NAME
mrtg-reference - MRTG 2.10.15 configuration reference
OVERVIEW
The runtime behaviour of
MRTG is governed by a configuration file. Run-of-
ther-mill configuration files can be generated with
cfgmaker. (Check
cfgmaker). But for more elaborate configurations some hand-tuning is
required.
This document describes all the configuration options understood by
the mrtg software.
SYNTAX
MRTG configuration file syntax follows some simple rules:
- *
-
Keywords must start at the beginning of a line.
- *
-
Lines which follow a keyword line which start
with a blank are appended to the keyword line
- *
-
Empty Lines are ignored
- *
-
Lines starting with a # sign are comments.
- *
-
You can add other files into the configuration file using
Include: file
Example:
Include: base-options.inc
If included files are specified with relative paths, both the current
working directory and the directory containing the main config file will
be searched for the files.
GLOBAL KEYWORDS
WorkDir
WorkDir specifies where the logfiles and the webpages should
be created.
Example:
WorkDir: /usr/tardis/pub/www/stats/mrtg
OPTIONAL GLOBAL KEYWORDS
HtmlDir
HtmlDir specifies the directory where the html (or shtml,
but we'll get on to those later) lives.
NOTE: Workdir overrides the settings for htmldir, imagedir
and logdir.
Example:
Htmldir: /www/mrtg/
ImageDir
ImageDir specifies the directory where the images live. They
should be under the html directory.
Example:
Imagedir: /www/mrtg/images
LogDir
LogDir specifies the directory where the logs are stored.
This need not be under htmldir directive.
Example:
Logdir: /www/mrtg/logs
Forks (UNIX only)
With system that supports fork (
UNIX for example), mrtg can fork itself into multiple
instances while it is acquiring data via snmp.
For situations with high latency or a great number of devices
this will speed things up considerably. It will not make things faster,
though, if you query a single switch sitting next door.
As far as I know NT can not fork so this option is not available on NT.
Example:
Forks: 4
EnableIPv6
When set to yes, IPv6 support is enabled if the required libraries are
present (see the mrtg-ipv6 manpage). When IPv6 is enabled, mrtg can talk to routers
using
SNMP over IPv6 and targets may be specified by their numeric IPv6
addresses as well as by hostname or IPv4 address.
If IPv6 is enabled and the target is a hostname, mrtg will try to resolve
the hostname to an IPv6 address and, if this fails, to an IPv4 address.
Note that mrtg will only use IPv4 if you specify an IPv4 address or a
hostname with no corresponding IPv6 address; it will not fall back to IPv4
if it simply fails to communicate with the target using IPv6. This is by
design.
Note that many routers do not currently support SNMP over IPv6. Use the
IPv4Only per target option for these routers.
IPv6 is disabled by default.
Example:
EnableIPv6: Yes
Refresh
How many seconds apart should the browser (Netscape) be
instructed to reload the page? If this is not defined, the
default is 300 seconds (5 minutes).
Example:
Refresh: 600
Interval
How often do you call mrtg? The default is 5 minutes. If
you call it less often, you should specify it here.
This does two things:
- *
-
The generated HTML page contains the right
information about the calling interval ...
- *
-
A META header in the generated HTML page will instruct
caches about the time-to-live of this page .....
In this example, we tell mrtg that we will be calling it
every 10 minutes. If you are calling mrtg every 5
minutes, you can leave this line commented out.
Example:
Interval: 10
Note that unless you are using rrdtool you can not set Interval to less
than 5 minutes. If you are using rrdtool you can set interval down to 1
minute. Note though, setting the Interval for an rrdtool/mrtg setup will
influence the initial creation of the database. If you change the interval
later, all existing databases will remain at the resolution they were
initially created with.
MaxAge
MRTG relies heavily on the real time clock of your computer. If the time is
set to a wrong value, especially if it is advanced far into the future,
this will cause mrtg to expire lots of supposedly old data from the log files.
To prevent this, you can add a 'reasonability' check by specifying a maximum
age for log files. If a file seems to be older, mrtg will not touch it but
complain instead, giving you a chance to investigate the cause.
Example:
MaxAge: 7200
The example above will make mrtg refuse to update log files older than 2 hours (7200 seconds).
WriteExpires
With this switch mrtg will generate .meta files for
CERN
and Apache servers which contain Expiration tags for the
html and gif files. The *.meta files will be created in
the same directory as the other files, so you will have
to set ``MetaDir .'' and ``MetaFiles on''
in your apache.conf or .htaccess file for this to work
NOTE: If you are running Apache-1.2 or later, you can use the mod_expire
to achieve the same effect ... see the file htaccess.txt
Example:
WriteExpires: Yes
NoMib2
Normally we ask the
SNMP device for 'sysUptime' and 'sysName' properties.
Some do not have these. If you want to avoid getting complaints from
mrtg about these missing properties, specify the nomib2 option.
An example of agents which do not implement base mib2 attributes are
Computer Associates - Unicenter TNG Agents. CA relies on using the base
OS SNMP agent in addition to its own agents to supplement the management
of a system.
Example:
NoMib2: Yes
SingleRequest
Some
SNMP implementations can not deal with requests asking for
multiple snmp variables in one go. Set this in your cfg file to force
mrtg to only ask for one variable per request.
Examples
SingleRequest: Yes
SnmpOptions
Apart from the per target timeout options, you can also configure the
behaviour of the snmpget process on a more profound level. SnmpOptions
accepts a hash of options. The following options are currently supported:
timeout => $default_timeout,
retries => $default_retries,
backoff => $default_backoff,
default_max_repetitions => $max_repetitions,
use_16bit_request_ids => 1,
lenient_source_port_matching => 0,
lenient_source_address_matching => 1
The values behind the options indicate the current default value.
Note that these settings OVERRIDE the per target timeout settings.
The 16bit request ids are the only way to query the broken SNMP
implementation of SMC Barricade routers.
Example:
SnmpOptions: retries => 2, only_ip_address_matching => 0
Note that AS/400 snmp seems to be broken in a way which prevents mrtg from
working with it unless
SnmpOptions: lenient_source_port_matching => 1
is set.
IconDir
If you want to keep the mrtg icons in someplace other than the
working (or imagedir) directory, use the
IconDir variable for
defining the url of the icons directory.
Example:
IconDir: /mrtgicons/
LoadMIBs
Load the
MIB file(s) specified and make its OIDs available as
symbolic names. For better efficiancy, a cache of MIBs is maintained
in the WorkDir.
