/ifplugo

dynamic network link status notification in pure Go on Linux

Primary LanguageGoMIT LicenseMIT

ifplugo

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ifplugo delivers network interface link information and link changes. It does this (on Linux) by querying kernel ioctls to gather the necessary status information, then emits a status summary on a given channel. This summary (LinkStatusSample) is emitted on the first invocation and each time the state changes for at least one monitored interface.

type LinkStatusSample struct {
    Ifaces  map[string]InterfaceStatus
}

where InterfaceStatus can be:

const (
    // InterfaceUnknown represents an interface with no assigned state.
    InterfaceUnknown InterfaceStatus = iota
    // InterfaceUp represents an interface with a cable connected.
    InterfaceUp
    // InterfaceDown represents an interface with no cable connected.
    InterfaceDown
    // InterfaceErr represents an interface with errors querying its status.
    InterfaceErr
)

These summaries can then easily be consumed (example):

outchan := make(chan ifplugo.LinkStatusSample)
mon := ifplugo.MakeLinkStatusMonitor(2 * time.Second, []string{"eth0"}, outchan)
go func() {
    for v := range outchan {
        for k, v := range v.Ifaces {
            fmt.Printf("%s: %s\n", k, v)
        }
    }
}()
mon.Run()

It is also possible to determine the status of an interface from whether any data is flowing or not. This can be useful if, for example, the interesting interface is only connected to one way of the physical connection (RX or TX) or for other reasons can not complete autonegotiation. Use CheckIncomingDelta() in this case, it allows to also mark an interface as 'up' and seeing traffic if a certain threshold of received bytes is exceeded during one polling period. Example:

mon.CheckIncomingDelta(true, 1000)

This would, for example, also mark an interface as up if more than 1000 bytes are received during the polling period, and mark the interface as down if there are ever less than 1000 bytes received in a polling period.

Platform restrictions

Obviously, this works on Linux only.

Example

See the source code of the simple command line tools in cmd/* for more simple examples of how to use ifplugo.

$ ifplugo-watch eth0,eth1,eth2,eth3
eth0: link
eth1: link
eth2: link
eth3: no link
^C
$

Authors

Sascha Steinbiss <sascha (at) steinbiss (dot) name>.

License

MIT