| 1 |
=head1 NAME |
| 2 |
|
| 3 |
Net::FPing - quickly ping a large number of hosts |
| 4 |
|
| 5 |
=head1 SYNOPSIS |
| 6 |
|
| 7 |
use Net::FPing; |
| 8 |
|
| 9 |
=head1 DESCRIPTION |
| 10 |
|
| 11 |
This module was written for a single purpose only: sendinf ICMP EHCO |
| 12 |
REQUEST packets as quickly as possible to a large number of hosts |
| 13 |
(thousands to millions). |
| 14 |
|
| 15 |
It employs a sending thread and is fully event-driven (using AnyEvent), so |
| 16 |
you have to run an event model supported by AnyEvent to use this module. |
| 17 |
|
| 18 |
=head1 FUNCTIONS |
| 19 |
|
| 20 |
=over 4 |
| 21 |
|
| 22 |
=cut |
| 23 |
|
| 24 |
package Net::FPing; |
| 25 |
|
| 26 |
use strict; |
| 27 |
no warnings; |
| 28 |
|
| 29 |
use AnyEvent; |
| 30 |
|
| 31 |
BEGIN { |
| 32 |
our $VERSION = '0.9'; |
| 33 |
our @ISA = qw(Exporter); |
| 34 |
|
| 35 |
require Exporter; |
| 36 |
#Exporter::export_ok_tags (keys %EXPORT_TAGS); |
| 37 |
|
| 38 |
require XSLoader; |
| 39 |
XSLoader::load (__PACKAGE__, $VERSION); |
| 40 |
} |
| 41 |
|
| 42 |
our ($THR_REQ_FD, $THR_RES_FD, $ICMP4_FD, $ICMP6_FD); |
| 43 |
|
| 44 |
our $THR_REQ_FH; open $THR_REQ_FH, ">&=$THR_REQ_FD" or die "FATAL: cannot fdopen"; |
| 45 |
our $THR_RES_FH; open $THR_RES_FH, "<&=$THR_RES_FD" or die "FATAL: cannot fdopen"; |
| 46 |
|
| 47 |
our $THR_REQ_W; |
| 48 |
our $THR_RES_W = AnyEvent->io (fh => $THR_RES_FH, poll => 'r', cb => sub { |
| 49 |
my $sv = _read_res |
| 50 |
or return; |
| 51 |
|
| 52 |
$sv->(); |
| 53 |
}); |
| 54 |
|
| 55 |
our $THR_REQ_BUF; |
| 56 |
|
| 57 |
sub _send_req($) { |
| 58 |
$THR_REQ_BUF .= $_[0]; |
| 59 |
|
| 60 |
$THR_REQ_W ||= AnyEvent->io (fh => $THR_REQ_FH, poll => 'w', cb => sub { |
| 61 |
my $len = syswrite $THR_REQ_FH, $THR_REQ_BUF; |
| 62 |
substr $THR_REQ_BUF, 0, $len, ""; |
| 63 |
|
| 64 |
undef $THR_REQ_W unless length $THR_REQ_BUF; |
| 65 |
}); |
| 66 |
} |
| 67 |
|
| 68 |
=item Net::FPing::ipv4_supported |
| 69 |
|
| 70 |
Returns true if IPv4 is supported in this module and on this system. |
| 71 |
|
| 72 |
=item Net::FPing::ipv6_supported |
| 73 |
|
| 74 |
Returns true if IPv6 is supported in this module and on this system. |
| 75 |
|
| 76 |
=item Net::FPing::icmp4_pktsize |
| 77 |
|
| 78 |
Returns the number of bytes each IPv4 ping packet has. |
| 79 |
|
| 80 |
=item Net::FPing::icmp6_pktsize |
| 81 |
|
| 82 |
Returns the number of bytes each IPv4 ping packet has. |
| 83 |
|
| 84 |
=item Net::FPing::icmp_ping [ranges...], $send_interval, $payload, \&callback |
| 85 |
|
| 86 |
Ping the given IPv4 address ranges. Each range is an arrayref of the |
| 87 |
form C<[lo, hi, interval]>, where C<lo> and C<hi> are octet strings with |
| 88 |
either 4 octets (for IPv4 addresses) or 16 octets (for IPV6 addresses), |
| 89 |
representing the lowest and highest address to ping (you can convert a |
| 90 |
dotted-quad IPv4 address to this format by using C<inet_aton $address>. The |
| 91 |
range C<interval> is the minimum time in seconds between pings to the |
| 92 |
given range. If omitted, defaults to C<$send_interval>. |
| 93 |
|
| 94 |
The C<$send_interval> is the minimum interval between sending any two |
| 95 |
packets and is a way to make an overall rate limit. If omitted, pings will |
| 96 |
be send as fast as possible. |
| 97 |
|
| 98 |
The C<$payload> is a 32 bit unsigned integer given as the ICMP ECHO |
| 99 |
REQUEST ident and sequence numbers (in unspecified order :). |
| 100 |
|
| 101 |
The request will be queued and all requests will be served by a background |
| 102 |
thread in order. When all ranges have been pinged, the C<callback> will be |
| 103 |
called. |
| 104 |
|
| 105 |
Algorithm: Each range has an associated "next time to send packet" |
| 106 |
time. The algorithm loops as long as there are ranges with hosts to be |
| 107 |
pinged and always serves the range with the most urgent packet send |
| 108 |
