probes::CiscoRTTMonEchoICMP(3S)mokePinpgrobes::CiscoRTTMonEchoICMP(3)



NNAAMMEE
       probes::CiscoRTTMonEchoICMP - Probe for SmokePing

SSYYNNOOPPSSIISS
        *** Probes ***
        + CiscoRTTMonEchoICMP
        + forks=50

        *** Targets ***
        + MyRouter-PingVictim
        menu = MyRouter->PingVictim
        title = RTTMon ping from MyRouter to PingVictim
        host = PingVictim.foobar.com.au
        ++ PROBE_CONF
        ioshost = RTTcommunity@Myrouter.foobar.com.au
        iosint = 10.33.22.11
        packetsize = 1024
        tos = 160

DDEESSCCRRIIPPTTIIOONN
       A probe for smokeping, which uses the ciscoRttMon MIB
       functionality ("Service Assurance Agent", "SAA") of Cisco
       IOS to measure ICMP echo ("ping") roundtrip times between
       a Cisco router and any IP address.

PPAARRAAMMEETTEERRSS
       The (mandatory) host parameter specifies the IP host,
       which will be pinged by the router. This can be a DNS
       name, the smokeping host can resolve or a dotted-quad IP
       address.

       The (mandatory) ioshost parameter specifies the Cisco
       router, which will execute the pings, as well as the SNMP
       community string on the router.

       The (optional) packetsize parameter lets you configure the
       packetsize for the pings sent. The minimum is 8, the maxi-
       mum 16392. Use the same number as with fping, if you want
       the same packet sizes being used on the network. Please
       note that the packesize must be specified under
       PROBE_CONF, all other definitions will be ignored. Default
       is 56 bytes.

       The (optional) iosint parameter is the source address for
       the pings sent. This should be one of the active (!) IP
       addresses of the router to get results. IOS looks up the
       target host address in the forwarding table and then uses
       the interface(s) listed there to send the ping packets. By
       default IOS uses the (primary) IP address on the sending
       interface as source address for a ping. The RTTMon MIB
       versions before IOS 12.0(3)T didn't support this parame-
       ter.

       The (optional) tos parameter specifies the value of the
       ToS byte in the IP header of the pings. Multiply DSCP val-
       ues times 4 and Precedence values times 32 to calculate
       the ToS values to configure, e.g. ToS 160 corresponds to a
       DSCP value 40 and a Precedence value of 5. The RTTMon MIB
       versions before IOS 12.0(3)T didn't support this parame-
       ter.

IIOOSS VVEERRSSIIOONNSS
       It is highly recommended to use this probe with routers
       running IOS 12.0(3)T or higher and to test it on less
       critical routers first. I managed to crash a router with
       12.0(9) quite consistently ( in IOS lingo 12.0(9) is older
       code than 12.0(3)T ). I did not observe crashes on higher
       IOS releases, but messages on the router like the one
       below, when multiple processes concurrently accessed the
       same router (this case was IOS 12.1(12b) ):

       Aug 20 07:30:14: %RTT-3-SemaphoreBadUnlock: %RTR: Attempt
       to unlock semaphore by wrong RTR process 70, locked by 78

       Aug 20 07:35:15: %RTT-3-SemaphoreInUse: %RTR: Could not
       obtain a lock for RTR. Process 80

IINNSSTTAALLLLAATTIIOONN
       To install this probe copy ciscoRttMonMIB.pm files to
       ($SMOKEPINGINSTALLDIR)/lib and CiscoRTTMonEchoICMP.pm to
       ($SMOKEPINGINSTALLDIR)/lib/probes. V0.97 or higher of
       Simon Leinen's SNMP_Session.pm is required.

       The router(s) must be configured to allow read/write SNMP
       access. Sufficient is:

               snmp-server community RTTCommunity RW

       If you want to be a bit more restrictive with SNMP write
       access to the router, then consider configuring something
       like this

               access-list 2 permit 10.37.3.5
               snmp-server view RttMon ciscoRttMonMIB included
               snmp-server community RTTCommunity view RttMon RW 2

       The above configuration grants SNMP read-write only to
       10.37.3.5 (the smokeping host) and only to the ciscoRttMon
       MIB tree. The probe does not need access to SNMP variables
       outside the RttMon tree.

BBUUGGSS
       The probe sends unnecessary pings, i.e. more than config-
       ured under "*** Database ***" - "pings", because the
       RTTMon MIB only allows to set a total time for all pings
       in one measurement run (one "life"). Currently the probe
       sets the life duration to "pings"*2+3 seconds (2 secs is
       the ping timeout value hardcoded into this probe).

SSEEEE AALLSSOO
       http://people.ee.ethz.ch/~oetiker/webtools/smokeping/
       http://www.switch.ch/misc/leinen/snmp/perl/

       The best source for background info on SAA is Cisco's doc-
       umentation on http://www.cisco.com and the CISCO-RTTMON-
       MIB documentation, which is available at:
       ftp://ftp.cisco.com/pub/mibs/v2/CISCO-RTTMON-MIB.my

AAUUTTHHOORR
       Joerg.Kummer at Roche.com



1.30                        2003-09-p2r4obes::CiscoRTTMonEchoICMP(3)