Example:
LoadMIBs: /dept/net/mibs/netapp.mib,/usr/local/lib/ft100m.mib
Language
Switch output format to the selected Language (Check the
translate directory
to see which languages are supported at the moment. In this directory you
can also find instructions on how to create new translations).
Currently the following laguages are supported:
big5
brazilian
bulgarian
catalan
chinese
croatian
czech
danish
dutch
eucjp
french
galician
gb
gb2312
german
greek
hungarian
icelandic
indonesia
iso2022jp
italian
korean
lithuanian
malay
norwegian
polish
portuguese
romanian
russian
russian1251
serbian
slovak
slovenian
spanish
swedish
turkish
ukrainian
Example:
Language: danish
LogFormat
Setting LogFormat to 'rrdtool' in your mrtg.cfg file enables rrdtool mode.
In rrdtool mode, mrtg relies on
rrdtool to do its logging. Graphs and html
pages will be generated on the fly by the 14all.cgi which can be found in
the contrib section together with a short readme ... This feature has been
contributed by Rainer Bawidamann <
bawidama@users.sourceforge.net>. Please check his
website for more information:
http://www.wh-hms.uni-ulm.de/~widi/14all/
Example:
LogFormat: rrdtool
LibAdd
If you are using rrdtool mode and your
rrdtool Perl module (RRDs.pm)
is not installed in a location where perl can find it on its own, you can
use LibAdd to supply an appropriate path.
Example:
LibAdd: /usr/local/rrdtool/lib/perl/
PathAdd
If the
rrdtool executable can not be found in the normal
"PATH", you can
use this keyword to add a suitable directory to your path.
Example:
PathAdd: /usr/local/rrdtool/bin/
RunAsDaemon
The RunAsDaemon keyword enables daemon mode operation. The purpose of daemon
mode is that
MRTG is launched once and not repeatedly (as it is with cron).
This behavior saves computing resourses as loading and parsing
of configuration files happens only once.
Using daemon mode MRTG itself is responible for timing the measurement
intervals. Therfore its important to set the Interval keyword to an
apropiate value.
Note that when using daemon mode MRTG should no longer be started from cron
as each new process runs forever. Instead MRTG should be
started from the command prompt or by a system startup script.
If you want mrtg to run under a particular user and group (it is not recomended to run
MRTG as root) then you can use the --user=user_name and --group=group_name
options on the mrtg commandline.
mrtg --user=mrtg_user --group=mrtg_group mrtg.cfg
Also note that in daemon mode restarting the process is required in order to
activate changes in the config file.
Under UNIX, the Daemon switch causes mrtg to fork into background after
checking its config file. On Windows NT the MRTG process will detach from
the console, but because the NT/2000 shell waits for its children you have to
use this special start sequence when you launch the program:
start /b perl mrtg mrtg.cfg
You may have to add path information equal to what you add when you run mrtg
from the commandline.
Example
RunAsDaemon: Yes
Interval: 5
This makes MRTG run as a daemon beginning data collection every 5 minutes
If you are daemontools and still want to run mrtg as a daemon you can
additionally specify
NoDetach: Yes
this will make mrtg run but without detaching it from the terminal.
ConversionCode
Some devices may produce non-numeric values that would nevertheless
be useful to graph with
MRTG if those values could be converted to numbers.
The ConversionCode keyword specifies the path to a file containing Perl code
to perform such conversions. The code in this file must consist of one or more
Perl subroutines. Each subroutine must accept a single string argument and
return a single numeric value. When RRDtool is in use, a decimal value may
be returned. When the name of one of these subroutines is specified in a
target definition (see below),
MRTG calls it twice for that target, once to
convert the the input value being monitored and a second time to convert the
output value. The subroutine must return an undefined value if the conversion
fails. In case of failure, a warning may be posted to the
MRTG log file using
Perl's warn function.
MRTG imports the subroutines into a separate name space
(package MRTGConversion), so the user need not worry about pollution of
MRTG's
global name space.
MRTG automatically prepends this package declaration to
the user-supplied code.
Example: Suppose a particular OID returns a character string whose length is
proportional to the value to be monitored. To convert this string to a
number that can be graphed by MRTG, create a file arbitrarily named
``MyConversions.pl'' containing the following code:
# Return the length of the string argument
sub Length2Int {
my $value = shift;
return length( $value );
}
Then include the following global keyword in the MRTG configuration file
(assuming that the conversion code file is saved in the mrtg/bin directory
along with mrtg itself):
ConversionCode: MyConversions.pl
This will cause MRTG to include the definition of the subroutine Length2Int
in its execution environment. Length2Int can then be invoked on any target
by appending ``|Length2Int'' to the target definition as follows:
Target[myrouter]: 1.3.6.1.4.1.999.1&1.3.6.1.4.1.999.1:public@mydevice|Length2Int
See ``Extended Host Name Syntax'' below for complete target definition syntax
information.
PER TARGET CONFIGURATION
Each monitoring target must be identified by a unique name. This
name must be appended to each parameter belonging to the same
target. The name will also be used for naming the
generated webpages, logfiles and images for this target.
Target
With the
Target keyword you tell mrtg what it should
monitor. The
Target keyword takes arguments in a wide
range of formats:
- Basic
-
The most basic format is ``port:community@router''
This will generate a traffic graph for the interface 'port'
of the host 'router' (dns name or IP address)
and it will use the community 'community' (snmp password)
for the snmp query.
Example:
Target[myrouter]: 2:public@wellfleet-fddi.ethz.ch
If your community contains a ``@'' or a `` '' these characters
must be escaped with a ``\''.
Target[bla]: 2:stu\ pi\@d@router
- SNMPv2c
-
If you have a fast router you might want to try to poll the ifHC* counters.
This feature gets activated by switching to SNMPv2c. Unfortunately not all
devices support SNMPv2c yet. If it works, this will prevent your counters
from wraping within the 5 minute polling interval, since we now use 64 bit
instead of the normal 32 bit.
Example:
Target[myrouter]: 2:public@router1:::::2
- Reversing
-
Sometimes you are sitting on the wrong side of the
link, and you would like to have mrtg report Incoming
traffic as Outgoing and vice versa. This can be achieved
by adding the '-' sign in front of the ``Target''
description. It flips the incoming and outgoing traffic rates.
