Hi Michael, Thank you for your reply it is very helpful. Michael Tremer wrote: > Hey Bob, > > thanks for getting in touch. > > I had no idea that too many people are still active around the IPCop > community, but welcome to IPFire. > I am still running an IPcop firewall but have been looking at IPFire for sometime as a replacement to the unsupported IPCop. I released adslmonitor a number of years ago which I had developed it for my own use to analyze my rather flaky adsl connection and hoped it would be of use to others with the same problem. I have made a number of changes over the years to support vdsl routers using ssh or telnet access but haven't released any updates as yet. I was thinking that I would release an updated version for IPFire if I could get it running on my own test box first but I see that your addons follow a different path to IPCop addons so was trying to understand what is involved. > I guess this would be a great addition to IPFire although I could not find > out which modems are supported. Is there any (bigger?) ISP handing out any > compatible ones? > In my original version I parsed the adsl data from the router's web pages with a regex. The problem here is that each different manufacturer need a different regex. Hopefully accessing the modem/router with ssh or telnet should make data collection less complex. > I had a look at the code that you linked and that looks quite good. It's > clean and tidy and I think porting that over would not be too hard. > However, we don't run the perl scripts any more to collect stats. We use > collectd in IPFire 2. > I've made a start and have the first web page (router.cgi) running on my IPFire test system. There weren't many problems mainly changing file locations from IPCop defaults to the IPFire ones. > Since we should not run the cron job to collect data for every since even > when it doesn't have a compatible device, we should make this an add-on. > I agree. > What you will need to do is check out the build system as described here: > > https://wiki.ipfire.org/devel/ipfire-2.x/build-howto > > Then you would have to create a file called lfs/adslmonitor or something > similar and roughly follow these steps: > > https://wiki.ipfire.org/devel/ipfire-2.x/addon-howto > Thanks for the links. > I guess a good example to follow would be guardian which is also an add-on > written in perl: > > https://git.ipfire.org/?p=ipfire-2.x.git;a=blob;f=lfs/guardian;h=f3001c82128f3ba08290eea295b87cf342f65590;hb=HEAD > OK > To add a button to the navigation, you will have to add a file with some > information to /var/ipfire/menu.d. They are here in the source: > > https://git.ipfire.org/?p=ipfire-2.x.git;a=tree;f=config/menu;h=64cd8c17713574e84a7012803f3261b8a8e81801;hb=HEAD > > Just dropping a file into that directory will do it. > OK I'll try to make the changes this way but on my test system I just hacked the /var/ipfire/menu.d/20-status.menu and added an extra item. Different to what I was used to in IPCop which uses a 'MENUENTRY' item in the perl script header. > I hope that this gives you some good guidance. If you have any further > questions please ask at any time. > > Best, > -Michael > Thanks again for your really useful reply, I am also running a few other prototype addons on my IPCop which could be ported over. One of these sends the daily firewall logs to dshield and another is a hack of the old IPCop Banish addon which is under development. Let me know if you think these could be useful to IPFire Kind Regards Bob