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#!/usr/bin/perl

# ipchainacc version 1.0.2
# Author: John Lange, john@darkcore.net
	  Ilya Konstantinov, mrtg-ipchains@future.galanet.net
# Date: Sep 06, 2000
#
# This script was written to provide output for MRTG
#  (multi router traffic grapher) via ipchains.
#
# http://ee-staff.ethz.ch/~oetiker/webtools/mrtg/mrtg.html
#
## USAGE EXAMPLE (line from mrtg.conf)
#
# Target[traffic]: /usr/local/mrtg-2/bin/ipchainacc 0 0
#
# The arguments 0 0 mean it should report the bytes count
# for the 1st (1st is 0, 2st is 1 and so on) rule in
# the 'acctin' chain (supposed to be the incoming traffic)
# and the 1st rule in the 'acctout' chain.
#
## Changelog
# v1.0.2 Made it actually account bytes instead of packages.
#	 Now ipchainacc requires 2 command-line arguments.
#	 This allows having more than one rule in the accounting
# 	 chains, so you could have traffic cuts by protocol
#	 or IP blocks which match your rules.
# v1.0.1 added -x to ipchains to expand byte counters
# v1.0.0 Inital Release
#
#
#   This command must return 4 lines of output:
#     Line 1 : current state of the 'incoming bytes counter'
#     Line 2 : current state of the 'outgoing bytes counter'
#     Line 3 : string, telling the uptime of the target.
#     Line 4 : string, telling the name of the target.  

# This script relies on you having setup your ipchains rules beforehand

## edit for your system

$ipchains='/sbin/ipchains';   # path to ipchains
$host=`/bin/hostname --fqdn`;  # local hostname (for information only)

# if you use the ipchains rules above, you don't have to change these
$inrule='acctin';  # name of input accounting rule
$outrule='acctout'; # name of output accounting rule


## -- don't edit below here ----

# get command line params
my ($in_rule,$out_rule) = @ARGV;

# fetch the status from ipchains
@rules=`$ipchains -L $inrule -v -n -x`;
splice @rules, 0, 2;
@in_bytes=split(' ',$rules[$in_rule]);

@rules=`$ipchains -L $outrule -v -n -x`;
splice @rules, 0, 2;
@out_bytes = split(' ',$rules[$out_rule]);
print "$out_line";    # just for debugging

#$c=1;
#foreach $value (@in_bytes) {
#  printf "$c: $value\n";
#  $c++;
#};

# uptime of the machine
my $upTimeLine = `uptime`;
my $upTime;
if ($upTimeLine =~ /\s+?.*?\s+?up (\d+ days,\s+.*?),/)
{
        $upTime = $1;
}

# 4 lines of output only.
if (!$in_bytes[1]) { $in_bytes[1] = 0; }
if (!$out_bytes[1]) { $out_bytes[1] = 0; }

print	"$in_bytes[1]\n",
	"$out_bytes[1]\n",
	"$upTime\n$host";
	

#print ($in_bytes[1] ne ''?$in_bytes[1]:'0'),"\n",
#      ($out_bytes[1] ne ''?$out_bytes[1]:'0'),"\n",
#	"$upTime\n$host";