mrtg-nt-guide(1) -- Linux man page
NAME
mrtg-nt-guide - The Windows NT Guide to MRTG 2.10.15
SYNOPSIS
Installing MRTG on an Windows NT or Windows 2000 box is not quite as ``click
and point'' as some might want it to be. But then again, it is not all that
difficult if you follow the instructions below.
PREREQUISITS
To get MRTG to work on Windows NT you need the following:
- *
-
A copy of Perl for NT from
http://www.ActiveState.com
(it must be version 5.005, or better yet, 5.6).
- *
-
The latest version of MRTG from
http://people.ee.ethz.ch/~oetiker/webtools/mrtg/pub Look for mrtg-2.10.15.zip
or better. The archive also contains a precompiled copy of rateup.exe for
Win32.
INSTALLATION
I suggest you do the following from the machine that will be running MRTG,
which, in this case, is also a web server. All examples are for doing things
to a LOCAL machine.
- First
-
Unzip MRTG to C:\mrtg-2.10.15 on the WindowsNT machine of your choice.
- Next
-
Install Perl on the same Windows NT machine. You might want to make sure
that the Perl binary directory is listed in your system path.
C:\Perl\bin;%SystemRoot%\system32;%SystemRoot%;...
You can manually check this by going to [Control Panel]->[System]->[Environment]
To see if everything is installed properly you can open a Command Shell
and go into c:\mrtg-2.10.15\bin. Type:
perl mrtg
This should give you a friendly error message complaining about the missing mrtg
configuration file. Now, you have successfully installed mrtg and perl.
CONFIGURING MRTG
Now it is time to create a configuration for mrtg. But before we begin you need to know a few things. Take an
opportunity to gather the following information:
- *
-
The IP address or hostname and the snmp port number, (if non standard), of the device you want to monitor.
- *
-
If you want to monitor something other than bytes in and out, you must also know the SNMPOID of what you
want to monitor.
- *
-
Finally you need to know the read-only SNMP community string
for your device. If you don't know it, try public, that is the default.
For the rest of this document we will be using device 10.10.10.1 ( a CISCO
Catalyst 5000) with Community string public. We are interested in monitoring
traffic, and the CPU load. Let's begin.
The first thing we do in setting up mrtg is making a default config file.
Get to a cmd prompt and change to the c:\mrtg-2.10.15\bin directory. Type the
following command:
perl cfgmaker public@10.10.10.1 --global "WorkDir: c:\www\mrtg" --output mrtg.cfg
This creates an initial MRTG config file for you. Note that in this file all interfaces
of your router will be stored by number. Unfortunately, these numbers are likely to change whenever you
reconfigure your router. In order to work around this you can get cfgmaker to produce a configuration
which is based on Ip numbers, or even Interface Descriptions. Check cfgmaker
If you get an error message complaining about no such name or no
response, your community name is probably wrong.
Now, let's take a look at the mrtg.cfg file that was created.
In Perl, a "#" is a comment, synonymous with "REM" in DOS.
Add the following to the top of the mrtg.cfg file:
WorkDir: D:\InetPub\wwwroot\MRTG
This is where the web pages are created, usually a web root.
######################################################################
# Description: LCP SUWGB
# Contact: Administrator
# System Name: LC-Bridge
# Location: Here
#.....................................................................
TargetDevice's IP Address:Interface Number:Community:IP Address
Target[10.10.10.1.1]: 1:public@10.10.10.1
This is the interface speed (Default is 10 megabits; for 100Mbit devices use 12500000 and so on...)
