NAME YATG - Fast SNMP data poller daemon, with storage and graphing VERSION version 4.112532 DESCRIPTION YATG is an application which is intended to be run persistently. At intervals it will wake up and poll network devices for SNMP data, and then store or print that data. In this distribution are also included examples for presenting simple CGI web pages with graphs. YATG is flexible, efficient and powerful. It can poll a large number of devices with thousands of ports in just a few seconds. The configuration is very simple, and the defaults sane (it's designed for sysadmins, after all). You can use YATG both for historical logging, such as traffic counters on ports, as well as short-term monitoring which might feed into, say, Nagios. Wherever possible, data is translated to human-friendly formats for storage, such as using Leaf Names instead of OIDs, translated values ("up", "down", etc) and device port names rather than SNMP Interface Indexes. How Does It Work? At startup, "yatg_updater" loads its configuration from local files and a database, performs some basic SNMP connections to build a cache about device capabilities and so on, and then goes to sleep. Periodically, as determined by the configuration, "yatg_updater" wakes up and polls all devices, then stores results, again according to instructions in the configuration. If you have only the essential dependencies installed (see below) then you can only output results to STDOUT. With other modules, you have more options such as local or remote disk, or memcached based storage. "yatg_updater" will re-load all its configuration if given a HUP signal. If you run the daemon persistently (for example with "daemontools") then a cron job once a day is a good way to refresh the configuration. There is reference to this in one of the bundled example files. What's in this distribution "yatg_updater" This is the main application, designed to be run persistently. It does not accept any input and only produces output when in debugging mode. It is a smart wrapper for the SNMP::Effective module. YATG::Store family of modules These are modules which take the SNMP poll results and store them to either local Disk, a Memcached server, or the disk on a remote networked server. YATG::Retrieve family of modules These are modules which read stored results back to you, for a given time window. The data can be retrieved from local Disk, a Memcached server, or the disk on a remote networked server. RPC::Serialized handlers If storing and/or retrieving on a remote networked server, it should run an instance of RPC::Serialized, and these are the RPC Handlers for that server (see that module's documentation for further details). CGI For the special case of viewing graphs of disk-based poll results for switch port traffic counters, there is are two CGI scripts. One is a wrapper which presents an HTML page embedded with PNG images created from the other script. Examples The "examples/" folder includes a copy of each of the files you should need for a complete deployment of YATG. Obviously some of them contain dummy data. Where to go from here To begin with, you probably want to see how to configure "yatg_updater" in YATG::Config. Alongside that, there are examples of all the files you should need to install, in the "examples/" folder of this distribution. LOGGING and TESTING This module uses "Log::Dispatch::Syslog" for logging, and by default will log timing data to your system's syslog service. More information is provided in the YATG::Config documentation. To run in debug mode, where timing data is output to standard out rather than syslog, set the environment variable "YATG_DEBUG" to a true value. To run the poller just once, set the "YATG_SINGLE_RUN" environment variable to a true value. This is great for development. It makes "yatg_updater" load its configuration, generate the device hints cache, sleep and then run just one poll cycle before exiting. For example: YATG_DEBUG=1 YATG_SINGLE_RUN=1 /usr/bin/yatg_updater /etc/yatg.yml SEE ALSO SNMP::Effective This system uses SNMP::Effective at its core do the polling. RPC::Serialized Store polled data on another server using RPC::Serialized. AUTHOR Oliver Gorwits COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE This software is copyright (c) 2011 by University of Oxford. This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.