 15
139
140 tos The (optional) tos parameter specifies the value of the ToS byte in
141 the IP header of the pings. Multiply DSCP values times 4 and
142 Precedence values times 32 to calculate the ToS values to
143 configure, e.g. ToS 160 corresponds to a DSCP value 40 and a
144 Precedence value of 5. The RTTMon MIB versions before IOS 12.0(3)T
145 didn't support this parameter.
146
147 Example value: 160
148
149 Default value: 0
150
151 vrf The the VPN name in which the RTT operation will be used. For
152 regular RTT operation this field should not be configured. The
153 agent will use this field to identify the VPN routing Table for
154 this operation.
155
156 Example value: INTERNET
157
159 Joerg.Kummer at Roche.com
160
162 IOS VERSIONS
163 It is highly recommended to use this probe with routers running IOS
164 12.0(3)T or higher and to test it on less critical routers first. I
165 managed to crash a router with 12.0(9) quite consistently ( in IOS
166 lingo 12.0(9) is older code than 12.0(3)T ). I did not observe crashes
167 on higher IOS releases, but messages on the router like the one below,
168 when multiple processes concurrently accessed the same router (this
169 case was IOS 12.1(12b) ):
170
171 Aug 20 07:30:14: %RTT-3-SemaphoreBadUnlock: %RTR: Attempt to unlock
172 semaphore by wrong RTR process 70, locked by 78
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174 Aug 20 07:35:15: %RTT-3-SemaphoreInUse: %RTR: Could not obtain a lock
175 for RTR. Process 80
176
177 INSTALLATION
178 To install this probe copy ciscoRttMonMIB.pm files to
179 ($SMOKEPINGINSTALLDIR)/lib/Smokeping and CiscoRTTMonEchoICMP.pm to
180 ($SMOKEPINGINSTALLDIR)/lib/Smokeping/probes. V0.97 or higher of Simon
181 Leinen's SNMP_Session.pm is required.
182
183 The router(s) must be configured to allow read/write SNMP access.
184 Sufficient is:
185
186 snmp-server community RTTCommunity RW
187
188 If you want to be a bit more restrictive with SNMP write access to the
189 router, then consider configuring something like this
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191 access-list 2 permit 10.37.3.5
192 snmp-server view RttMon ciscoRttMonMIB included
193 snmp-server community RTTCommunity view RttMon RW 2
194
195 The above configuration grants SNMP read-write only to 10.37.3.5 (the
196 smokeping host) and only to the ciscoRttMon MIB tree. The probe does
197 not need access to SNMP variables outside the RttMon tree.
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200 The probe sends unnecessary pings, i.e. more than configured in the
201 "pings" variable, because the RTTMon MIB only allows to set a total
202 time for all pings in one measurement run (one "life"). Currently the
203 probe sets the life duration to "pings"*5+3 seconds (5 secs is the ping
204 timeout value hardcoded into this probe).
205
207 <http://oss.oetiker.ch/smokeping/>
208
209 <http://www.switch.ch/misc/leinen/snmp/perl/>
210
211 The best source for background info on SAA is Cisco's documentation on
212 <http://www.cisco.com> and the CISCO-RTTMON-MIB documentation, which is
213 available at: <ftp://ftp.cisco.com/pub/mibs/v2/CISCO-RTTMON-MIB.my>
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2172.7.2 2020-0S1m-o3k0eping_probes_CiscoRTTMonEchoICMP(3)