Persistently monitors network conditions with respect to a set of specific hosts.
The executable for the connvitals-monitor package (connmonitor
) runs
on python3 (tested CPython 3.6.3) and requires a python3 interpreter. It
also requires `connvitals
<https://github.com/comcast/connvitals>`__
to exist as a subdirectory in its directory (or your import
path) as
it uses that as a library.
Note: Because this package is not in a standard repository (nor is its dependency), dependencies cannot be automatically resolved; you must first install connvitals for this package to work.
Note: Versions 1.2+ **only* support Linux systems that run
systemd. It's possible that it may install on your system even if
you do not run systemd, but it will attempt to install the Unit File
under /usr/lib/systemd/system
.*
By far the easiest way to install connvitals-monitor is to simply use
pip
like so:
pip install connmonitor
Note that you'll probably need to run this command with sudo
or the
--user
flag.
The easiest way to install is to simply use pip
. You can install
directly from this repository without needing to manually download it by
running
user@hostname ~ $ pip install git+https://github.com/comcast/connvitals-monitor.git#egg=connmonitor
Note that you may need to run this command as root/with sudo
or with
--user
, depending on your pip
installation. Also ensure that
pip
is installing packages for Python 3.x. Typically, if both
Python2 and Python3 exist on a system with pip
installed for both,
the pip
to use for Python3 packages is accessible as pip3
.
To install manually, first download or clone this repository. Then, in the directory you downloaded/cloned it into, run the command
user@hostname ~/connvitals-monitor $ python setup.py install
sudo
. Also ensure that the python
command points to
a valid Python3 interpreter (you can check with python --version
).
On many systems, it is common for python
to point to a Python2
interpreter. If you have both Python3 and Python2 installed, it's
common that they be accessible as python3
and python2
,
respectively.pip
installation, you may not have setuptools
installed. On most 'nix distros, this can be installed without
installing pip
by running
sudo apt-get install python3-setuptools
(Debian/Ubuntu),
sudo pacman -S python3-setuptools
(Arch),
sudo yum install python3-setuptools
(RedHat/Fedora/CentOS), or
brew install python3-setuptools
(macOS with brew
installed).$ connmonitor [input file]
$ connmonitor [ -v --version ]
input file
is a file containing a set of options and hosts to
check. If not specified, connmonitor
will read input of the same
format from stdin
. If instead -v
or --version
is passed as
the first argument, the program's version is printed to stdout, and
the program exits successfully.SIGHUP
(e.g. when the terminal used to run it is
closed), connmonitor
will attempt to re-read its configuration
file, then continue execution. If the configuration file cannot be
read, the program will log an error, clean up its resources and exit
with error code 1
. If input was given on stdin
, the program
will log an error and resume execution.connmonitor
handles SIGTERM
by neatly cleaning up resources
(finishing any running tasks and printing their output to stdout
,
still logging any errors) and exiting.Starting with version 1.2.1, connvitals-monitor (unfortunately) comes
packaged with a systemd Unit File, and will attempt to install it. To
run the daemon, simply run systemctl start connmonitor
(as root),
and to stop it run systemctl stop connmonitor
(also as root). By
default, the monitor will log its stdout
in JSON format to
/var/log/connmonitor.log
, and its stderr
to
/var/log/connmonitor.err
. Whenever the monitor is started, it looks
for a configuration file at /var/run/connmonitor.conf
, and creates
it if it does not exist with the following default contents (see 'Input
Format'):
localhost trace=5000 scan=5000 json=True
The monitor service does not check for filesystem updates to that
config file; if you wish to edit it you may safely do so, but should run
systemctl reload connmonitor
to read in the new configuration.
connmonitor expects input formatted like this:
host1 ping=500 trace=30000 hops=40 scan=60000 json=1 host2 ping=50 numpings=10 payload=41 host3 trace=1000 hops=10 ...
Note that config lines (except the hostname part, when applicable) are cAsE-iNsEnSiTiVe. Empty lines are ignored at any point.
<name>=<value>
can
be specified. If an option is not specified, a default value is used.
The options and their valid values are:ping
- can be set to any positive, rational number or 0 (zero). This indicates the frequency at which pings are performed by specifying a duration (in milliseconds) to wait between each burst of pings. A value of 0 indicates that pings should not be sent. Default: 500numpings
- can be set to any positive integer. Indicates the number of pings that should be sent in a "burst". Default: 10payload
- can be set to any positive integer. This indicates the size in bytes of a payload to be sent with each ping. Typically, this will have little to no impact on ping results, but can, in some networks/situations diagnose specific issues. Default: 41trace
- can be set to any positive, rational number or 0 (zero). This indicates the frequency at which route traces are done by specifying a duration (in milliseconds) to wait between each route trace. A new route trace will not begin until the previous one has finished, so setting this to values lower than network latency to the target is typically meaningless. A value of 0 (zero) indicates that route traces should not be performed. Default: 0 (zero)hops
- can be set to any positive integer. This indicates the number of network hops to be used as an upper limit on route traces. The default value typically suffices in most situations. Default: 30scan
- can be set to any positive, rational number or 0 (zero). This indicates the frequency at which route traces are done by specifying a duration (in milliseconds) to wait between each port scan. A value of 0 (zero) indicates that port scans should not be done. Default: 0 (zero)json
- can be set to any integer or 0 (zero), or one of the Python boolean constants:True
andFalse
. If this value is any non-zero integer orTrue
, then the output of this host's statistics will be in JSON format rather than the plain-text format. Default:False
timestamp
- can be set to any integer or 0 (zero), or one of the Python boolean constants:True
andFalse
. If this value is any non-zero integer orTrue
, then the outputs of this hosts's statistics will always contain timestamps indicating the time at which printing occurs. Default:True
Configuration options can appear in any order and can be separated by
any amount/kind of whitespace except for line terminators (Line Feed,
Carriage Return, Form Feed etc.). However, the same option cannot be
specified multiple times on the same line, even if it always appears
with the same value. Furthermore, there must be no space on either side
of the =
assigning a value to a config variable.
connmonitor
outputs results to stdout
and logs errors to
stderr
. Output (including JSON output) takes the same form as
connvitals, and you can read about that format on that
project's README.
Starting with version 3.0, connmonitor
will no longer output traces
if they are determined to be the same as the most recent route
previously recorded for a given host. This is as a result of changes
made to connvitals (but only the Python version) which are discussed in
greater detail on that project's
page.
Starting with version 3.1, connmonitor
will output a timestamp as a
part of the JSON object (a floating-point number in milliseconds since
the UNIX Epoch), and will output a human-readable date and time in the
plaintext output on the second line (directly after names/IP addresses)
in the system's ctime
format. All timestamps are given in the
timezone for which the system is configured.
Starting with version 4.0, each statistic is reported individually, and
not bundled together the way connvitals
outputs them. This
essentially looks like a separate output for each statistic, as though
each were invoked seperately by a different connvitals
invokation.
Prior to this version, configurations were global and all statistics
were gathered at the same frequency.
Here's an example of a configuration file that will gather port scans
and ping statistics for 10 pings per run each having a payload of 1337B
- but not route traces - from google.com every half-second with output
in connvitals
's standard, plain-text output, and do limited port
scanning and traceroutes (to a maximum of 30 hops) - but not pings - on
the address 127.0.0.1 (localhost) every 50 milliseconds with output in
JSON format:
google.com ping=500 payload=1337 scan=500 127.0.0.1 trace=50 json=1 scan=50