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NAMEsntop —
top-like console network status tool
SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTIONsntop (simple network top) is a console utility, in the
spirit of top, that polls a list of hosts at a regular interval to determine
if they are online, displaying the results in a formatted table. This list is
read on load from a config file, sntoprc, located (by default) in ~/ or /etc.
The polling is done via ICMP ping (1)
Optionally, the results can be used to generate an html page or ellicit the execution of a file. Interactive run-time commands exist:
COMMAND-LINE PARAMETERS-d, --daemon - daemon mode: make sntop capable of
running in the background. note, it wont automatically fork into the
background.
Command Execution SyntaxIn alarm or log mode a file is executed on the occurence of change in status of a given host. sntop will fork and exec the specified file, passing as arguments information about the event. those arguments are:<display name of host> <host name/IP> <status> <display name of host> the 'display' name (first sntop collumn) of the machine, ie "MyBox" <host name/IP> the explicit hostname or IP address of the machine, ie "snaggle" or "192.168.55.12" <status> the new status of the machine, "UP" or "DOWN," this would obviously always be DOWN for alarm mode Note, DOWN hosts will be logged in both modes upon load (ie, if they are down when sntop loads, <file> is executed). No action is taken in any modes for hosts that originate as UP -- thus, the default status is UP. We execute an external file to remain in the UNIX tradition -- small, simple programs that do one thing damn well. Thus, a logging option is not even provided -- a two-line shell script will do fine, there. However, the possibilities are powerful: administrator paging, for instance. See alarm.sh for an example script. FILES~/.sntoprc default config file location/etc/sntoprc if a user's config is not found, this system-wide one is read /usr/man/man1/sntop.1.gz the man page alarm.sh sample alarm-execute script /usr/local/bin/sntop the sntop executable CONFIG FILEAn example config file, sntoprc.EXAMPLE, is included in the standard distribution. However, the config file syntax is simple. Entries are RETURN terminated. Trailing whitespace is ignored. '#' signifies a comment and can be used inline. By default, upto 32 characters will be read, per line. All entries should be a single word, except comments. The syntax:
Example:
AUTHORSsntop was written by Robert M. Love
<rml@tech9.net> and Christopher M. Rivera <cmrivera@ufl.edu>. Send
us bug reports, suggestions, and hardware.
SEE ALSOtop (1), ping (1), fping (1)
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