Example:
Target[ezci]: -1:public@ezci-ether.ethz.ch
- Explicit OIDs
-
You can also explicitly define which OID to query by using the
following syntax 'OID_1&OID_2:community@router'
The following example will retrieve error counts for input and output
on interface 1. MRTG needs to graph two variables,
so you need to specify two OID's such as temperature and humidity
or error input and error output.
Example:
Target[myrouter]: 1.3.6.1.2.1.2.2.1.14.1&1.3.6.1.2.1.2.2.1.20.1:public@myrouter
- MIB Variables
-
MRTG knows a number of symbolic SNMP variable names.
See the file mibhelp.txt for a list of known names.
One example are the ifInErrors and ifOutErrors.
This means you can specify the above as:
Example:
Target[myrouter]: ifInErrors.1&ifOutErrors.1:public@myrouter
- Interface by IP
-
Sometimes SNMP interface index can change, like when new interfaces are
added or removed. This can cause all Target entries in your config file
to become offset, causing MRTG to graphs wrong instances etc.
MRTG supports IP address instead of ifindex in target definition. Then
MRTG will query snmp device and try to map IP address to the current ifindex.
You can use IP addresses in every type of target definition by adding
IP address of the numbered interface after OID and separation char '/'.
Make sure that the given IP address is used on
your same target router, especially when graphing two different OIDs
and/or interface split by '&' delimiter.
You can tell cfgmaker to generate such references with the option
--ifref=ip.
Example:
Target[myrouter]: /1.2.3.4:public@wellfleet-fddi.ethz.ch
Target[ezci]: -/1.2.3.4:public@ezci-ether.ethz.ch
Target[myrouter]: 1.3.6.1.2.1.2.2.1.14/1.2.3.4&1.3.6.1.2.1.2.2.1.14/1.2.3.4:public@myrouter
Target[myrouter]: ifInErrors/1.2.3.4&ifOutErrors/1.2.3.4:public@myrouter
- Interface by Description
-
If you can not use IP addresses you might want to use
the interface names. This works similar to the IP address aproach
except that the prefix to use is a \ instead of a /
You can tell cfgmaker to generate such references with the option
--ifref=descr.
Example:
Target[myrouter]: \My-Interface2:public@wellfleet-fddi.ethz.ch
Target[ezci]: -\My-Interface2:public@ezci-ether.ethz.ch
Target[myrouter]: 1.3.6.1.2.1.2.2.1.14\My-Interface2&1.3.6.1.2.1.2.2.1.14\My-Interface3:public@myrouter
Target[myrouter]: ifInErrors\My-Interface2&ifOutErrors\My-Interface3:public@myrouter
If your description contains a ``&'', a ``:'', a ``@'' or a `` '' you can include
them but you must escape with a backlash:
Target[myrouter]: \fun\:\ ney\&ddd:public@hello.router
- Interface by Name
-
This is the only sensible way to reference the interfaces of your switches.
You can tell cfgmaker to generate such references with the option
--ifref=name.
Example:
Target[myrouter]: #2/11:public@wellfleet-fddi.ethz.ch
Target[ezci]: -#2/11:public@ezci-ether.ethz.ch
Target[myrouter]: 1.3.6.1.2.1.2.2.1.14#3/7&1.3.6.1.2.1.2.2.1.14#3/7:public@myrouter
Target[myrouter]: ifInErrors#3/7&ifOutErrors#3/7:public@myrouter
If your description contains a ``&'', a ``:'', a ``@'' or a `` '' you can include them but you must escape with
a backlash:
Target[myrouter]: #\:\ fun:public@hello.router
<Note that the # sign will be interpreted as a comment character if
it is the first non white-space character on the line.>
- Interface by Ethernet Address
-
When the SNMP interface index changes, you can key that interface by its
'Physical Address', sometimes called a 'hard address', which is the SNMP
variable 'ifPhysAddress'. Internally, MRTG matches the Physical Address from
the *.cfg file to its current index, and then uses that index for the rest of
the session.
You can use the Physical Address in every type of target definition by adding
the Physical Address after the OID and the separation char '!' (analogous to the IP
address option). The Physical address is specified as '-' delimited
octets, such as ``0a-0-f1-5-23-18'' (omit the double quotes). Note that some
routers use the same Hardware Ethernet Address for all of their Interfaces which
prevents unique interface identification. Mrtg will notice such problems and alert you.
You can tell cfgmaker to generate configuration files with hardware ethernet address references
by using the option --ifref=eth.
Example:
Target[myrouter]: !0a-0b-0c-0d:public@wellfleet-fddi.ethz.ch
Target[ezci]: -!0-f-bb-05-71-22:public@ezci-ether.ethz.ch
Target[myrouter]: 1.3.6.1.2.1.2.2.1.14!0a-00-10-23-44-51&!0a-00-10-23-44-51:public@myrouter
Target[myrouter]: ifInErrors!0a-00-10-23-44-51&ifOutErrors!0a-00-10-23-44-51:public@myrouter
- Interface by Type
-
It seems that there are devices that try to defy all monitoring efforts: the interesting interfaces have
neither ifName nor a constant ifDescr not to mention a persistant ifIndex. The only way to get a constant
mapping is by looking at the interface type, because the interface you are interested in is unique in the
device you are looking at ...
You can tell cfgmaker to generate such references with the option
--ifref=type.
Example:
Target[myrouter]: %13:public@wellfleet-fddi.ethz.ch
Target[ezci]: -%13:public@ezci-ether.ethz.ch
Target[myrouter]: 1.3.6.1.2.1.2.2.1.14%13&1.3.6.1.2.1.2.2.1.14%14:public@myrouter
Target[myrouter]: ifInErrors%13&ifOutErrors%14:public@myrouter
- Extended Host Name Syntax
-
In all places where ``community@router'' is accepted, you can add
additional parameters for the SNMP communication using
colon-separated suffixes. You can also append a pipe symbol ( | ) and
the name of a numeric conversion subroutine as described under the global
keyword ``ConversionCode'' above. The full syntax is as follows:
community@router[:[port][:[timeout][:[retries][:[backoff][:[version]][|name]]]]]
where the meaning of each parameter is as follows:
-
- port
-
the UDP port under which to contact the SNMP agent (default: 161)
- timeout
-
initial timeout for SNMP queries, in seconds (default: 2.0)
- retries
-
number of times a timed-out request will be retried (default: 5)
- backoff
-
factor by which the timeout is multiplied on every retry (default: 1.0).
