|
NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | INTERFACE IDENTIFICATION | HELPER UTILITIES | INSTALLATION | FILES | PCP ENVIRONMENT | SEE ALSO | COLOPHON |
|
PMDACISCO(1) General Commands Manual PMDACISCO(1)
pmdacisco - Cisco router performance metrics domain agent (PMDA)
$PCP_PMDAS_DIR/cisco/pmdacisco [-d domain] [-l logfile] [-U username]
[-P password] [-r refresh] [-s prompt] [-M username] [-x port]
host:interface-spec [...]
$PCP_PMDAS_DIR/cisco/parse [options] host:interface-spec [...]
$PCP_PMDAS_DIR/cisco/probe [-P password] [-s prompt] [-U username]
[-x port] host
pmdacisco is a Performance Metrics Domain Agent (PMDA) which extracts
performance metrics from one or more Cisco routers.
A brief description of the pmdacisco command line options follows:
-d It is absolutely crucial that the performance metrics domain
number specified here is unique and consistent. That is, domain
should be different for every PMDA on the one host, and the same
domain number should be used for the same PMDA on all hosts.
-l Location of the log file. By default, a log file named
cisco.log is written in the current directory of pmcd(1) when
pmdacisco is started, i.e. $PCP_LOG_DIR/pmcd. If the log file
cannot be created or is not writable, output is written to the
standard error instead.
-P By default, it is assumed that no user-level password is
required to access the Cisco's telnet port. If user-level
passwords have been enabled on the Ciscos, then those passwords
must be specified to pmdacisco. If specified with the -P
option, password will be used as the default user-level password
for all Ciscos. See also the INTERFACE IDENTIFICATION section
below.
-r pmdacisco will refresh the current values for all performance
metrics by contacting each Cisco router once every refresh
seconds. The default refresh is 120 seconds.
-s The Cisco command prompt ends with the string prompt. The
default value is ``>''. The only way pmdacisco can synchronize
the sending of commands and the parsing of output is by
recognizing prompt as a unique string that comes at the end of
all output, i.e. as the command prompt when waiting for the next
command.
-U By default, it is assumed that no username login is required to
access the Cisco's telnet port. If username login has been
enabled on the Ciscos, then the corresponding usernames must be
specified to pmdacisco. If specified with the -U option,
username will be used as the default username login for all
Ciscos. See also the INTERFACE IDENTIFICATION section below.
-M User account under which to run the agent. The default is the
unprivileged "pcp" account in current versions of PCP, but in
older versions the superuser account ("root") was used by
default.
-x Connect to the Cisco via TCP port number port rather than the
default 23 for a telnet connection.
For each interface, once the telnet connection is established,
pmdacisco is willing to wait up to 5 seconds for the Cisco to provide
a new snapshot of the requested information. If this does not
happen, the telnet connection is broken and no values are returned.
This prevents pmdacisco tying up the Cisco's telnet ports waiting
indefinitely when the response from the router is not what is
expected, e.g. if the format of the ``show int'' output changes, or
the command is in error because an interface is no longer configured
on the router.
As each Cisco router can support multiple network interfaces and/or
multiple communications protocols, it is necessary to tell pmdacisco
which interfaces are to be monitored.
The host:interface-spec arguments on the command line define a
particular interface on a particular Cisco router. host should be a
hostname or a ``dot-notation'' IP address that identifies the telnet
port of a particular Cisco router. There are several components of
the interface-spec as follows.
protocol
One of the abbreviations a, B, E, e, f, G, h, s or Vl
respectively for ATM, BRI (ISDN), FastEthernet, Ethernet,
FDDI, GigabitEthernet, HSSI, serial or Vlan.
interface
Depending on the model of the Cisco, this will either be an
integer, e.g. s0, or an integer followed by a slash (``/'')
followed by a subinterface identification in one of a variety
of syntactic forms, e.g. e1/0, G0/0/1 or s4/2.1.
To discover the valid interfaces on a particular Cisco,
connect to the telnet port (using telnet(1)) and enter the
command "show int" and look for the interface identifiers
following the keywords ``Ethernet'', ``Fddi'', ``Serial'',
etc.
Alternatively run the probe command.
username
If there is a username login, and it is different to the
default (see -U above), it may be optionally specified here by
appending ``@'' and the username to the end of interface-spec.
password
If there is a user-level password, and it is different to the
default (see -P above), it may be optionally specified here by
appending a question mark (``?'') and the password to the end
of interface-spec.
prompt If the Cisco command prompt is different to the default (see
-s above), it may be optionally specified here by appending an
exclamation mark (``!'') and the prompt to the end of
interface-spec.
The following are examples of valid interface-spec arguments.
my-router:e1/2
123.456.789.0:s0
wancisco:f2/3?trust_me
somecisco:G1/0!myprompt
cisco34.foo.bar.com:e2?way2cool
mycisco:s2/2.1@mylogin
yourcisco:E0/0@yourlogin?yourpassword
mycisco:E0/0@mylogin?mypassword!myprompt
The probe command may be used to discover the names of all interfaces
for a particular Cisco router identified by host. The -P argument is
the same as for pmdacisco.
The parse command takes exactly the same arguments as pmdacisco, but
executes outside the control of any pmcd(1) and so may be used to
diagnose problems with handling a particular Cisco router and/or one
of its interfaces.
Additional diagnostic verbosity may be produced using the -D
appl0,appl1,appl2 command line option. appl0 logs connect and
disconnect events, login progress, high-level flow of control and
extracted statistics. appl1 traces all commands sent to the Cisco
device. appl2 logs tokenizing and parsing of the output from the
Cisco device. Diagnostics are generated on standard error as each
sample is fetched and parsed.
If you want access to the names, help text and values for the Cisco
performance metrics, do the following as root:
# cd $PCP_PMDAS_DIR/cisco
# ./Install
If you want to undo the installation, do the following as root:
# cd $PCP_PMDAS_DIR/cisco
# ./Remove
pmdacisco is launched by pmcd(1) and should never be executed
directly. The Install and Remove scripts notify pmcd(1) when the
agent is installed or removed.
$PCP_PMCDCONF_PATH
command line options used to launch pmdacisco
$PCP_PMDAS_DIR/cisco/help
default help text file for the Cisco metrics
$PCP_PMDAS_DIR/cisco/Install
installation script for the pmdacisco agent
$PCP_PMDAS_DIR/cisco/Remove
undo installation script for the pmdacisco agent
$PCP_LOG_DIR/pmcd/cisco.log
default log file for error messages and other information
from pmdacisco
Environment variables with the prefix PCP_ are used to parameterize
the file and directory names used by PCP. On each installation, the
file /etc/pcp.conf contains the local values for these variables.
The $PCP_CONF variable may be used to specify an alternative
configuration file, as described in pcp.conf(5).
pmcd(1), pcp.conf(5) and pcp.env(5).
This page is part of the PCP (Performance Co-Pilot) project.
Information about the project can be found at ⟨http://www.pcp.io/⟩.
If you have a bug report for this manual page, send it to
pcp@groups.io. This page was obtained from the project's upstream
Git repository ⟨https://github.com/performancecopilot/pcp.git⟩ on
2018-02-02. (At that time, the date of the most recent commit that
was found in the repository was 2018-02-02.) If you discover any
rendering problems in this HTML version of the page, or you believe
there is a better or more up-to-date source for the page, or you have
corrections or improvements to the information in this COLOPHON
(which is not part of the original manual page), send a mail to
man-pages@man7.org
Performance Co-Pilot PCP PMDACISCO(1)