This package provides a suite of modules for managing NetApp's NAS
devices, commonly referred to as "filers".
This is the first public release of my NetApp Perl API, and although I
consider the code to be very stable, the API should be considered
experimental. The convention I will be following regarding
non-compatible API changes is as follows. I'm using a
major.minor.subminor release naming convention, and I will promise to
NOT make non-backwards compatible changes between subminor releases.
However, in order to allow the API to evolve, it is entirely possible
that non-backwards compatible changes will be made between minor
releases. IOW, the major.minor release numbers can be considered an
API version. Any changes to 1.1.0, 1.1.2, etc. must be backwards
compatible with the previous 1.1.* releases.
There is no guarantee that 1.2.0 will be 100% backwards compatible,
although such changes will be made only when justified. The author
does not believe in infinite backwards compatibility.
This module provides shortcuts when performing repetitive information-retrieval
tasks with p5-SNMP.
This Perl library is a set of utilities for configuring and monitoring
SNMP based devices. This library requires the Net-SNMP implementation of SNMP
and the SNMP.pm module written by Joe Marzot.
Provides an object interface to the xymon/hobbit client.
This is a PERL interface to the Zenoss Monitoring System
JSON API. It allows the ability to execute all available functions
provided by the Zenoss API programmatically. Anything you could do from
the Zenoss interface can be achieved via this module. This is a
full service implementation, providing the construction of the call
to the API and the handling of the response.
Jmx4Perl is here to connect the Java and Perl Enterprise world by providing
transparent access to the Java Management Extensions (JMX) from the perl side.
It uses a traditional request-response paradigma for performing JMX operations
on a remote Java Virtual machine.
Portmon is a network service monitoring daemon. Portmon
basically uses a list of hosts and port numbers, and tries to
connect to each host on the list at a regular time interval. It
is a lightweight program, and requires no software to be
installed on the machines one wishes to monitor.
Rate is a swiss-army-knife command-line traffic analysis tool, designed
to help a network administrator to see what is happening at a router at
the moment. Unlike tcpdump(1), rate uses statistical and stream-oriented
methods, and will never produce an output stream at a speed beyond human
perception. The output is less accurate, however. Rate features four
different operating modes, designed to perform the following tasks:
estimating overall traffic rates, determining nodes generating the
highest traffic, determining connections and flows generating the highest
traffic and extracting strings from packets.
Remote Arpwatch collects ARP tables from remote devices using SNMP and
checks them for changes. It is very useful for detecting problems and
malicious users in networks with routers that don't support static
ARP tables.