- version
-
for SNMP version. If you have a fast router you might want to put
a '2' here. This will make mrtg try to poll the 64 bit counters and thus
prevent excessive counter wrapping. Not all routers support this though.
Example:
3:public@router1:::::2
- name
-
the name of the subroutine that MRTG will call to convert the input and output
values to integers. See the complete example under the global keyword
``ConversionCode'' above.
Example:
1.3.6.1.4.1.999.1&1.3.6.1.4.1.999.2:public@mydevice:161::::2|Length2Int
This would retrieve values from the OID 1.3.6.1.4.1.999.1 for input and .2
for output on mydevice using UDP port 161 and SNMP version 2, and would
execute the user-defined numeric conversion subroutine Length2Int to convert
those values to integers.
-
A value that equals the default value can be omitted. Trailing colons
can be omitted, too. The pipe symbol followed by the name parameter, if
present, must come at the end. There must be no spaces around the colons or
pipe symbol.
Example:
Target[ezci]: 1:public@ezci-ether.ethz.ch:9161::4
This would refer to the input/output octet counters for the interface
with ifIndex 1 on ezci-ether.ethz.ch, as known
by the SNMP agent listening on UDP port 9161. The standard initial
timeout (2.0 seconds) is used, but the number of retries is set to
four. The backoff value is the default.
- Numeric IPv6 addresses
-
If IPv6 is enabled you may also specify a target using its IPv6 address. To
avoid ambiguity with the port number, numeric IPv6 addresses must be placed
in square brackets.
Example:
Target[IPv6test]: 2:public@[2001:760:4::]:6161::4
- External Monitoring Scripts
-
If you want to monitor something which does not provide
data via snmp you can use some external program to do
the data gathering.
The external command must return 4 lines of output:
-
- Line 1
-
current state of the first variable, normally 'incoming bytes count'
- Line 2
-
current state of the second variable, normally 'outgoing bytes count'
- Line 3
-
string (in any human readable format), telling the uptime of the target.
- Line 4
-
string, telling the name of the target.
-
Depending on the type of data your script returns you
might want to use the 'gauge' or 'absolute' arguments
for the Options keyword.
Example:
Target[myrouter]: `/usr/local/bin/df2mrtg /dev/dsk/c0t2d0s0`
Note the use of the backticks (`), not apostrophes (')
around the command.
If you want to use a backtick in the command name this can be done
but you must escape it with a backslash ...
If your script does not have any data to return but does not want mrtg to
complain about invalid data, it can return 'UNKNOWN' instead of a number.
Note though that only rrdtool is realy equipped to handle unknown data well.
- Multi Target Syntax
-
You can also combine several target definitions in a mathematical expression.
Any syntactically correct expression that the Perl interpreter can evaluate
to will work. An expression could be used, for example, to aggregate both B
channels in an ISDN connection or to calculate the percentage hard disk
utilization of a server from the absolute used space and total capacity.
Examples:
Target[myrouter]: 2:public@wellfleetA + 1:public@wellfleetA
Target[myrouter]: 1.3.6.1.4.1.999.1&1.3.6.1.4.1.999.2:public@mydevice /
1.3.6.1.4.1.999.3&1.3.6.1.4.1.999.4:public@mydevice * 100
Note that whitespace must surround each target definition in the expression.
Target definitions themselves must not contain whitespace, except in
interface descriptions and interface names, where each whitespace character
is escaped by a backslash.
MRTG automatically rounds the result of the expression to an integer unless
RRDTool logging is in use and the gauge option is in effect for the target.
Internally MRTG uses Perl's Math::BigFloat package to calculate the result
of the expression with 40 digits of precision. Even in extreme cases, where,
for example, you take the difference of two 64-bit integers, the result of
the expression should be accurate.
- SNMP Request Optimization
-
MRTG is designed to economize on its SNMP requests. Where a target
definition appears more than once in the configuration file, MRTG requests
the data from the device only once per round of data collection and uses
the collected data for each instance of a particular target. Recognition of
two target definitions as being identical is based on a simple string match
rather than any kind of deeper semantic analysis.
Example:
Target[Targ1]: 1:public@CiscoA
Target[Targ2]: 2:public@CiscoA
Target[Targ3]: 1:public@CiscoA + 2:public@CiscoA
Target[Targ4]: 1:public@CISCOA
This results in a total of three SNMP requests. Data for 1:public@CiscoA
and 2:public@CiscoA are requested only once each, and used for Targ1, Targ2,
and Targ3. Targ4 causes another SNMP request for 1:public@CISCOA, which is not
recognized as being identical to 1:public@CiscoA.
MaxBytes
The maximum value either of the two variables monitored
are allowed to reach. For monitoring router traffic
this is normally the bytes per second this
interface port can carry.
If a number higher than MaxBytes is returned, it is ignored.
Also read the section on AbsMax for further info.
The MaxBytes value is also used in calculating the Y range
for unscaled graphs (see the section on Unscaled).
Since most links are rated in bits per second, you need to divide
their maximum bandwidth (in bits) by eight (8) in order to get
bytes per second. This is very important to make your
unscaled graphs display realistic information.
T1 = 193000, 56K = 7000, Ethernet = 1250000. The MaxBytes
value will be used by mrtg to decide whether it got a
valid response from the router.
If you need two different MaxBytes values for the two monitored
variables, you can use MaxBytes1 and MaxBytes2 instead of MaxBytes.
Example:
MaxBytes[myrouter]: 1250000
Title
Title for the
HTML page which gets generated for the graph.
Example:
Title[myrouter]: Traffic Analysis for Our Nice Company
OPTIONAL PER TARGET KEYWORDS
PageTop
Things to add to the top of the generated
HTML page. Note
that you can have several lines of text as long as the
first column is empty.
Note that the continuation lines will all end up on the same
line in the html page. If you want linebreaks in the generated
html use the '\n' sequence.
Example:
PageTop[myrouter]: <H1>Traffic Analysis for ETZ C95.1</H1>
Our Campus Backbone runs over an FDDI line\n
with a maximum transfer rate of 12.5 megabytes per
Second.
RouterUptime
In cases where you calculate the used bandwidth from
several interfaces you normaly don't get the router uptime
and router name displayed on the web page.
If these interfaces are on the same router and the uptime and
name should be displayed you have to specify
its community and address again with the RouterUptime keyword.
