ospf_monitor(ADMN)
ospf_monitor --
monitor OSPF gateways
Synopsis
ospf_monitor mon_db_file
Description
Use the ospf_monitor command to query OSPF routers. The
ospf_monitor
command operates in interactive mode. It allows the user to query
the various OSPF routers to provide detailed information
on IO
statistics, error logs, link-state data bases, AS external data
bases, the OSPF routing table,
configured OSPF interfaces, and OSPF neighbors.
mon_db_file
is the complete pathname of a database composed of
records configuring destinations for ospf_monitor remote commands.
Each destination record is a single-line entry which lists the
destination IP address, the destination hostname, and
an OSPF
authentication key (if authentication is activated by the
destination). Since authentication keys may be present in the
destination records, it is recommended that general access to this
database be restricted. The recommended pathname for
mon_db_file
is
/etc/mon.db.
Refer to RFC 1583 (OSPF Specification, version 2)
for details about
OSPF database and packet formats.
Commands
Upon entering interactive mode,
ospf_monitor
presents the prompt
[ # ] dest command params >
at which you can enter any of
ospf_monitor's interactive commands. Interactive commands can be
interrupted at any time via a keyboard interrupt. Note that the
command line length must be less than 200 characters.
Local commands
?-
Display all local commands and their functions.
?R-
Display all remote commands and their functions.
d-
Display all configured destinations. This command displays
``<dest index>'',
the IP address, and the hostname of all
potential ospf_monitor command destinations configured in
mon_db_file.
h-
Display the command history buffer showing the last 30
interactive commands.
x-
Exit the ospf_monitor program.
@ remote_command-
Send
remote_command
to the same (previous) destination.
@ dest_index remote_command-
Send
remote_command to configured destination
dest_index.
F filename-
Send all ospf_monitor output to
filename.
S-
Send all ospf_monitor output to stdout.
Remote commands
a area_id type ls_id adv_rtr-
Display link state advertisement.
area_id
is the OSPF area
for which the query is directed.
adv_rtr
is currently
unused.
type
specifies the type of advertisement to request
and should be specified as follows:
1-
Request the router links advertisements. They describe
the collected states of the router's interfaces. For
this type of request, the
ls_id
field should be set
to the originating router's Router ID.
2-
Request the network links advertisements. They
describe the set of routers attached to the network.
For this type of request, the
ls_id
field should be
set to the IP interface address of the network's
Designated Router.
3-
Request the summary link advertisements describing
routes to networks. They describe inter-area routes
and enable the condensation of routing information at
area borders. For this type of request, the
ls_id
field should be set to the destination network's IP
address.
4-
Request the summary link advertisements describing
routes to AS boundary routers. They describe inter-
area routes and enable the condensation of routing
information at area borders. For this type of request,
the
ls_id
field should be set to the Router ID of the
described AS boundary router.
5-
Request the AS external link advertisements. They
describe routes to destinations external to the
Autonomous System. For this type of request, the
ls_id
field should be set to the destination network's IP
address.
c-
Display cumulative log. This log includes input/output
statistics for monitor request, hello, data base description,
link-state request, link-state update, and link-state ack
packets. Area statistics are provided which describe the
total number of routing neighbors and number of active OSPF
interfaces. Routing table statistics are summarized and
reported as the number of intra-area routes, inter-area
routes, and AS external data base entries.
e-
Display cumulative errors. This log reports the various error
conditions which can occur between OSPF routing neighbors and
shows the number of occurrences for each.
h-
Display a list of valid next hops derived from the SPF calculation.
l [retrans]-
Display the link-state database (except for ASEs). This
table describes the routers and networks making up the AS. If
retrans is non-zero, the retransmit list of neighbors held
by this lsdb structure will be printed.
A retrans-
Display the AS external data base entries. This table reports
the advertising router, forwarding address, age, length,
sequence number, type, and metric for each AS external route.
If
retrans
is non-zero, the retransmit list of neighbors
held by this lsdb structure will be printed.
o-
Display the OSPF routing table. This table reports the AS
border routes, area border routes, summary AS border routes,
and networks currently managed via OSPF.
I-
Display all interfaces. This report shows all interfaces
configured for OSPF. Information reported includes the area,
interface IP address, interface type, interface state, cost,
priority, and the IP address of the DR and BDR
for the
network.
N-
Display all OSPF routing neighbors. Information reported
includes the area, local interface address, router ID,
neighbor IP address, state, and mode.
V-
Display gated version information.
Files
/etc/mon.db-
the monitor database file
References
gated(ADMN),
gated.conf(SFF),
gdc(ADMN)
RFC 1583
© 2005 The SCO Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
SCO OpenServer Release 6.0.0 - 01 June 2005