Interface Traffic Graph not created for CentOS - Others OK
Moderators: Developers, Moderators
Interface Traffic Graph not created for CentOS - Others OK
We have been using Cacti for some time now with Windows, SUSE and Solaris hosts and everything has worked well. We've started working with CentOS now, but we can't get the network interface graphs to work for CentOS hosts. All of the other graphs work fine (CPU/Load/Disk/Mem). We are using the latest version of Cacti and net-snmp. We can't find any error messages anywhere. We just get a missing image for the interface graph.
Anybody have any ideas?
Thanks,
Jeff
Anybody have any ideas?
Thanks,
Jeff
- TheWitness
- Developer
- Posts: 17007
- Joined: Tue May 14, 2002 5:08 pm
- Location: MI, USA
- Contact:
You have to perform a verbose query and post your results. Also, walk the mib. I am sure it's something simple, like the snmp.conf file.
TheWitness
TheWitness
True understanding begins only when we realize how little we truly understand...
Life is an adventure, let yours begin with Cacti!
Author of dozens of Cacti plugins and customization's. Advocate of LAMP, MariaDB, IBM Spectrum LSF and the world of batch. Creator of IBM Spectrum RTM, author of quite a bit of unpublished work and most of Cacti's bugs.
_________________
Official Cacti Documentation
GitHub Repository with Supported Plugins
Percona Device Packages (no support)
Interesting Device Packages
For those wondering, I'm still here, but lost in the shadows. Yearning for less bugs. Who want's a Cacti 1.3/2.0? Streams anyone?
Life is an adventure, let yours begin with Cacti!
Author of dozens of Cacti plugins and customization's. Advocate of LAMP, MariaDB, IBM Spectrum LSF and the world of batch. Creator of IBM Spectrum RTM, author of quite a bit of unpublished work and most of Cacti's bugs.
_________________
Official Cacti Documentation
GitHub Repository with Supported Plugins
Percona Device Packages (no support)
Interesting Device Packages
For those wondering, I'm still here, but lost in the shadows. Yearning for less bugs. Who want's a Cacti 1.3/2.0? Streams anyone?
-
- Posts: 8
- Joined: Tue Mar 07, 2006 12:15 am
..or the cron task that uses "wwwrun php " instead of "wwwrun php5" which I discovered in SuSe10.1 as a problem and why the poller was never called. when I finally ran the line from command line I got the bash error about unknown command "php"TheWitness wrote:I am sure it's something simple, like the snmp.conf file.
I don't know much about SNMP. I'm pretty much dependent on the plug + play functionality of Cacti. Can you give me a little something more to go on?TheWitness wrote:You have to perform a verbose query and post your results. Also, walk the mib. I am sure it's something simple, like the snmp.conf file.
TheWitness
The poller is running. All the other graphs update for this and other hosts. Interface traffic graphs work for other hosts, just not CentOS machines.Mark Susol wrote:..or the cron task that uses "wwwrun php " instead of "wwwrun php5" which I discovered in SuSe10.1 as a problem and why the poller was never called. when I finally ran the line from command line I got the bash error about unknown command "php"TheWitness wrote:I am sure it's something simple, like the snmp.conf file.
Hi jlar310!!!
I just came accross your post. You say that you successfully create graph for your CentOS box. My interest is CPU. I cannot get them graphed at all. I have CentOS 4.2 and it has net-snmp installed and all my graph are just "none". Any ideas about what I am missing?
Appreciate if you give me any hint.
Sencerely
Eugene
I just came accross your post. You say that you successfully create graph for your CentOS box. My interest is CPU. I cannot get them graphed at all. I have CentOS 4.2 and it has net-snmp installed and all my graph are just "none". Any ideas about what I am missing?
Appreciate if you give me any hint.
Sencerely
Eugene
CentOS comes with a default snmpd.conf file that isn't suitable for Cacti. Read the Cacti docs for configuring a basic snmpd.confzheka wrote:Hi jlar310!!!
I just came accross your post. You say that you successfully create graph for your CentOS box. My interest is CPU. I cannot get them graphed at all. I have CentOS 4.2 and it has net-snmp installed and all my graph are just "none". Any ideas about what I am missing?
Appreciate if you give me any hint.
Sencerely
Eugene
http://www.cacti.net/downloads/docs/htm ... ml#AEN1900zheka wrote:Good idea! I tried to look through cacti manual and didn't find any reference to snmpd.conf
Do you have ready to go snmpd.conf file for CentOS.
That's pretty much all I've got in my snmp.conf except that I've added the IP address of the Cacti server to the "rocommunity public" line to make it a tiny bit more secure. See the snmp.conf man page for more details. The snmpconf program is also useful if not terribly intuitive.
OK, so I still don't know anything about "verbose query" or "walk the mib" but maybe this will help. We enabled more verbose logging in Cacti and it seems that SNMP is returning traffic stats -- so where's the graph?TheWitness wrote:You have to perform a verbose query and post your results. Also, walk the mib. I am sure it's something simple, like the snmp.conf file.
TheWitness
Here is a snippet from the log for a CentOS host. I cut the lines short for clarity.
Code: Select all
cpu_nice, oid: .1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.11.51.0, output: 57
cpu_system, oid: .1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.11.52.0, output: 13837010
cpu_user, oid: .1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.11.50.0, output: 1329454
load_1min, oid: .1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.10.1.3.1, output: 0.67
load_15min, oid: .1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.10.1.3.3, output: 0.89
load_5min, oid: .1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.10.1.3.2, output: 0.90
mem_buffers, oid: .1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.4.14.0, output: 65460
mem_cache, oid: .1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.4.15.0, output: 3581312
mem_free, oid: .1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.4.6.0, output: 17644
traffic_in, oid: .1.3.6.1.2.1.2.2.1.10.2, output: 2341016426
traffic_out, oid: .1.3.6.1.2.1.2.2.1.16.2, output: 572989108
traffic_out, oid: .1.3.6.1.2.1.2.2.1.16.3, output: 1869116975
traffic_in, oid: .1.3.6.1.2.1.2.2.1.10.3, output: 0
hdd_free, oid: .1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.9.1.7.1, output: 16348372
hdd_used, oid: .1.3.6.1.4.1.2021.9.1.8.1, output: 12766420
Got it to work, but not entirely sure why
Just as a sanity check, I created a completely new install of Cacti on a clean install of CentOS running under VMWare. All the client graphs including the interface traffic work just fine on the new install. Besides the Cacti host OS (SuSE vs. CentOS), the only real difference was the rrdtool version which was newer on the CentOS install. Maybe that's all it was...
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 11 guests