Example:
Target[kacisco.comp.edu]: 1:public@194.64.66.250 + 2:public@194.64.66.250
RouterUptime[kacisco.comp.edu]: public@194.64.66.250
RouterName
If the default name of the router is incorrect/uninformative,
you can use RouterName to specify a different
OID on either the
same or a different host.
A practical example: sysName on BayTech DS72 units always display
``ds72'', no matter what you set the Unit ID to be. Instead, the
Unit ID is stored at 1.3.6.1.4.1.4779.1.1.3.0, so we can have
MRTG display this instead of sysName.
Example:
RouterName[kacisco.comp.edu]: 1.3.6.1.4.1.4779.1.1.3.0
A different OID on a different host can also be specified:
RouterName[kacisco.comp.edu]: 1.3.6.1.4.1.4779.1.1.3.0:public@194.64.66.251
MaxBytes1
Same as MaxBytes, for variable 1.
MaxBytes2
Same as MaxBytes, for variable 2.
IPv4Only
Many IPv6 routers do not currently support
SNMP over IPv6 and must
be monitored using IPv4. The IPv4Only option forces mrtg to use IPv4
when communicating with the target, even if IPv6 is enabled. This is
useful if the target is a hostname with both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses;
without the IPv4Only keyword, monitoring such a router will not work
if IPv6 is enabled.
If set to no (the default), mrtg will use IPv6 unless the target has
no IPv6 addresses, in which case it will use IPv4. If set to yes, mrtg
will only use IPv4.
Note that if this option is set to yes and the target does not have an
IPv4 address, communication with the target will fail.
This option has no effect if IPv6 is not enabled.
Example:
Target[v4onlyrouter_1]: 1:public@v4onlyrouter
IPv4Only[v4onlyrouter_1]: Yes
PageFoot
Things to add to the bottom of the generated
HTML page. Note
that you can have several lines of text as long as the
first column is empty.
Note that the continuation lines will all end up on the same
line in the html page. If you want linebreaks in the generated
html use the '\n' sequence.
The material will be added just before the </BODY> tag:
Example:
PageFoot[myrouter]: Contact <A HREF="mailto:peter@x.yz">Peter</A>
if you have questions regarding this page
AddHead
Use this tag like the
PageTop header, but its contents
will be added between </TITLE> and </HEAD>.
Example:
AddHead[myrouter]: <link rev="made" href="mailto:mrtg@blabla.edu">
BodyTag
BodyTag lets you supply your very own <body ...> tag for the
generated webpages.
Example:
BodyTag[myrouter]: <BODY LEFTMARGIN="1" TOPMARGIN="1"
BACKGROUND="/stats/images/bg.neo2.gif">
AbsMax
If you are monitoring a link which can handle more traffic
than the
MaxBytes value. Eg, a line which uses compression
or some frame relay link, you can use the
AbsMax keyword
to give the absolute maximum value ever to be reached.
We need to know this in order to sort out unrealistic values
returned by the routers. If you do not set
AbsMax, rateup
will ignore values higher than
MaxBytes.
Example:
AbsMax[myrouter]: 2500000
Unscaled
By default each graph is scaled vertically to make the
actual data visible even when it is much lower than
MaxBytes. With the
Unscaled variable you can suppress
this. It's argument is a string, containing one letter
for each graph you don't want to be scaled: d=day w=week
m=month y=year. There is also a special case to unset the
variable completely: n=none. This could be useful in the
event you need to override a global configuration. In the
example scaling for the yearly and the monthly graph are
suppressed.
Example:
Unscaled[myrouter]: ym
WithPeak
By default the graphs only contain the average
values of the monitored variables - normally the
transfer rates for incoming and outgoing traffic.
The following option instructs mrtg to display the peak
5 minute values in the [w]eekly, [m]onthly and
[y]early graph. In the example we define the monthly
and the yearly graph to contain peak as well as average
values.
Examples:
WithPeak[myrouter]: ym
Suppress
By default mrtg produces 4 graphs. With this option
you can suppress the generation of selected graphs.
The option value syntax is analogous to the above two options.
In this example we suppress the yearly graph
as it is quite empty in the beginning.
Example:
Suppress[myrouter]: y
Extension
By default, mrtg creates .html files. Use this option to tell mrtg to
use a different extension. For example you could set the extension to
php3, then you will be able to enclose
PHP tags into the output (useful
for getting a router name out of a database).
Example:
Extension[myrouter]: phtml
Directory
By default, mrtg puts all the files that it generates for each
target (the GIFs, the
HTML page, the log file, etc.) in
WorkDir.
If the Directory option is specified, the files are instead put
into a directory under WorkDir or Log-, Image- and HtmlDir).
(For example the Directory
option below would cause all the files for a target myrouter
to be put into directory /usr/tardis/pub/www/stats/mrtg/myrouter/ .)
The directory must already exist; mrtg will not create it.
Example:
WorkDir: /usr/tardis/pub/www/stats/mrtg
Directory[myrouter]: myrouter
NOTE: the Directory option must always be 'relative' or bad things will happen.
XSize and YSize
By default mrtgs graphs are 100 by 400 pixels wide (plus
some more for the labels. In the example we get almost
square graphs ...
Note: XSize must be between 20 and 600; YSize must be larger than 20
Example:
XSize[myrouter]: 300
YSize[myrouter]: 300
XZoom and YZoom
If you want your graphs to have larger pixels, you can
``Zoom'' them.
Example:
XZoom[myrouter]: 2.0
YZoom[myrouter]: 2.0
XScale and YScale
If you want your graphs to be actually scaled use
XScale
and
YScale. (Beware: while this works, the results look ugly
(to be frank) so if someone wants to fix this: patches are welcome.
Example:
XScale[myrouter]: 1.5
YScale[myrouter]: 1.5
YTics and YTicsFactor
If you want to show more than 4 lines per graph, use YTics.
If you want to scale the value used for the YLegend of these
tics, use YTicsFactor.
The default value for YTics is 4 and the default value for
YTicsFactor is 1.0 .
Example:
Suppose you get values ranging from 0 to 700.
You want to plot 7 lines and want to show
0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 instead of 0, 100, 200,
300, 400, 500, 600, 700. You should write then:
YTics[myrouter]: 7
YTicsFactor[myrouter]: 0.01
Factor
If you want to multiply all numbers shown below the graph with a constant factor, use
this directive to define it ..
Example:
Factor[as400]: 4096
Step
Change the default step from 5 * 60 seconds to
something else (I have not tested this much ...)
Example:
Step[myrouter]: 60
PNGTitle
When using rateup for graph generation, this will print the given title in the
graph it generates.
