#!/bin/sh #*********************************************************************** # # adsl-status # # Shell script to report on status of ADSL connection # # Copyright (C) 2000-2001 Roaring Penguin Software Inc. # # $Id$ # # This file may be distributed under the terms of the GNU General # Public License. # # Usage: adsl-status [config_file] # If config_file is omitted, defaults to /etc/ppp/pppoe.conf # #*********************************************************************** # Defaults CONFIG=/etc/ppp/pppoe.conf case "$#" in 1) CONFIG="$1" ;; esac if [ ! -f "$CONFIG" -o ! -r "$CONFIG" ] ; then echo "$0: Cannot read configuration file '$CONFIG'" >& 2 exit 1 fi . $CONFIG PPPOE_PIDFILE="$PIDFILE.pppoe" PPPD_PIDFILE="$PIDFILE.pppd" if [ "$DEMAND" != "no" ] ; then echo "Note: You have enabled demand-connection; adsl-status may be inaccurate." fi # If no PPPOE_PIDFILE, connection is down, unless we're using the Linux plugin if [ "$LINUX_PLUGIN" = "" ] ; then if [ ! -r "$PPPOE_PIDFILE" ] ; then echo "adsl-status: Link is down (can't read pppoe PID file $PPPOE_PIDFILE)" exit 1 fi fi # If no PPPD_PIDFILE, something fishy! if [ ! -r "$PPPD_PIDFILE" ] ; then echo "adsl-status: Link is down (can't read pppd PID file $PPPD_PIDFILE)" exit 1 fi PPPD_PID=`cat "$PPPD_PIDFILE"` # Sigh. Some versions of pppd put PID files in /var/run; others put them # in /etc/ppp. Since it's too messy to figure out what pppd does, we # try both locations. for i in /etc/ppp/ppp*.pid /var/run/ppp*.pid ; do if [ -r $i ] ; then PID=`cat $i` if [ "$PID" = "$PPPD_PID" ] ; then IF=`basename $i .pid` netstat -rn | grep " ${IF}\$" > /dev/null # /sbin/ifconfig $IF | grep "UP.*POINTOPOINT" > /dev/null if [ "$?" != "0" ] ; then echo "adsl-status: Link is attached to $IF, but $IF is down" exit 1 fi echo "adsl-status: Link is up and running on interface $IF" /sbin/ifconfig $IF exit 0 fi fi done echo "adsl-status: Link is down -- could not find interface corresponding to" echo "pppd pid $PPPD_PID" exit 1