Response Time Reporter

The Response Time Reporter (RTR) feature enables you to monitor network performance and resources by measuring response times and the availability of your network devices.

RTR configuration is associated with a specific virtual router, distinct from any other virtual router.

Configuration Tasks

To configure RTR:

  1. Configure the probe type—an echo probe or a path echo probe.
  2. (Optional) Configure probe characteristics:
    • frequency
    • hops-of-statistics-kept (path echo)
    • max-response-failure (path echo)
    • operations-per-hop (path echo)
    • owner
    • receive-interface
    • request-data-size
    • samples-of-history-kept
    • tag
    • timeout (echo)
    • tos

      Note: You cannot set any of these characteristics until you have set the probe type. The default values of these characteristics depend on the type of the entry.

  3. (Optional) Set reaction conditions.
  4. Schedule the probe.
  5. (Optional) Capture statistics and collect error information.
  6. (Optional) Collect history.

Configuring the Probe Type

To begin configuring RTR, enter RTR Configuration mode and configure the probe type—either an echo probe or a path echo probe.

rtr

type

Configuring Optional Characteristics

In addition to configuring the probe’s type, you can configure the probe characteristics presented in Table 7.

Table 7: Probe Characteristics

Characteristic

Description

frequency

Time between tests (in seconds)

hops-of-statistics-kept

Hops per path for which statistics are gathered

max-response-failure

Maximum number of consecutive failures

operations-per-hop

Number of probes per hop

owner

Owner of the probe

receive-interface

Interface on which the probe expects to receive responses

request-data-size

Request’s payload size

samples-of-history-kept

Maximum number of history samples

tag

User-defined tag

timeout

Probe timeout (in milliseconds)

tos

A value for the TOS byte

frequency

operations-per-hop

owner

request-data-size

tag

timeout

tos

Capturing Statistics

The primary objective of RTR is to collect statistics and information about network performance. You can control the number and type of statistics collected.

hops-of-statistics-kept

max-response-failure

Collecting History

RTR can collect data samples for a given probe. These samples are referred to as history data. When RTR collects history, it refers to tests. A test is the lifetime of a probe operation.

samples-of-history-kept

Setting the Receiving Interface

When you configure multiple RTR entries to use the same target address, you must issue the receive-interface command to set the interface on which the probe expects to receive responses. This action enables the router to map incoming responses to the proper RTR entry, even when multiple RTR entries have the same target address.

receive-interface

Setting Reaction Conditions

You can set the RTR probe to react to events that take place and to send notifications about these events.

Note: The only no version for all the rtr reaction-configuration commands is no rtr reaction-configuration rtrIndex. Use the no version to clear all traps. This works for all the options.

rtr reaction-configuration action-type

rtr reaction-configuration operation-failure

rtr reaction-configuration path-change

rtr reaction-configuration test-completion

rtr reaction-configuration test-failure

Scheduling the Probe

When you have configured the RTR probe, you must schedule the operation to begin collecting statistics and other information about problems that may arise.

rtr schedule

rtr schedule life

rtr schedule restart-time

rtr schedule start-time

Shutting Down the Probe

You can shut down the RTR probe operation.

rtr reset

Monitoring RTR

You can monitor RTR by displaying status and configuration information.

show rtr application

show rtr collection-statistics

show rtr configuration

show rtr history

show rtr hops

show rtr operational-state