Example:
PNGTitle[myrouter]: WAN Link UK-US
Options
The
Options Keyword allows you to set some boolean
switches:
- growright
-
The graph grows to the left by default.
This option flips the direction of growth
causing the current time to be at the right edge
of the graph and the history values to the left of it.
- bits
-
All the monitored variable values are multiplied by 8
(i.e. shown in bits instead of bytes) ... looks much more impressive :-)
It also affects the 'factory default' labeling and units
for the given target.
- perminute
-
All the monitored variable values are multiplied by 60
(i.e. shown in units per minute instead of units per second) in case
of small values more accurate graphs are displayed.
It also affects the 'factory default' labeling and units
for the given target.
- perhour
-
All the monitored variable values are multiplied by 3600
(i.e. shown in units per hour instead of units per second) in case
of small values more accurate graphs are displayed.
It also affects the 'factory default' labeling and units
for the given target.
- noinfo
-
Suppress the information about uptime and
device name in the generated webpage.
- nopercent
-
Don't print usage percentages.
- transparent
-
Make the background of the generated gifs transparent.
- integer
-
Print summary lines below graph as integers without commas.
- dorelpercent
-
The relative percentage of IN-traffic to OUT-traffic is calculated
and displayed in the graph as an additional line.
Note: Only a fixed scale is available (from 0 to 100%). Therefore
if IN-traffic is greater than OUT-traffic then 100% is displayed.
If you suspect that your IN-traffic is not always less than or equal
to your OUT-traffic you are urged to not use this options.
Note: If you use this option in combination with the Colours
options, a fifth colour-name colour-value pair is required there.
- avgpeak
-
There are some ISPs who use the average Peak values to bill their customers.
Using this option MRTG displays these values for each graph. The value is
built by averaging the max 5 minute traffic avarage for each 'step' shown in
the graph. For the Weekly graph this means that it builds the average of all
2 hour intervals 5 minute peak values. (Confused? Thought so!)
- gauge
-
Treat the values gathered from target as 'current status' measurements
and not as ever incrementing counters.
This would be useful to monitor things like disk space,
processor load, temperature, and the like ...
In the absence of 'gauge' or 'absolute' options,
MRTG treats variables as a counters and calculates
the difference between the current and the previous value
and divides that by the elapsed time between
the last two readings to get the value to be plotted.
- absolute
-
This is for counter type data sources which reset their value when they are
read. This means that rateup does not have to build the difference between
the current and the last value read from the data source. The value obtained is
still divided by the elapsed time between the current and the last reading, which makes
it different from the 'gauge' option. Useful for external data gatherers.
- unknaszero
-
Log unknown data as zero instead of the default behaviour of repeating the
last value seen. Be careful with this, often a flat line in the graph is
much more obvious than a line at 0.
- withzeroes
-
Normally we ignore all values which are zero when calculating the average
transfer rate on a line. If this is not desirable use this option.
- noborder
-
If you are using rateup to log data, MRTG will create the graph images.
Normally these images have a shaded border around them. If you do not want the
border to be drawn, enable this option. This option has no effect if you are
not using rateup.
- noarrow
-
As with the option above, this effects rateup graph generation only. Normally
rateup will generate graphs with a small arrow showing the direction of the
data. If you do not want this arrow to be drawn, enable this option. This
option has no effect if you are not using rateup.
- noi
-
When using rateup for graph generation, you can use this option to stop rateup
drawing a graph for the 'I' or first variable. This also removes entries for
this variable in the HTML page MRTG generates, and will remove the peaks for
this variable if they are enabled. This allows you to hide this data, or can
be very useful if you are only graphing one line of data rather than two.
This option is not destructive - any data received for the the variable
continued to be logged, it just isn't shown.
- noo
-
Same as above, except relating to the 'O' or second variable.
- nobanner
-
When using rateup for graph generation, this option disables MRTG adding the
MRTG banner to the HTML pages it generates.
- nolegend
-
When using rateup for graph generation, this option will stop MRTG from creating
a legend at the bottom of the HTML pages it generates.
- printrouter
-
When using rateup for graph generation, this option will print the router
name in the graph it generates. This option is overridden by the value of
PNGTitle if one is given
- pngdate
-
When using rateup for graph generation, this option will print a
timestamp in the graph it generates, including a timezone if one is specified
by the 'Timezone' parameter.
Example:
Options[myrouter]: growright, bits
kilo
Use this option to change the multiplier value for building
prefixes. Defaultvalue is 1000. This tag is for the special
case that 1kB = 1024B, 1MB = 1024kB and so far.
Example:
kilo[myrouter]: 1024
kMG
Change the default multiplier prefixes (,k,M,G,T,P). In the tag
ShortLegend define only the basic units.
Format: Comma seperated list of prefixed. Two consecutive commas
or a comma at start or end of the line gives no prefix on this item.
Note: If you do not want prefixes, just put two consecutive commas.
Example: velocity in nm/s (nanometers per second) displayed in nm/h.
ShortLegend[myrouter]: m/h
kMG[myrouter]: n,u,m,,k,M,G,T,P
options[myrouter]: perhour
Colours
The
Colours tag allows you to override the default colour
scheme. Note: All 4 of the required colours must be
specified here. The colour name ('Colourx' below) is the
legend name displayed, while the
RGB value is the real
colour used for the display, both on the graph and in the
html doc.
Format is: Col1#RRGGBB,Col2#RRGGBB,Col3#RRGGBB,Col4#RRGGBB
Important:
If you use the dorelpercent options tag a fifth colour name
colour value pair is required:
Col1#RRGGBB,Col2#RRGGBB,Col3#RRGGBB,Col4#RRGGBB,Col5#RRGGBB
- Colour1
-
First variable (normally Input) on default graph.
- Colour2
-
Second variable (normally Output) on default graph.
- Colour3
-
Max first variable (input).
- Colour4
-
Max second variable (output).
- RRGGBB
-
2 digit hex values for Red, Green and Blue.
Example:
Colours[myrouter]: GREEN#00eb0c,BLUE#1000ff,DARK GREEN#006600,VIOLET#ff00ff
Background
With the
Background tag you can configure the background
colour of the generated
HTML page.
Example:
Background[myrouter]: #a0a0a0a
YLegend, ShortLegend, Legend[1234]
The following keywords allow you to override the text
displayed for the various legends of the graph and in the
HTML document:
- YLegend
-
The Y-axis label of the graph. Note that a text which is too long
to fit in the graph will be silently ignored.
