table of contents
Smokeping_probes_IRTT(3) | SmokePing | Smokeping_probes_IRTT(3) |
NAME¶
Smokeping::probes::IRTT - a SmokePing Probe for IRTT <https://github.com/peteheist/irtt>
SYNOPSIS¶
*** Probes *** +IRTT binary = /usr/local/bin/irtt # mandatory forks = 5 offset = 50% step = 300 timeout = 15 tmpdir = /tmp/smokeping-irtt # The following variables can be overridden in each target section dscp = 46 extraargs = --ttl=32 fill = rand hmac = opensesame interval = 1.5 ipversion = 6 length = 172 localaddr = 192.168.1.10:63814 metric = rtt pings = 5 readfrom = irtt1 readfrompollinterval = 2 serverfill = rand sleep = 0.5 writeto = irtt1 # [...] *** Targets *** probe = IRTT # if this should be the default probe # [...] + mytarget # probe = IRTT # if the default probe is something else host = my.host dscp = 46 extraargs = --ttl=32 fill = rand hmac = opensesame interval = 1.5 ipversion = 6 length = 172 localaddr = 192.168.1.10:63814 metric = rtt pings = 5 readfrom = irtt1 readfrompollinterval = 2 serverfill = rand sleep = 0.5 writeto = irtt1
DESCRIPTION¶
This SmokePing probe uses IRTT <https://github.com/peteheist/irtt> to record network round-trip time <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Round-trip_delay_time>, one-way delay <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/End-to-end_delay> or IPDV <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Packet_delay_variation> (jitter), based on the value of the metric variable.
Additionally, the probe provides a results sharing feature, which allows using results from a single IRTT run to record multiple metrics for a given host at the same time. One target is defined with the writeto variable set, which selects the name of a temporary file to save the IRTT output to. Additional targets are defined with the readfrom variable set to the same value, which, instead of running IRTT, wait for the main target's output to become available, then parse it to record the chosen metric from the same data. See the writeto and readfrom variables for more information.
WARNING¶
The results sharing feature (writeto and readfrom variables) requires the number of forks for the IRTT probe to be at least the total number of IRTT targets defined (regardless of whether they have writeto and readfrom set). Otherwise, there can be a deadlock while readfrom targets wait for their corresponding writeto target to complete, which may never start.
VARIABLES¶
Supported probe-specific variables:
- binary
- The location of your irtt binary.
Example value: /usr/local/bin/irtt
Default value: /usr/bin/irtt
This setting is mandatory.
- forks
- Run this many concurrent processes at maximum
Example value: 5
Default value: 5
- offset
- If you run many probes concurrently you may want to prevent them from
hitting your network all at the same time. Using the probe-specific offset
parameter you can change the point in time when each probe will be run.
Offset is specified in % of total interval, or alternatively as 'random',
and the offset from the 'General' section is used if nothing is specified
here. Note that this does NOT influence the rrds itself, it is just a
matter of when data acqusition is initiated. (This variable is only
applicable if the variable 'concurrentprobes' is set in the 'General'
section.)
Example value: 50%
- step
- Duration of the base interval that this probe should use, if different
from the one specified in the 'Database' section. Note that the step in
the RRD files is fixed when they are originally generated, and if you
change the step parameter afterwards, you'll have to delete the old RRD
files or somehow convert them. (This variable is only applicable if the
variable 'concurrentprobes' is set in the 'General' section.)
Example value: 300
- timeout
- How long a single 'ping' takes at maximum
Example value: 15
Default value: 5
- tmpdir
- A temporary directory in which to place files for writeto/readfrom.
Default value: /tmp/smokeping-irtt
Supported target-specific variables:
- dscp
- The packet DSCP
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Differentiated_services> value to use
("irtt client --dscp"). This is the same
as the classic one byte IP ToS field, but on the modern Internet,
typically only the lower 6 bits are used, and this is called the DSCP
value. The upper two bits are reserved for ECN
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Explicit_Congestion_Notification>.
Hex may be used if prefixed by "0x".
Example value: 46
- extraargs
- Extra arguments to "irtt client" (see
irtt-client(1)). Be careful with extra arguments, as some
can corrupt the results.
Example value: --ttl=32
- fill
- The fill to use in the payload for the client to server packet
("irtt client
--fill"). The length variable must be
large enough so there's a payload to fill. Use rand for random fill, or
see irtt-client(1) for more options.
Example value: rand
- hmac
- The HMAC
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hash-based_message_authentication_code>
key to use when sending packets to the server ("irtt
client --hmac").
Example value: opensesame
- interval
- The interval between successive requests, in seconds
("irtt client -i", but the unit is
always seconds (s)).
