Before this commit, the value of target.hostname was incorrect.
It was accidentially pointing to the hostname of the source of
the link. This means target.hostname was equal to source.hostname.
Fixes: #197
Fixes: 0325aad24e
PR: #200
PR at github: #199
This output takes the respondd response as sent by the node and includes
it in a Line-Delimited JSON (JSONL) document. In this format each line
can be interpreted as separate JSON element, which is useful for json
streaming. The first line is json object holding the timestamp and
version of the file. Then there follows one line for each node, each
containing a json object.
An example output looks like this:
{"version":1,"updated_at":"2021-03-27T21:58:48+0100","format":"raw-nodes-jsonl"}
{"firstseen": ..., "lastseen": ..., "online":true, "statistics": {...}, "nodeinfo": {...}, "neighbours":null, "custom_fields":null}
{"firstseen": ..., "lastseen": ..., "online":true, "statistics": {...}, "nodeinfo": {...}, "neighbours":null, "custom_fields":null}
{"firstseen": ..., "lastseen": ..., "online":true, "statistics": {...}, "nodeinfo": {...}, "neighbours":null, "custom_fields":null}
{"firstseen": ..., "lastseen": ..., "online":true, "statistics": {...}, "nodeinfo": {...}, "neighbours":null, "custom_fields":null}
...
Signed-off-by: Leonardo Mörlein <git@irrelefant.net>
Grafana is currently not able to resolve the target.id or source.id
into a human readable hostname. Therefore reading the neighbour
graphs is quite difficult for humans. To resolve this, we add the
additional tags source.hostname and target.hostname to the influx
link measurements.
In PR #197
Gluon exports information about how many OWE capable clients are
connected to a given node. The OWE client count is already contained in
the wifi* counters and only provides more-specific information.
At the moment, if one has a custom respondd module which includes custom
fields, Yanic will simply ignore these fields. Communities which have custom
fields have to maintain patches on Yanic to have them available.
This commit allows to define custom fields in the configuration file, which
will cause Yanic to also save the values of these custom fields in its internal
data structures. Output modules can then decide whether they want to include
these fields. For most cases, this should avoid the need for patches in Yanic.