Provided by: rancid_2.3.8-6_amd64 bug

NAME

       rancid_intro - introduction to the Really Awesome New Cisco confIg Differ

INTRODUCTION

       rancid  is  really  more  than  just a Cisco configuration differ.  It handles several different device's
       configurations; currently including Alteon, Arista, Bay Networks  (Nortel),  Cisco,  Extreme,  F5  BigIP,
       Force10, Fortinet, Foundry, HP Procurve switches, Hitachi, Juniper Routers and edge (ERX) routers, Lucent
       TNT,  MRTd  daemon,  Netscalar load balancers, Netscreen firewalls, Procket, Redback, SMC switches, Zebra
       routing software, and the ADC-Kentrox EZ-T3 mux.

       rancid uses an expect script to login to each of a list of devices and run a set  of  commands  for  that
       device-type  and  collects  the output.  The output is run through some filtering to summarize, reformat,
       and/or snip unwanted or security related  data  such  as  chassis  temperature  and  easily  reverse-able
       passwords.

       Named  after  the  device's  name  in the group's configuration file (router.db), the resulting files are
       saved in the directory <group>/configs.  Except for the data filtered from  the  configuration  file  for
       security  reasons, such as reversable passwords, these files are suitable for loading directly to restore
       a lost configuration.  See rancid.conf(5) for more information on <group>s.

       After filtering, a uni-diff (see diff(1)) of the result is produced for each of the devices  in  a  group
       against  that  of the previous run of rancid and is e-mailed to that group's mail list, "rancid-<group>".
       This e-mail will also include any differences of the device  list  in  the  group's  configuration  file,
       router.db.

       Lastly, all the updated files are checked into the revision control system (CVS or Subversion).

       Additional  utilities,  including  a  looking  glass,  come  with rancid.  See rancid's share directory (
       share/rancid).

EXAMPLE E-MAIL

       Below  is  a  sample  of  a  uni-diff  produced  from  the  group  "shrubbery"  for  the   device   named
       dfw.shrubbery.net, which happens to be a Cisco GSR.

       From: rancid
       To: rancid-shrubbery@shrubbery.net
       Subject: shrubbery router config diffs
       Precedence: bulk

       Index: configs/dfw.shrubbery.net
       ===================================================================
       retrieving revision 1.144
       diff -u -4 -r1.144 dfw.shrubbery.net
       @@ -57,14 +57,8 @@
         !Slot 2/MBUS: hvers 1.1
         !Slot 2/MBUS: software 01.36 (RAM) (ROM version is 01.33)
         !Slot 2/MBUS: 128 Mbytes DRAM, 16384 Kbytes SDRAM
         !
       - !Slot 6: 1 Port Gigabit Ethernet
       - !Slot 6/PCA: part 73-3302-03 rev C0 ver 3, serial CAB031216OL
       - !Slot 6/PCA: hvers 1.1
       - !Slot 6/MBUS: part 73-2146-07 rev B0 dev 0, serial CAB031112SB
       - !Slot 6/MBUS: hvers 1.2
       - !Slot 6/MBUS: software 01.36 (RAM) (ROM version is 01.33)
         !Slot 7: Route Processor
         !Slot 7/PCA: part 73-2170-03 rev B0 ver 3, serial CAB024901SI
         !Slot 7/PCA: hvers 1.4
         !Slot 7/MBUS: part 73-2146-06 rev A0 dev 0, serial CAB02060044

       In  this  example,  we see that a Gigabit Ethernet linecard was removed from slot 6.  However, since this
       data is collected from "show" commands on the router, it could just as easily be that the card crashed so
       the RP can not communicate with it to collect information.

GETTING STARTED

       Installation instructions are included in the distribution's  top-level  directory  in  the  README  file
       (which  will  be installed in share/rancid).  Once the installation is complete, start by reading the man
       pages listed below or follow the basic instructions included in the README file.

       See http://www.shrubbery.net/rancid for information on new versions, mail lists, etc.

ADDING NEW GROUPS

       Follow this procedure for adding new groups:

       o      Update the LIST_OF_GROUPS variable in etc/rancid.conf (see rancid.conf(5)).

       o      Run rancid-cvs(1).

       o      Update the system's mail aliases file /etc/aliases (see rancid.conf(5)).

SEE ALSO

       clogin(1),  cloginrc(5),  control_rancid(1),  lg_intro(1),  rancid(1),   rancid-run(1),   rancid.conf(5),
       router.db(5)

                                                  14 july 2009                                   rancid_intro(1)