time. It will at most send one packet every C<$send_interval> seconds. |
| 109 |
|
| 110 |
This will ensure that pings to the same range are nicely interleaved with |
| 111 |
other ranges - this can help reduce per-subnet bandwidth while maintaining |
| 112 |
an overall high packet rate. |
| 113 |
|
| 114 |
The algorithm to send each packet is O(log n) on the number of ranges, so |
| 115 |
even a large number of ranges (many thousands) is managable. |
| 116 |
|
| 117 |
No storage is allocated per address. |
| 118 |
|
| 119 |
Performance: On my 2 GHz Opteron system with a pretty average nvidia |
| 120 |
gigabit network card I can ping around 60k to 200k adresses per second, |
| 121 |
depending on routing decisions. |
| 122 |
|
| 123 |
Example: ping 10.0.0.1-10.0.0.15 with at most 100 packets/s, and |
| 124 |
11.0.0.1-11.0.255.255 with at most 1000 packets/s. Do not, however, exceed |
| 125 |
1000 packets/s overall: |
| 126 |
|
| 127 |
my $done = AnyEvent->condvar; |
| 128 |
|
| 129 |
Net::FPing::icmp_ping |
| 130 |
[ |
| 131 |
[v10.0.0.1, v10.0.0.15, .01], |
| 132 |
[v11.0.0.1, v11.0.255.255, .001], |
| 133 |
], |
| 134 |
.001, 0x12345678, |
| 135 |
sub { |
| 136 |
warn "all ranges pinged\n"; |
| 137 |
$done->broadcast; |
| 138 |
} |
| 139 |
; |
| 140 |
|
| 141 |
$done->wait; |
| 142 |
|
| 143 |
=cut |
| 144 |
|
| 145 |
sub icmp_ping($$$&) { |
| 146 |
_send_req _req_icmp_ping @_; |
| 147 |
} |
| 148 |
|
| 149 |
our $ICMP4_FH; |
| 150 |
our $ICMP4_W = (open $ICMP4_FH, "<&=$ICMP4_FD") && AnyEvent->io (fh => $ICMP4_FH, poll => 'r', cb => \&_recv_icmp4); |
| 151 |
our $ICMP6_FH; |
| 152 |
our $ICMP6_W = (open $ICMP6_FH, "<&=$ICMP6_FD") && AnyEvent->io (fh => $ICMP6_FH, poll => 'r', cb => \&_recv_icmp6); |
| 153 |
|
| 154 |
=item Net::FPing::register_cb \&cb |
| 155 |
|
| 156 |
Register a callback that is called for every received ping reply |
| 157 |
(regardless of whether a ping is still in process or not and regardless of |
| 158 |
whether the reply is actually a reply to a ping sent earlier). |
| 159 |
|
| 160 |
The code reference gets a single parameter - an arrayref with an |
| 161 |
entry for each received packet (replies are beign batched for greater |
| 162 |
efficiency). Each packet is represented by an arrayref with three members: |
| 163 |
the source address (an octet string of either 4 (IPv4) or 16 (IPv6) octets |
| 164 |
length), the payload as passed to C<icmp_ping> and the round trip time in |
| 165 |
seconds. |
| 166 |
|
| 167 |
Example: a single ping reply with payload of 1 from C<::1> gets passed |
| 168 |
like this: |
| 169 |
|
| 170 |
[ [ |
| 171 |
"\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\1", |
| 172 |
"0.000280141830444336", |
| 173 |
1 |
| 174 |
] ] |
| 175 |
|
| 176 |
Example: ping replies for C<127.0.0.1> and C<127.0.0.2>, with a payload of |
| 177 |
C<0x12345678>: |
| 178 |
|
| 179 |
[ |
| 180 |
[ |
| 181 |
"\177\0\0\1", |
| 182 |
"0.00015711784362793", |
| 183 |
305419896 |
| 184 |
], |
| 185 |
[ |
| 186 |
"\177\0\0\2", |
| 187 |
"0.00090184211731", |
| 188 |
305419896 |
| 189 |
] |
| 190 |
] |
| 191 |
|
| 192 |
=item Net::FPing::unregister_cb \&cb |
| 193 |
|
| 194 |
Unregister the callback again (make sure you pass the same codereference |
| 195 |
as to C<register_cb>). |
| 196 |
|
| 197 |
=cut |
| 198 |
|
| 199 |
our @CB; |
| 200 |
|
| 201 |
sub register_cb(&) { |
| 202 |
push @CB, $_[0]; |
| 203 |
} |
| 204 |
|
| 205 |
sub unregister_cb($) { |
| 206 |
@CB = grep $_ != $_[0], @CB; |
| 207 |
} |
| 208 |
|
| 209 |
1; |
| 210 |
|
| 211 |
=back |
| 212 |
|
| 213 |
=head1 AUTHOR |
| 214 |
|
| 215 |
Marc Lehmann <schmorp@schmorp.de> |
| 216 |
http://home.schmorp.de/ |
| 217 |
|
| 218 |
=head1 AUTHOR |
| 219 |
|
| 220 |
This software is distributed under the GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE, version 2 |
| 221 |
or any later version or, at your option, the Artistic License. |
| 222 |
|
| 223 |
=cut |
| 224 |
|