WARNING
If interval is increased to greater than 5 seconds, the timeout (which defaults to pings * 5 seconds + 1) must be modified so that SmokePing doesn't kill the probe prematurely. Additionally, interval must not be increased such that pings * interval is greater than step. For example, at step=300 and pings=20, the interval must not be greater than 15 seconds, but should preferably be less to account for handshake and packet wait times.
Example value: 1.5
Default value: 1
- ipversion
- The IP version to use for packets (4 or 6, corresponding to
"irtt client -4" or
"irtt client -6"). By default the IP
version is chosen based on the supplied host variable.
Example value: 6
- length
- The length (size) of the packet ("irtt client
-l"). The length includes IRTT headers, but not IP or UDP
headers. The actual packet length is increased to accommodate the IRTT
headers, if necessary. Header size as of IRTT 0.9.0 as used in SmokePing
is 48 bytes when writeto is set (since both monotonic and wall
clock values are requested) and 40 bytes otherwise.
Example value: 172
- localaddr
- The local address to bind to when sending packets
("irtt client --local"). See
irtt-client(1) Host formats for valid syntax.
Example value: 192.168.1.10:63814
- metric
- The metric to record, one of:
- rtt: round-trip time <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Round-trip_delay_time>
- send: one-way send delay <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/End-to-end_delay> (requires external time synchronization)
- receive: one-way receive delay <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/End-to-end_delay> (requires external time synchronization)
- ipdv: IPDV <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Packet_delay_variation> (instantaneous packet delay variation, or jitter)
- send_ipdv: IPDV for sent packets
- receive_ipdv: IPDV for received packets
Note that the "send" and "receive" metrics require accurate external system clock synchronization, otherwise the values from one will be abnormally high and the other will be abnormally low or even negative, in which case the value 0 will be given SmokePing. It is recommended to install ntp on both the SmokePing client and IRTT server. Properly configured NTP may be able to synchronize time to within a few milliseconds, which is usually enough to provide useful results. PTP over a LAN may achieve microsecond-level accuracy. For best results between geographically remote hosts, GPS receivers may be used. Since "send_ipdv" and "receive_ipdv" measure the variation in times between successive packets, and since "rtt" and "ipdv" use monotonic clock values on the client side only, external time synchronization is not required for these metrics.
Default value: rtt
- pings
- How many pings should be sent to each target, if different from the global
value specified in the Database section. Note that the number of pings in
the RRD files is fixed when they are originally generated, and if you
change this parameter afterwards, you'll have to delete the old RRD files
or somehow convert them.
Example value: 5
- readfrom
- The name of a file to read results from, instead of running IRTT. Use in
combination with writeto to use the results from one IRTT run to
record multiple metrics. The value will become the name of a file in
tmpdir, and must be the same as another target's setting for
writeto. Multiple targets may use the same value for
readfrom, but writeto and readfrom may not be both
set for a given target. When readfrom is set, any variables that
affect "irtt client" are ignored because
IRTT is not being invoked, including: dscp, extraargs,
fill, hmac, interval, ipversion,
length, localaddr and serverfill. These values are
only relevant in the corresponding writeto target.
Note that the host variable must still be defined for targets that define readfrom, otherwise the target won't be used.
When using this feature, be sure to have at least as many forks for the IRTT probe as you have total IRTT targets defined. See the "DESCRIPTION" section for more information.
Example value: irtt1
- readfrompollinterval
- The integer interval in seconds on which to poll for results when
readfrom is set. Lower numbers will allow readfrom to see
the results a bit sooner, at the cost of higher CPU usage. Polling does
not begin until the soonest time at which the IRTT client could have
terminated normally.
Example value: 2
Default value: 5
- serverfill
- The fill to use in the payload for the server to client packet
("irtt client
--sfill"). The length variable must be
large enough to accommodate a payload. Use
"rand" for random fill, or see
irtt-client(1) for more options.
Example value: rand
- sleep
- The amount of time to sleep before starting requests or processing results
(a float in seconds). This may be used to avoid CPU spikes caused by
invoking multiple instances of IRTT at the same time.
Example value: 0.5
- writeto
- The name of a file to write results to after running IRTT. Use in
combination with readfrom to use the results from this IRTT run to
record multiple metrics. The value will become the name of a file in
tmpdir, and any targets with readfrom set to the same value
will use this target's results. There must be only one target with
writeto set for a given file, and writeto and
readfrom may not be both set for a given target.
When using this feature, be sure to have at least as many forks for the IRTT probe as you have total IRTT targets defined. See the "DESCRIPTION" section for more information.
Example value: irtt1
AUTHORS¶
Pete Heist <pete@eventide.io>
2018-05-15 | 2.6.11 |