The perennially discussed issues around parsing iproute2 output are kind
of well cpovered so we'll let that be... And no, SUSE hasn't removed
net-tools. It's just not installed in
a very minimal install.
On 9/19/19 7:53 PM, Jeremy Laidman wrote:
Would it be difficult to have the server-side linux parser look for
[ports] and if not found, then look for [ss]; and similarly, [ifconfig] has
[ip-addr] as its fallback
(assuming "ip addr show" gives similar output - probably doesn't, but
you get the idea)?
Minorly tangential, I think sar is more universally available these days
than when the client scripts were first created. So I'm wondering if we
should make better use of sar,
perhaps even have a [sar] section of the client message, that is the
first place that xymond goes when looking for statistics.
On Fri, 20 Sep 2019 at 00:52, Japheth Cleaver <user-87556346d4af@xymon.invalid
<mailto:user-87556346d4af@xymon.invalid>> wrote:
On 9/18/2019 8:05 AM, Zden?k Tlust? wrote:Hello,
the script xymonclient-linux.sh is using commands like ifconfig,
netstat, etc. These commands are marked as depreciated and some of
the
Linux distributions have removed them already. For example SuSE
Linux
Enterprise Server 15 has no support for netstat and ifconfig.
The replacement are commands from iproute2 package like ip, ss,
routel, etc.
Are there any plan to replace depreciated commands with new ones?
Especially with SS and IP, it's something that's on the road map.
Unfortunately, doing that in a backwards-compatible way will still
keeping the 'linux' OStype/class 'linux' might prove difficult
without a
lot more text processing. (This flag is split on the receiving side
for
parsing out what client evaluations to run and how, since the output
of
SunOS, Linux, BSDs, and other *nixes can vary widely.)
One could either move current OS's to something like "linux-old", or
have upgraded scripts under "linux-new", or do a lot of 'awk' calls
in
xymonclient-linux.sh to try to duplicate previous output more
precisely.
I'm not sure which is better there.
Regards,
-jc