Copyright (C) 2011, 2014, 2015, 2018 Christian Garbs [email protected]
Licensed under GNU GPL 3 or later.
bgpgraph is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
bgpgraph is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with bgpgraph. If not, see http://www.gnu.org/licenses/.
https://github.com/mmitch/bgpgraph
Run
vtysh -c 'show ip bgp' | vtysh_bgp_to_dot 1234 | dot -Tpng > graph.png
to generate a graph, where 1234
is your local AS and graph.png
will be the generated graph. You need read-access with vtysh
, of
course.
If you pass no local AS to vtysh_bgp_to_dot
, the local node will
not be included in the generated graph:
vtysh -c 'show ip bgp' | vtysh_bgp_to_dot | dot -Tpng > graph_without_local_node.png
If there is an info.conf
in your current directory, it will be
read to spice up the graph. The format of info.conf
is whitespace
delimited fields:
- First field contains an AS number.
- Second field contains a name describing the AS.
- Third field optionally contains a flag for marking a node in the output.
60001 this_is_me
60002 Network_A
60003 Network_B important
60004 Network_C
This configuration will add labels to the graph nodes 60001 to 60004 and mark the node 60003 as important.
If you want to add additional information to the generated graph, you
could use convert
from the Imagemagick
package like this:
vtysh -c 'show ip bgp' | ./vtysh_bgp_to_dot 60001 | dot -Tpng | \
convert - \
-gravity Southwest -background white -splice 0x25 \
-annotate +0+2 " `hostname -f` - `date` " graph.png
This will add a status text to the bottom of the graph containing the hostname and the current date.
As vtysh_bgp_to_dot
reads from stdin, it does not need to be
installed on your router.
If you have SSH access to the router, you can execute vtysh
remotely and execute everything else locally like this:
ssh user@router 'vtysh -c "show ip bgp"' | vtysh_bgp_to_dot | ...
You can use the command=
setting in ~/.ssh/authorized_keys
to
enable key-based login without password while restricting access to
the vtysh
command.
Instead of SSH you could also use netcat
and (x)inetd
or a
cronjob plus some sort of network file exchange or even send the
vtysh
output by email and process it with procmail
or
maildrop
.