MaxBytes[10.10.10.1.1]: 1250000
Title[10.10.10.1.1]: LC-Bridge (sample.device): ether0
This section determines how the web page headers will look
PageTop[10.10.10.1.1]: <H1>Traffic Analysis for ether0</H1>
<TABLE>
<TR><TD>System:</TD><TD>LC-Bridge inAndover</TD></TR>
<TR><TD>Maintainer:</TD><TD>Administrator</TD></TR>
<TR><TD>Interface:</TD><TD>ether0(1)</TD></TR>
<TR><TD>IP:</TD><TD>sample.device(10.10.10.1)</TD></TR>
<TR><TD>Max Speed:</TD>
<TD>1250.0 kBytes/s (ethernetCsmacd)</TD></TR>
</TABLE>
Target[10.10.10.1.2]: 2:public@10.10.10.1
MaxBytes[10.10.10.1.2]: 1250000
Title[10.10.10.1.2]: LC-Bridge (): ulink0
PageTop[10.10.10.1.2]: <H1>Traffic Analysis for ulink0</H1>
<TABLE>
<TR><TD>System:</TD><TD>LC-Bridge inAndover</TD></TR>
<TR><TD>Maintainer:</TD><TD>Administrator</TD></TR>
<TR><TD>Interface:</TD><TD>ulink0(2)</TD></TR>
<TR><TD>IP:</TD><TD>()</TD></TR>
<TR><TD>Max Speed:</TD>
<TD>1250.0 kBytes/s (ethernetCsmacd)</TD></TR>
</TABLE>
#---------------------------------------------------------------
And that's a very basic mrtg config file. You can run this and see your
results by going into the c:\mrtg-2.10.15\bin directory and typing:
perl mrtg mrtg.cfg
It is normal to get errors for the first two times you run this command. The
errors will alert you about the fact that there have not been any log files
in existence before.
If you take a look at those web pages they are not very exciting (yet). You need
to have the mrtg files run every five minutes to produce the desired results.
Just run it again after a few minutes. You should now be able to see the first
lines in your graphs.
MAKE MRTG RUN ALL THE TIME
Starting mrtg by hand every time you want to run it is not going to make you
happy I guess.
There is a special option you can set in the mrtg configuration file so
so that mrtg will not terminate after it was started. Instead it
will wait for 5 minutes and then run again.
Add the option
RunAsDaemon: yes
to your mrtg.cfg file and start it with:
start /Dc:\mrtg-2.10.15\bin wperl mrtg --logging=eventlog mrtg.cfg
If you use wperl instead of perl, no console window will show. MRTG is now
running in the background. If it runs into problems it will tell you so
over the EventLog. To stop MRTG, open the Task Manager and terminate the
wperl.exe process. If mrtg has anything to tell you these messages
can be found in the event log.
If you put a shortcut with
Target: wperl mrtg --logging=eventlog mrtg.cfg
Start in: c:\mrtg-2.10.15\bin
into your startup folder, mrtg will now start whever you login to your NT
box.
If you do not want to log into your NT box just to start mrtg. Have a look
at http://www.firedaemon.com/mrtg-howto.php which describes a free tool to
start any program as a Service. The pages gives specific instructions for
mrtg users.
EXAMPLE
Now lets look at a config file to monitor what we wanted to on our mythical
Cisco Cat 5000 --- utilization on ports 3, 5, 10, and 24, and the CPU Load,
which will show us nonstandard mrtg configurations as well as more options..
WorkDir: D:\InetPub\wwwroot\MRTG
######################################################################
# Description: LCP SUWGB
# Contact: Administrator
# System Name: LC-Bridge
# Location: Here
#.....................................................................