- ShortLegend
-
The units string (default 'b/s') used for Max, Average and Current
- Legend[1234IO]
-
The strings for the colour legend.
Example:
YLegend[myrouter]: Bits per Second
ShortLegend[myrouter]: b/s
Legend1[myrouter]: Incoming Traffic in Bits per Second
Legend2[myrouter]: Outgoing Traffic in Bits per Second
Legend3[myrouter]: Maximal 5 Minute Incoming Traffic
Legend4[myrouter]: Maximal 5 Minute Outgoing Traffic
LegendI[myrouter]: In:
LegendO[myrouter]: Out:
Note, if LegendI or LegendO are set to an empty string with
LegendO[myrouter]:
The corresponding line below the graph will not be printed at all.
Timezone
If you live in an international world, you might want to
generate the graphs in different timezones. This is set in the
TZ variable. Under certain operating systems like Solaris,
this will provoke the localtime call to give the time in
the selected timezone.
Example:
Timezone[myrouter]: Japan
The Timezone is the standard Solaris timezone, ie Japan, Hongkong,
GMT, GMT+1 etc etc.
Weekformat
By default, mrtg (actually rateup) uses the
strftime(3) '%W' option
to format week numbers in the monthly graphs. The exact semantics
of this format option vary between systems. If you find that the
week numbers are wrong, and your system's
strftime(3) routine
supports it, you can try another format option. The
POSIX '%V'
option seems to correspond to a widely used week numbering
convention. The week format character should be specified as a
single letter; either W, V, or U.
Example:
Weekformat[myrouter]: V
RRDRowCount
This affects the creation of new rrd files. By default rrds are created to
hold about 1 day's worth of high resolution data. (plus 1 week of 30 minute
data, 2 months of 2 hour data and 2 years of 1 day data). With this Keyword
you can change the number of base interval entries configured for new rrds
as they get created. Note that you must take the interval time into account.
Example:
RRDRowCount[myrouter]: 1600
TimeStrPos
This defines placement of the timestamp string on the image. Possible
values are
RU,
LU,
RL,
LL (which stand, respectively, for RightUpper,
LeftUpper, RightLower and LeftLower corner) and
NO (for no timestamp).
By default, no timestamp is placed on the image.
Example:
TimeStrPos[myrouter]: RU
TimeStrFmt
Using this keyword you may specify format of the timestamp to be placed
on the image (if enabled by the TimeStrPos keyword). Specified string
will be used by the
strftime() function - see
strftime(3) documentation
for conversion specifiers available on your system.
Default format:
%Y-%m-%d
%H:%M
Example:
TimeStrFmt[myrouter]: %H:%M:%S
THRESHOLD CHECKING
Through its threshold checking functionality mrtg is able to detect
threshold problems for the various targets and can call external
scripts to handle those problems (e.g. send email or a page to an administrator).
Threshold checking is configured through the following parameters:
ThreshDir (GLOBAL)
By defining ThreshDir to point to a writable directory,
MRTG will only alert
you when a threshold boundery has been crossed.
Example:
ThreshDir: /var/mrtg/thresh
ThreshMinI (PER TARGET)
This is the minimum acceptable value for the Input (first) parameter. If
the parameter falls below this value, the program specified in ThreshProgI
will be run. If the value ends in '%' then the threshold is defined relative to MaxBytes.
ThreshMaxI (PER TARGET)
This is the maximum acceptable value for the Input (first) parameter. If
the parameter falls above this value, the program specified in ThreshProgI
will be run. If the value ends in '%' then the threshold is defined relative to MaxBytes.
ThreshDesc (PER TARGET)
Its value will be assigned to the environment variable
THRESH_DESC before
any of the programs mentioned below are called. The programms can use the value
of this variable to produce more user-friendly output.
ThreshProgI (PER TARGET)
This defines a program to be run if ThreshMinI or ThreshMaxI is broken.
MRTG passes 3 arguments: the
$router variable, the threshold value
broken, and the current parameter value.
ThreshProgOKI (PER TARGET)
This defines a program to be run if the parameter is currently
OK (based on
ThreshMinI and ThreshMaxI), but wasn't
OK on the previous running --- based
on the files found in ThreshDir.
MRTG passes 3 arguments: the
$router
variable the unbroken threshold value, and the current parameter value.
ThreshMinO, ThreshMaxO, ThreshProgO, and ThreshProgOKO
These work the same as their *I counterparts, except on the Output (second)
parameter.
Note that you can use the SetEnv parameter explained above to pass
additional information to the threshold programs.
SetEnv
When calling threshold scripts from within your cfg file you might want to
pass some data on to the script. This can be done with the SetEnv
configuration option which takes a series of environment variable
assignments. Note that the quotes are mandatory. This does not
work for external scripts. It is not
possible to set environment variables per target.
Example:
SetEnv[myrouter]: EMAIL="contact_email@someplace.net"
HOST="www.some_server.net"
URL="http://www.some_server.net/path/mrtg.html"
PER TARGET DEFAULT VALUES
Pre- and Postfix
To save yourself some typing you can define a target
called '^'. The text of every Keyword you define for this
target will be
PREPENDED to the corresponding Keyword of
all the targets defined below this line. The same goes for
a Target called '$' but its text will be
APPENDED.
Note that a space is inserted between the prepended text
and the Keyword value, as well as between the Keyword value
and the appended text. This works well for text-valued Keywords,
but is not very useful for other Keywords. See the ``default''
target description below.
The example will make mrtg use a common header and a
common contact person in all the pages generated from
targets defined later in this file.
Example:
PageTop[^]: <H1>NoWhere Unis Traffic Stats</H1><HR>
PageTop[$]: Contact Peter Norton if you have any questions<HR>
To remove the prepend/append value, specify an empty value, e.g.:
PageTop[^]:
PageTop[$]:
NoSpaceChar
With
PREPEND and
APPEND (see below) there is normally a space inserted
between the local value and the
PRE- or
APPEND value. Sometimes this is not
desirable. You can use the global option
NoSpaceChar to
define a character which can be mentioned at the end of a $ or ^ definition
in order to supress the space.
Example:
NoSpaceChar: ~
Target[^]: 1.3.6.1.4.1.482.50.2.4.20.0&1.3.6.1.4.1.482.50.2.4.21.0:get@~
Target[a]: a.tolna.net
Target[b]: b.tolna.net
Target[c]: c.tolna.net
Target[d]: d.tolna.net
Default Values
The target name '_' specifies a default value for that
Keyword. In the absence of explicit Keyword value, the prepended
and the appended keyword value, the default value will be used.
