MKTXP is a Prometheus Exporter for Mikrotik RouterOS devices.
It gathers and exports a rich set of metrics across multiple routers, all easily configurable via built-in CLI interface.
Apart from exporting to Prometheus, MKTXP can also print some of the metrics directly on the command line (see an example below).
For effortless visualization of the RouterOS metrics exported to Prometheus, MKTXP comes with a dedicated Grafana dashboard:
-
Python 3.6.x or later
-
Supported OSs:
- Linux
- Mac OSX
-
Mikrotik RouterOS device(s)
-
Optional:
There are multiple ways to install this project, from a standalone app to a fully dockerized monitoring stack.
-
from PyPI:
❯ pip install mktxp
-
latest from source repository:
❯ pip install git+https://github.com/akpw/mktxp
-
from Docker image :
❯ docker pull ghcr.io/akpw/mktxp:latest
-
with MKTXP Stack: a ready-to-go MKTXP monitoring stack
To get started with MKTXP, you need to edit its main configuration file. This essentially involves adding your Mikrotik devices ip addresses & authentication info, optionally modifying various settings to specific needs.
The default configuration file comes with a sample configuration, making it easy to copy / edit parameters as needed:
[Sample-Router]
enabled = False # turns metrics collection for this RouterOS device on / off
hostname = localhost # RouterOS IP address
port = 8728 # RouterOS IP Port
username = username # RouterOS user, needs to have 'read' and 'api' permissions
password = password
use_ssl = False # enables connection via API-SSL servis
no_ssl_certificate = False # enables API_SSL connect without router SSL certificate
ssl_certificate_verify = False # turns SSL certificate verification on / off
dhcp = True # DHCP general metrics
dhcp_lease = True # DHCP lease metrics
pool = True # Pool metrics
interface = True # Interfaces traffic metrics
firewall = True # Firewall rules matching traffic metrics
monitor = True # Interface monitor metrics
route = True # Routes metrics
wireless = True # WLAN general metrics
wireless_clients = True # WLAN clients metrics
capsman = True # CAPsMAN general metrics
capsman_clients = True # CAPsMAN clients metrics
use_comments_over_names = False # when available, forces using comments over the interfaces names
If you have a local MKTXP installation, you can edit this file with your default system editor directly from mktxp:
❯ mktxp edit
In case you prefer a different editor, run the edit
command with its optional -ed
parameter:
❯ mktxp edit -ed nano
Obviously, you can do the same via just opening the config file directly:
❯ nano ~/mktxp/mktxp.conf
For Docker instances, one way is to use a configured mktxp.conf file from a local installation. Alternatively you can create a standalone one in a dedicated folder:
mkdir mktxp
nano mktxp/mktxp.conf # copy&edit sample entry(ies) from above
Now you can mount this folder and run your docker instance with:
docker run -v "$(pwd)/mktxp:/home/mktxp/mktxp/" -p 49090:49090 -it --rm ghcr.io/akpw/mktxp:latest
MKTXP Stack Getting Started provides similar instructions around editing the mktxp.conf file and, if needed, adding a dedicated API user to your Mikrotik RouterOS devices as mentioned below.
For the purpose of RouterOS device monitoring, it's best to create a dedicated user with minimal required permissions.
MKTXP only needs API
and Read
, so at that point you can go to your router's terminal and type:
/user group add name=mktxp_group policy=api,read
/user add name=mktxp_user group=mktxp_group password=mktxp_user_password
Now let's put some Mikrotik device address / user credentials in the above MKTXP configuration file, and at that point we should already be able to check out on our progress so far. Since MKTXP can output selected metrics directly on the command line with the mktxp print
command, it's easy to do it even without Prometheus or Grafana.
