infping
is a simple Go program to parse the output of fping
and store it in InfluxDB. Based upon software by Tor Hveem.
This program uses the Viper configuration package and can process configuration files in JSON, YAML, TOML, and others. Save your configuration file as infping.<json|yaml|toml|...>
in /etc/
, /usr/local/etc
, or the program directory. A sample configuration file is provided in JSON format.
- host: The hostname to connect to
- port: The TCP port number
- user: The username, if needed
- pass: The password, if needed
- db: The database name to connect to – this will be created if it does not exist
- secure: Set to true to enable HTTPS
- backoff: The value for the
-B
argument - retries: The value for the
-r
argument - tos: The value for the
-O
argument - summary: The value for the
-Q
argument – this determines how often data is collected - period: The value for the
-p
argument
- hosts: An array of hostnames to ping
Data is stored in Influx with the following fields and tags:
- min: field showing minimum ping time during the run
- max: field showing maximum ping time during the run
- avg: field showing average ping time during the run
- loss: field showing packet loss during the run
- rx_host: tag showing the target host
- tx_host: tag showing the originating host of the ping check
There is a beta-quality Dockerfile in the root of this repo that uses multistage builds to build and create an image of infping
. Running it can be as easy as:
docker run -v /local/infping.json:/config/infping.json $IMAGE
It will automatically detect the configuration in /config
. For best results, assign a hostname, otherwise you'll end up with one that doesn't make much sense
A sample Grafana dashboard is included, that plots all four of the collected ping statistics in something approximating the display of Smokeping. Simply create a datasource named "infping" pointing to Influx, and then import this dashboard. The hostname
variable will be automatically populated with all the host names found in the database, and can be used to select different graphs.