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9 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Christian Hesse 222fe8fd54 add doc/netwatch-syslog.md 2020-03-27 22:12:49 +01:00
Christian Hesse afb9839073 update copyright for 2020 2020-01-01 17:00:39 +01:00
Christian Hesse de0a3a7d88 netwatch-syslog: simplify array access 2019-01-15 10:40:40 +01:00
Christian Hesse 870f00bb36 global: variable names are CamelCase
___  _         ___     __
           / _ )(_)__ _   / _/__ _/ /_
          / _  / / _ `/  / _/ _ `/ __/
         /____/_/\_, /  /_/ \_,_/\__/
 _       __     /___/       _             __
| |     / /___ __________  (_)___  ____ _/ /
| | /| / / __ `/ ___/ __ \/ / __ \/ __ `/ /
| |/ |/ / /_/ / /  / / / / / / / / /_/ /_/
|__/|__/\__,_/_/  /_/ /_/_/_/ /_/\__, (_)
                                /____/

RouterOS has some odd behavior when it comes to variable names. Let's
have a look at the interfaces:

[admin@MikroTik] > / interface print where name=en1
Flags: D - dynamic, X - disabled, R - running, S - slave
 #     NAME                                TYPE       ACTUAL-MTU L2MTU
 0  RS en1                                 ether            1500  1598

That looks ok. Now we use a script:

{ :local interface "en1";
  / interface print where name=$interface; }

And the result...

[admin@MikroTik] > { :local interface "en1";
{...   / interface print where name=$interface; }
Flags: D - dynamic, X - disabled, R - running, S - slave
 #     NAME                                TYPE       ACTUAL-MTU L2MTU
 0  RS en1                                 ether            1500  1598

... still looks ok.
We make a little modification to the script:

{ :local name "en1";
  / interface print where name=$name; }

And the result:

[admin@MikroTik] > { :local name "en1";
{...   / interface print where name=$name; }
Flags: D - dynamic, X - disabled, R - running, S - slave
 #     NAME                                TYPE       ACTUAL-MTU L2MTU
 0  RS en1                                 ether            1500  1598
 1   S en2                                 ether            1500  1598
 2   S en3                                 ether            1500  1598
 3   S en4                                 ether            1500  1598
 4   S en5                                 ether            1500  1598
 5  R  br-local                            bridge           1500  1598

Ups! The filter has no effect!
That happens whenever the variable name ($name) matches the property
name (name=).

And another modification:

{ :local type "en1";
  / interface print where name=$type; }

And the result:

[admin@MikroTik] > { :local type "en1";
{...   / interface print where name=$type; }
Flags: D - dynamic, X - disabled, R - running, S - slave
 #     NAME                                TYPE       ACTUAL-MTU L2MTU

Ups! Nothing?
Even if the variable name ($type) matches whatever property name (type=)
things go wrong.

The answer from MikroTik support (in Ticket#2019010222000454):

> This is how scripting works in RouterOS and we will not fix it.

To get around this we use variable names in CamelCase. Let's hope
Mikrotik never ever introduces property names in CamelCase...

*fingers crossed*
2019-01-04 12:35:34 +01:00
Christian Hesse 472cd3d905 update copyright for 2019 2019-01-02 09:38:34 +01:00
Christian Hesse e0e48573b9 netwatch-syslog: set dont-require-permissions=yes
... and drop the scheduler workaround.
2018-10-12 11:17:39 +02:00
Christian Hesse be673737d3 start scripts with a magic token / shebang 2018-09-27 00:18:43 +02:00
Christian Hesse 07e54dd88b add empty comment at first line...
... for better formatting in export.
2018-08-24 16:58:30 +02:00
Christian Hesse e1f134ead5 add scripts 2018-07-05 15:34:08 +02:00