For example, let's go take a look at some of my smart home CAPsMAN clients:
❯ mktxp print -en MKT-GT -cc
Connecting to router MKT-GT@10.**.*.**
2021-01-24 12:04:29 Connection to router MKT-GT@10.**.*.** has been established
| dhcp_name | dhcp_address | mac_address | rx_signal | interface | ssid | tx_rate | rx_rate | uptime |
|----------------------|----------------|-------------------|-------------|-------------|--------|-----------|-----------|----------|
| Woox Runner | 10.**.*.** | 80:*************D | -64 | LR-2G-1-1 | AKP | 72 Mbps | 54 Mbps | 3 days |
| Woox Office Lamp | 10.**.*.** | 80:*************F | -59 | LR-2G-1-1 | AKP | 72 Mbps | 54 Mbps | 3 days |
| Harmony Hub | 10.**.*.** | C8:*************5 | -46 | LR-2G-1-1 | AKP | 72 Mbps | 72 Mbps | 3 days |
| Woox Office Hub | 10.**.*.** | DC:*************7 | -44 | LR-2G-1-1 | AKP | 72 Mbps | 54 Mbps | 3 days |
| Woox Ext Hub | 10.**.*.** | DC:*************E | -44 | LR-2G-1-1 | AKP | 72 Mbps | 54 Mbps | 3 days |
| Amazon Echo | 10.**.*.** | CC:*************4 | -44 | LR-2G-1-1 | AKP | 72 Mbps | 72 Mbps | a day |
| Woox Living Room Hub | 10.**.*.** | DC:*************0 | -43 | LR-2G-1-1 | AKP | 72 Mbps | 54 Mbps | 3 days |
| JBL View | 10.**.*.** | 00:*************D | -28 | LR-2G-1-1 | AKP | 144 Mbps | 117 Mbps | 7 hours |
| | | | | | | | | |
| MBP15 | 10.**.*.** | 78:*************E | -53 | GT-5G-1 | AKP5G | 877 Mbps | 877 Mbps | 3 days |
| | | | | | | | | |
| Woox Toaster | 10.**.*.** | 68:*************B | -70 | KT-2G-1-1 | AKP | 72 Mbps | 54 Mbps | 3 days |
| Woox Kettle | 10.**.*.** | B4:*************5 | -65 | KT-2G-1-1 | AKP | 65 Mbps | 54 Mbps | 2 days |
| Woburn White | 10.**.*.** | 54:*************6 | -59 | KT-2G-1-1 | AKP | 72 Mbps | 72 Mbps | 9 hours |
| Siemens Washer | 10.**.*.** | 68:*************1 | -57 | KT-2G-1-1 | AKP | 72 Mbps | 72 Mbps | 2 days |
| Woburn Black | 10.**.*.** | 54:*************8 | -57 | KT-2G-1-1 | AKP | 72 Mbps | 72 Mbps | 9 hours |
| Google Nest Display | 10.**.*.** | 1C:*************A | -49 | KT-2G-1-1 | AKP | 52 Mbps | 43 Mbps | 8 hours |
----------------------- --
Connected Wifi Devices: 15
----------------------- --
Hmmm, that toaster could probably use a better signal... :)
But let's get back on track and proceed with the business of exporting RouterOS metrics to Prometheus.
For getting your routers' metrics into an existing Prometheus installation, we basically just need to connect MKTXP to it.
Let's do just that via editing the Prometheus config file:
❯ nano /etc/prometheus/prometheus.yml
and simply add:
- job_name: 'mktxp'
static_configs:
- targets: ['mktxp_machine_IP:49090']
At that point, we should be all ready for running the main mktxp export
command that will be gathering router(s) metrics as configured above and serving them to Prometheus via a http server on the default port 49090. \
❯ mktxp export
Connecting to router MKT-GT@10.**.*.**
2021-01-24 14:16:22 Connection to router MKT-GT@10.**.*.** has been established
Connecting to router MKT-LR@10.**.*.**
2021-01-24 14:16:23 Connection to router MKT-LR@10.**.*.** has been established
2021-01-24 14:16:23 Running HTTP metrics server on port 49090
In case a different port is preffered, it can be set as needed via running the mktxp edit -i
command.
That will open an internal MKTXP configuration file with some more implementation-related parameters.
Now with your RouterOS metrics being exported to Prometheus, it's easy to visualize them with this Grafana dashboard
If you've installed MKTXP on a Linux system, you can run it with system boot via adding a service.
Let's start with:
❯ nano /etc/systemd/system/mktxp.service
Now copy and paste the following:
[Unit]
Description=MKTXP Exporter
[Service]
User=user # the user under which mktxp was installed
ExecStart=mktxp export # if mktxp is not at your $PATH, you might need to provide a full path
[Install]
WantedBy=default.target
Let's save and then start the service as well as check on its' status:
❯ sudo systemctl daemon-reload
❯ sudo systemctl start mktxp
❯ sudo systemctl enable mktxp
❯ systemctl status mktxp
● mktxp.service - MKTXP Mikrotik Exporter to Prometheus
Loaded: loaded (/etc/systemd/system/mktxp.service; disabled; vendor preset: enabled)
Active: active (running) since Sun 2021-01-24 09:16:44 CET; 2h 44min ago
...
. MKTXP commands:
.. info Shows base MKTXP info
.. edit Open MKTXP configuration file in your editor of choice
.. print Displays selected metrics on the command line
.. export Starts collecting metrics for all enabled RouterOS configuration entries
.. show Shows MKTXP configuration entries on the command line
❯ mktxp -h
usage: MKTXP [-h] {info, edit, export, print, show, } ...
To learn more about individual commands, just run it with -h
:
For example, to learn everything about mktxp show
:
❯ mktxp show -h
usage: MKTXP show [-h]
[-en ['Sample-Router']]
[-cfg]
Displays MKTXP config router entries
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-en, --entry-name ['Sample-Router']
Config entry name
-cfg, --config Shows MKTXP config files paths
- Clone the repo, then run:
$ python setup.py develop
Running Tests
- TDB
- Run via:
$ python setup.py test