Give these a shot. https://github.com/jlmcgraw/networkUtilities
I know J could use a little feedback on those as well but all in all they are pretty solid. > On Oct 11, 2016, at 08:48, Lee <ler...@gmail.com> wrote: > > On 10/10/16, Jay Hennigan <j...@west.net> wrote: >> On 10/6/16 1:26 PM, Jesse McGraw wrote: >>> Nanog, >>> >>> (This is me scratching an itch of my own and hoping that sharing it >>> might be useful to others on this list. Apologies if it isn't) >>> >>> When I'm trying to comprehend a new or complicated Cisco router, >>> switch or firewall configuration an old pet-peeve of mine is how >>> needlessly difficult it is to follow deeply nested logic in route-maps, >>> ACLs, QoS policy-maps etc etc >>> >>> To make this a bit simpler I’ve been working on a perl script to convert >>> these text-based configuration files into HTML with links between the >>> different elements (e.g. To an access-list from the interface where it’s >>> applied, from policy-maps to class-maps etc), hopefully making it easier >>> to to follow the chain of logic via clicking links and using the forward >>> and back buttons in your browser to go back and forth between command >>> and referenced list. >> >> Way cool. Now to hook it into RANCID.... > > It looks like what I did in 2.3.8 should still work - control_rancid > puts the diff output into $TMP.diff so add this bit: > grep "^Index: " $TMP.diff | awk '/^Index: configs/{ > if ( ! got1 ) { printf("/usr/local/bin/myscript.sh "); got1=1; } > printf("%s ", $2) > } > END{ printf("\n") } > ' >$TMP.doit > /bin/sh $TMP.doit >$TMP.out > if [ -s $TMP.out ] ; then > .. send mail / whatever > rm $TMP.doit $TMP.out > fi > > Regards, > Lee -- Jason Hellenthal JJH48-ARIN