Example:
YSize[_]: 150
Options[_]: growright,bits,nopercent
WithPeak[_]: ymw
Suppress[_]: y
MaxBytes[_]: 1250000
To remove the default value and return to the 'factory default',
specify an empty value, e.g.:
YLegend[_]:
There can be several instances of setting the default/prepend/append
values in the configuration file. The later setting replaces the
previous one for the rest of the configuration file.
The default/prepend/append values used for a given
keyword/target pair are the ones that were in effect
at the point in the configuration file where the target
was mentioned for the first time.
Example:
MaxBytes[_]: 1250000
Target[myrouter.somplace.edu.2]: 2:public@myrouter.somplace.edu
MaxBytes[_]: 8000
Title[myrouter.somplace.edu.2]: Traffic Analysis for myrouter.somplace.edu IF 2
The default MaxBytes for the target myrouter.someplace.edu.2
in the above example will be 1250000, which was in effect
where the target name myrouter.someplace.edu.2 first appeared
in the config file.
COMMAND LINE OPTIONS
- --user username and --group groupname
-
Run as the given user and/or group. (Unix Only)
- --lock-file filename
-
Use an alternate lock-file (the default is to use the configuration-file
appended with "_l").
- --confcache-file filename
-
Use an alternate confcache-file (the default is to use the configuration-file appended with ".ok")
- --logging filename|eventlog
-
If this is set to writable filename, all output from mrtg (warnings, debug messages, errors)
will go to filename. If you are running on Win32 you can specify eventlog instead of a filename
which will send all error to the windows event log.
NOTE:Note, there is no Message DLL for mrtg. This has the side effect
that the windows event logger will display a nice message with every entry
in the event log, complaing about the fact that mrtg has no message dll. If
any of the Windows folks want to contribute one, they are welcome.
- --daemon
-
Put MRTG into the background, running as a daemon. This works the same way as
the config file option, but the switch is required for proper FHS operation
(because /var/run is writable only by root)
- --fhs
-
Configure all mrtg paths to conform to the FHS specification;
http://www.pathname.com/fhs/
- --check
-
Only check the cfg file for errors. Do not do anything.
- --pid-file=s
-
Define the name and path of the pid file for mrtg running as a daemon
- --debug=s
-
Enable debug options. The argument of the debug option is a comma separated list of debug values:
cfg - watch the config file reading
dir - directory mangeling
base - basic program flow
tarp - target parser
snpo - snmp polling
fork - forking view
time - some timing info
log - logging of data via rateup or rrdtool
Example:
--debug="cfg,snpo"
EXAMPLES
Minimal mrtg.cfg
WorkDir: /usr/tardis/pub/www/stats/mrtg
Target[r1]: 2:public@myrouter.somplace.edu
MaxBytes[r1]: 8000
Title[r1]: Traffic Analysis ISDN
PageTop[r1]: <H1>Stats for our ISDN Line</H1>
Cfg for several Routers.
WorkDir: /usr/tardis/pub/www/stats/mrtg
Title[^]: Traffic Analysis for
PageTop[^]: <H1>Stats for
PageTop[$]: Contact The Chief if you notice anybody<HR>
MaxBytes[_]: 8000
Options[_]: growright
Title[isdn]: our ISDN Line
PageTop[isdn]: our ISDN Line</H1>
Target[isdn]: 2:public@router.somplace.edu
Title[backb]: our Campus Backbone
PageTop[backb]: our Campus Backbone</H1>
Target[backb]: 1:public@router.somplace.edu
MaxBytes[backb]: 1250000
# the following line removes the default prepend value
# defined above
Title[^]:
Title[isdn2]: Traffic for the Backup ISDN Line
PageTop[isdn2]: our ISDN Line</H1>
Target[isdn2]: 3:public@router.somplace.edu
AUTHOR
Tobias Oetiker <
oetiker@ee.ethz.ch> and many contributors
Index
- NAME
-
- OVERVIEW
-
- SYNTAX
-
- GLOBAL KEYWORDS
-
- WorkDir
-
- OPTIONAL GLOBAL KEYWORDS
-
- HtmlDir
-
- ImageDir
-
- LogDir
-
- Forks (UNIX only)
-
- EnableIPv6
-
- Refresh
-
- Interval
-
- MaxAge
-
- WriteExpires
-
- NoMib2
-
- SingleRequest
-
- SnmpOptions
-
- IconDir
-
- LoadMIBs
-
- Language
-
- LogFormat
-
- LibAdd
-
- PathAdd
-
- RunAsDaemon
-
- ConversionCode
-
- PER TARGET CONFIGURATION
-
- Target
-
- MaxBytes
-
- Title
-
- OPTIONAL PER TARGET KEYWORDS
-
- PageTop
-
- RouterUptime
-
- RouterName
-
- MaxBytes1
-
- MaxBytes2
-
- IPv4Only
-
- PageFoot
-
- AddHead
-
- BodyTag
-
- AbsMax
-
- Unscaled
-
- WithPeak
-
- Suppress
-
- Extension
-
- Directory
-
- XSize and YSize
-
- XZoom and YZoom
-
- XScale and YScale
-
- YTics and YTicsFactor
-
- Factor
-
- Step
-
- PNGTitle
-
- Options
-
- kilo
-
- kMG
-
- Colours
-
- Background
-
- YLegend, ShortLegend, Legend[1234]
-
- Timezone
-
- Weekformat
-
- RRDRowCount
-
- TimeStrPos
-
- TimeStrFmt
-
- THRESHOLD CHECKING
-
- ThreshDir (GLOBAL)
-
- ThreshMinI (PER TARGET)
-
- ThreshMaxI (PER TARGET)
-
- ThreshDesc (PER TARGET)
-
- ThreshProgI (PER TARGET)
-
- ThreshProgOKI (PER TARGET)
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- ThreshMinO, ThreshMaxO, ThreshProgO, and ThreshProgOKO
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- SetEnv
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- PER TARGET DEFAULT VALUES
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- Pre- and Postfix
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- NoSpaceChar
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- Default Values
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- COMMAND LINE OPTIONS
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- EXAMPLES
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- Minimal mrtg.cfg
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- Cfg for several Routers.
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- AUTHOR
-