NAME¶
mrtg-ipv6 - IPv6 support in MRTG
OVERVIEW¶
MRTG and cfgmaker support SNMP over IPv6. IPv6 targets can be specified by
hostname or IPv6 address, and if the required libraries are present (see
below), queries will use IPv6.
USAGE¶
Enabling IPv6¶
IPv6 is currently disabled by default and must be explicitly enabled. In MRTG
this is done by turning on the
EnableIPv6 global option in the
configuration file. In cfgmaker, it is enabled with the
--enable-ipv6
command-line option.
If IPv6 is disabled, MRTG and cfgmaker should behave in exactly the same way as
previous versions. So the addition of IPv6 support should have no effect on
existing MRTG setups unless IPv6 is enabled.
IPv6 support requires the Socket6 and INET6 libraries (see below). If MRTG can't
find them, IPv6 is disabled.
Specifying IPv6 targets¶
IPv6 targets may be specified by name or IPv6 address. Numeric IPv6 addresses
may be used with both cfgmaker and MRTG, but they must be enclosed in square
brackets.
For example, a target could be specified as:
public@[2001:760:4::]:161
Hostnames work as expected: first an IPv6 name lookup is tried, then an IPv4
lookup.
Targets that do not support SNMP over IPv6¶
Many targets (this currently includes all Cisco routers) do not yet support SNMP
over IPv6 and must be monitored over IPv4. This can cause problems if you
specify a target through its DNS name and the name maps to both the IPv6
address and the IPv4 address of the target: MRTG will only try IPv6, and will
fail.
To query these targets, use the
IPv4Only per-target option, which tells
MRTG not to use SNMP over IPv6 for the target.
MRTG does not fall back to IPv4 for performance and correctness reasons. If
there are many routers to query, a timeout for every router would make MRTG
take too long to query them all. And if, for some reason, IPv6 connectivity to
the target is lost, MRTG's error messages can help figure out what is wrong.
cfgmaker does fall back from IPv6 to IPv4. If IPv6 is enabled and cfgmaker is
given a hostname that resolves to both an IPv6 and an IPv4 address, it first
tries to query the target over IPv6. If it receives no answer, it tries again
using IPv4. If the target answers, cfgmaker sets the IPv4Only option in the
generated config file.
IPv6 LIBRARIES¶
Libraries required¶
IPv6 support requires the
Socket6 and
INET6 Perl modules. Both can
be downloaded from CPAN:
http://search.cpan.org/author/UMEMOTO/Socket6/
http://search.cpan.org/author/MONDEJAR/INET6/
If you use Debian, you will need the packages
libsocket6-perl and
libio-socket-inet6-perl, which are (or should soon be) in unstable.
So far, IPv6 support has been tested on Linux only, and only with Socket6
version 0.12. Also note that IPv6 won't work at all if you don't have INET6.pm
version 2.00 or newer.
Installing the libraries¶
Building and installing Socket6 and INET6 is very simple. For each module, just
unpack the archive and then do:
perl Makefile.PL
make
and then:
su
make install
If you have installed the libraries successfully, cfgmaker and mrtg should
automatically detect them and allow IPv6 support to be enabled.
AUTHOR¶
Lorenzo Colitti <lorenzo location colitti.com>