Target[10.10.10.1.1]: 3:public@10.10.10.1
MaxBytes[10.10.10.1.1]: 1250000
Title[10.10.10.1.1]: LC-Bridge (sample-device): ether0
PageTop[10.10.10.1.1]: <H1>Traffic Analysis for ether0</H1>
<TABLE>
<TR><TD>System:</TD><TD>LC-Bridge inAndover</TD></TR>
<TR><TD>Maintainer:</TD><TD>Administrator</TD></TR>
<TR><TD>Interface:</TD><TD>ether0(3)</TD></TR>
<TR><TD>IP:</TD><TD>sample-device(10.10.10.1)</TD></TR>
<TR><TD>Max Speed:</TD>
<TD>1250.0 kBytes/s (ethernetCsmacd)</TD></TR>
</TABLE>
#---------------------------------------------------------------
Target[10.10.10.1.2]: 5:public@10.10.10.1
MaxBytes[10.10.10.1.2]: 1250000
Title[10.10.10.1.2]: LC-Bridge (): ulink0
PageTop[10.10.10.1.2]: <H1>Traffic Analysis for ulink0</H1>
<TABLE>
<TR><TD>System:</TD><TD>LC-Bridge inAndover</TD></TR>
<TR><TD>Maintainer:</TD><TD>Administrator</TD></TR>
<TR><TD>Interface:</TD><TD>ulink0(5)</TD></TR>
<TR><TD>IP:</TD><TD>()</TD></TR>
<TR><TD>Max Speed:</TD>
<TD>1250.0 kBytes/s (ethernetCsmacd)</TD></TR>
</TABLE>
#---------------------------------------------------------------
Target[10.10.10.1.1]: 10:public@10.10.10.1
MaxBytes[10.10.10.1.1]: 1250000
Title[10.10.10.1.1]: LC-Bridge (sample-device): ether0
PageTop[10.10.10.1.1]: <H1>Traffic Analysis for ether0</H1>
<TABLE>
<TR><TD>System:</TD><TD>LC-Bridge inAndover</TD></TR>
<TR><TD>Maintainer:</TD><TD>Administrator</TD></TR>
<TR><TD>Interface:</TD><TD>ether0(10)</TD></TR>
<TR><TD>IP:</TD><TD>sample-device(10.10.10.1)</TD></TR>
<TR><TD>Max Speed:</TD>
<TD>1250.0 kBytes/s (ethernetCsmacd)</TD></TR>
</TABLE>
#---------------------------------------------------------------
Target[10.10.10.1.2]: 24:public@10.10.10.1
MaxBytes[10.10.10.1.2]: 1250000
Title[10.10.10.1.2]: LC-Bridge (): ulink0
PageTop[10.10.10.1.2]: <H1>Traffic Analysis for ulink0</H1>
<TABLE>
<TR><TD>System:</TD><TD>LC-Bridge inAndover</TD></TR>
<TR><TD>Maintainer:</TD><TD>Administrator</TD></TR>
<TR><TD>Interface:</TD><TD>ulink0(24)</TD></TR>
<TR><TD>IP:</TD><TD>()</TD></TR>
<TR><TD>Max Speed:</TD>
<TD>1250.0 kBytes/s (ethernetCsmacd)</TD></TR>
</TABLE>
#---------------------------------------------------------------
# Router CPU load %
Target[cpu.1]:1.3.6.1.4.1.9.2.1.58.0&1.3.6.1.4.1.9.2.1.58.0:public@10.10.10.1
RouterUptime[cpu.1]: public@10.10.10.1
MaxBytes[cpu.1]: 100
Title[cpu.1]: CPU LOAD
PageTop[cpu.1]: <H1>CPU Load %</H1>
Unscaled[cpu.1]: ymwd
ShortLegend[cpu.1]: %
XSize[cpu.1]: 380
YSize[cpu.1]: 100
YLegend[cpu.1]: CPU Utilization
Legend1[cpu.1]: CPU Utilization in % (Load)
Legend2[cpu.1]: CPU Utilization in % (Load)
Legend3[cpu.1]:
Legend4[cpu.1]:
LegendI[cpu.1]:
LegendO[cpu.1]: Usage
Options[cpu.1]: gauge
This is a nice example of how to monitor any SNMP device if you know what OID
you want to use. Once again, For an explanation of the more advance features of
mrtg, please see Tobias's documentation.
AUTHORS
David S. Divins <ddivins@moon.jic.com>,
Steve Pierce <MRTG@HDL.com>,
Tobi Oeitker <oetiker@ee.ethz.ch>
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