rtrmon (router monitor) sample output
thought i'd show a few examples of bgp and ospf monitor notifications that rtrmon sends when peers/neighbors go down: Subject: rtrmon do bgp-summary watch last Peers *DOWN* on peer1.lax1.genuity.net: sandbox.ep.net (198.32.146.11) down for 4:28:06 Peers reset on border1.sjc1.genuity.net: border1-eth1.SanJose.fibernet.net (206.183.239.141) reset 0:04:16 ago the ospf example is from a router that had rebooted, i believe, between monitor runs: Subject: rtrmon do ospf-neighbors watch state Differences encountered on core1.nyc1.genuity.net: The following lines were added: Neighbor ID Pri State Address Interface core1.phx1.genu 1 FULL/ - 207.240.0.1 ATM0/0.601 core1.lax1.genu 1 FULL/ - 207.240.0.5 ATM0/0.602 core1.sjc1.genu 1 FULL/ - 207.240.0.9 ATM0/0.603 core1.ord1.genu 1 FULL/ - 207.240.0.17 ATM0/0.605 core1.wdc1.genu 1 FULL/ - 207.240.0.25 ATM0/0.607 core1.phx1.genu 1 FULL/ - 207.240.0.1 ATM1/0.611 core1.lax1.genu 1 FULL/ - 207.240.0.5 ATM1/0.612 core1.sjc1.genu 1 FULL/ - 207.240.0.9 ATM1/0.613 core1.ord1.genu 1 FULL/ - 207.240.0.17 ATM1/0.615 core1.wdc1.genu 1 FULL/ - 207.240.0.25 ATM1/0.617 peer1.nyc1.genu 1 FULL/ - 207.240.48.3 ATM1/0.618 -brett
I wanted to add a few notations to Brett's announcements about rtrmon. (1) it is freely redistributable with a BSD-like copyright, though it requires that appropriate credit be given Genuity in the literature of any derived product (which is fair since they paid us to write it.) (2) it is extremely portable since it's written in perl/tk/expect/yadayada. (3) it is running in production on at least Genuity's network. (4) its main author is Dave Lawrence, who came to work here after UUNET. The URL for it is http://www.vix.com/rtrmon/. There's no mailing list yet, the web page says "send mail to Dave Lawrence if you have questions" and that's about right until Genuity sets up a real mailing list for it. Finally, I want to take this opportunity to publically thank Genuity, who lets me rant and whine about free software, and then pays us to write stuff like Vulture (and soon Vulture-II, which is lots prettier and can deal with subinterfaces which Cisco SNMP doesn't describe), and RTRMON, and then lets us give them away to a community which is pretty much loaded with potential competitors. My argument to Rodney (at Genuity) was: "the network is still cooperative at the core technology level, and if these tools allow your competitors to have more reliable networks, then YOUR customers will benefit from that as well." I hope more ISP's will follow Genuity's example, rather than believing the "competitive advantage" fiction I've heard spewed so often in this field.
participants (2)
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Brett D. Watson
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Paul A Vixie