I just installed it, now I need to learn to use it. Ran into trouble
with getting cheops installed gubuntu. Got Centos up on another system,
haven't got that cheops there either. Meetings all day, sorry.
On 2018-01-10 07:06 AM, Dave via Mikrotik-users wrote:
+1
We use DIA for linux and I also have it on my windoze machine
Good stuff for documentation and helping with customer understandings.
On 01/09/2018 03:04 PM, Kristian Hoffmann via Mikrotik-users wrote:
Not trying to be esoteric, if you're talking about the actual
documentation/visualization part of it (not automated discovery),
then you can make a spreadsheet of edges/vertexes (e.g. routers and
connecting interfaces) and feed it into graphviz. This approach has
the benefit of storing the data in a tabular form (better, imho), and
can be used to re-generate the diagram whenever the data is updated.
We use something similar, but output to KML from info in a database,
so you get the benefit of a more accurate geographical
representation, not just pure network topology.
-Kristian
On 01/09/2018 12:51 PM, Jan Van Kort via Mikrotik-users wrote:
I used to use Dude, it was causing a system-wide interrupt every
20-30 seconds. Employed a rb750gr3 to monitor 3 pops. Un-plugging
the rb750 caused the problem to go away. We made the experts very
wealthy trying to figure out the cause of the problem.
Now I have to manually draw 3 charts for the new IT dept. As soon as
we add new clients, the new charts will be outdated. It doesn't
matter because the Mikrotiks are going away too. So just looking
for a temporary solution to convey topology info to the new guys who
are taking over and then they can do it their way.
On 2018-01-09 10:37 AM, Lewis Bergman via Mikrotik-users wrote:
There is wine for Windows but I don't know if it would run dude.
There is always a VM.
On Tue, Jan 9, 2018, 12:30 PM Grand Avenue Broadband via
Mikrotik-users <[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
You may be seeing maps managed by Mikrotik's Dude, which is
free as long as you have one of a handful of MT routers that
can run the server (needs a TILE or an inexpensive non-variant
hEX). However, the client is built only for Windows. It does
run perfectly on Macs in a wine-bottle app wrapper; perhaps
there's an analogous environment for Linux.
On Jan 9, 2018, at 10:46 AM, Jan Van Kort via Mikrotik-users
<[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>>
wrote:
I would like to know what application to use to create those nice
mapping topologies I see once in awhile when other users
show-off their
networks. I use Linux, exclusively, is there a package in the
Linux
repos that does this?
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