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A set of client applications for issuing measurements to the RIPE Atlas network

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##Introduction

This project is a set of command line scripts that double as Python libraries for creating measurements for RIPE Atlas. It uses the more recent RESTful API. This project will be most useful for those who prefer to work on the command-line or need a higher level of flexability when issuing and collecting measurements.

If you are looking for a library to assist in parsing Atlas data then please check out the analysis tools.

The code started off from a very nice tutorial by Stéphane Bortzmeyer (http://www.bortzmeyer.org/ripe-atlas-api.html). I continue to use the "authentication key" configuration from the tutorial script.

##Measurement scripts

There are several measurement scripts in place for running traceroute, ping, ssl etc... Most scripts double as Python class modules and command-line scripts. As command-line scripts, each typically takes a probe-target file as the first argument and an output file to write measurement ids as the second argument. The probe-target file is a space-separated probeid, target pair per line such as

4125 www.google.com
4156 204.57.0.5
...

Measurements are target-centric. When measurements are issued, all probes measuring the same target will be batched together is a single measurement. This reduces load on the RIPE Atlas backend scheduling platform.

Example usage of ping.

atlas_ping.py probe-targets-file probe-targets-measurementids

Each measurement script has it's own set of independent options so check out the usage output for each one. Measurement ids are also printed to stderr as a status indicator.

##Configure Auth Key Measurement scripts require an auth key file at ~/.atlas/auth with the key as a single line. Alternatively, a key can be passed as a parameter to most scripts.

##Utilities

###Check status of measurements

./atlas_status probe-targets-measurementids

###Fetching active probes

./fetch_active.py tab true > active_probes

The first argument specifies space-separated tabular format as the output. Otherwise the output is JSON. The format of the tab file is

Probe ID | IPv4 ASN | IPv6 ASN | IPv4 Address | IPv6 Address | IPv4 Prefix | IPv6 Prefix | Connected Status | Country Code | Latitude | Longitude

###Downloading measurements This currently relies on GNU parallel. It seems to work with versions >= 20130222 but older versions may have problems. There are other implementations of download commented out in the source if parallel is not available but they will be much slower.

./atlas_collect.sh probe-targets-file 4 > results.json 

###Stop repeating measurements

./stop_measurements.sh probe-targets-measurementids

##My Workflow These scripts don't implement the full convenience of probe selection that is possible in the web UI. Instead, you must create an input file with a list of all the probes you want to use. My workflow generally looks something like this.

First, fetch a fresh copy of the list of probes that are currently online. $./fetch_active.py tab true > active_probes.txt Then I pick out the specific probes I want for a target with standard unix tools. For example, if I want to use all the probes hosted in AT&T in the U.S. to measure Google, I would do something like this. $awk '{ if($2 == 7018 && $9 == "US") print "www.google.com",$1}' active_probes.txt > probe_targets.txt It's a bit of manual work but it allowed me much more control with my experiments than I could get with the UI.`

Then you should be able to run your measurements. For traceroutes, your would do $./atlas_traceroute.py probe_targets.txt measure_ids.txt.

Check their status with $./atlas_status.py measure_ids.txt. When all are complete, collect them with $./atlas_collect.sh measure_ids.txt 4 > results.json.

If you want to run repeating measurements then you should be able to pass the interval in seconds using ```--repeats`` flag (I think this works but I generally don't use it much). This will keep going unless you stop it.

##Using As a Library Clone the project and install in the standard way python setup.py install.

Here is a simple traceroute client.

from atlas import atlas_traceroute

target = 'www.google.com'
key = 'abc1234'         # ripe atlas key to create measurements
probe_list = ['12', '456', '99'] # list of probe ids

traceroute = atlas_traceroute.Traceroute(target, key, probe_list=probe_list)
#set some options
traceroute.description = 'This is my traceroute test'
traceroute.af = 4 # IPv4
traceroute.is_oneoff = True # Make this one off
traceroute.is_public = True
traceroute.npackets = 3 # set 3 packets per hop

response = traceroute.run()
print(response)

##Dependencies The atlas client libraries require the Requests library.

##Licence The MIT License (MIT)

Copyright (c) 2015 Matt Calder & The University of Southern California.

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