- Read Me First
- IP SLAs Overview
- Configuring IP SLAs UDP Jitter Operations
- IP SLAs Multicast Support
- Configuring IP SLAs UDP Jitter Operations for VoIP
- IP SLAs QFP Time Stamping
- Configuring IP SLAs LSP Health Monitor Operations
- IP SLAs for MPLS Psuedo Wire via VCCV
- Configuring IP SLAs for Metro-Ethernet
- Configuring IP SLAs Metro-Ethernet 3.0 (ITU-T Y.1731) Operations
- IPSLA Y1731 On-Demand and Concurrent Operations
- Configuring IP SLAs UDP Echo Operations
- Configuring IP SLAs HTTP Operations
- Configuring IP SLAs TCP Connect Operations
- Configuring Cisco IP SLAs ICMP Jitter Operations
- Configuring IP SLAs ICMP Echo Operations
- Configuring IP SLAs ICMP Path Echo Operations
- Configuring IP SLAs ICMP Path Jitter Operations
- Configuring IP SLAs FTP Operations
- Configuring IP SLAs DNS Operations
- Configuring IP SLAs DHCP Operations
- Configuring an IP SLAs Multioperation Scheduler
- Configuring Proactive Threshold Monitoring for IP SLAs Operations
- IP SLAs TWAMP Responder
- Finding Feature Information
- Restrictions for IP SLAs HTTP Operations
- Information About IP SLAs HTTP Operations
- How to Configure IP SLAs HTTP Operations
Configuring IP SLAs HTTP Operations
This module describes how to configure an IP Service Level Agreements (SLAs) HTTP operation to monitor the response time between a Cisco device and an HTTP server to retrieve a web page. The IP SLAs HTTP operation supports both the normal GET requests and customer RAW requests. This module also demonstrates how the results of the HTTP operation can be displayed and analyzed to determine how an HTTP server is performing.
- Finding Feature Information
- Restrictions for IP SLAs HTTP Operations
- Information About IP SLAs HTTP Operations
- How to Configure IP SLAs HTTP Operations
- Configuration Examples for IP SLAs HTTP Operations
- Additional References
- Feature Information for IP SLAs HTTP Operations
Finding Feature Information
Your software release may not support all the features documented in this module. For the latest caveats and feature information, see Bug Search Tool and the release notes for your platform and software release. To find information about the features documented in this module, and to see a list of the releases in which each feature is supported, see the feature information table.
Use Cisco Feature Navigator to find information about platform support and Cisco software image support. To access Cisco Feature Navigator, go to www.cisco.com/go/cfn. An account on Cisco.com is not required.
Restrictions for IP SLAs HTTP Operations
IP SLAs HTTP operations support only HTTP/1.0.
HTTP/1.1 is not supported for any IP SLAs HTTP operation, including HTTP RAW requests.
Information About IP SLAs HTTP Operations
HTTP Operation
The HTTP operation measures the round-trip time (RTT) between a Cisco device and an HTTP server to retrieve a web page. The HTTP server response time measurements consist of three types:
DNS lookupRTT taken to perform domain name lookup.
TCP Connect--RTT taken to perform a TCP connection to the HTTP server.
HTTP transaction time--RTT taken to send a request and get a response from the HTTP server. The operation retrieves only the home HTML page.
The DNS operation is performed first and the DNS RTT is measured. Once the domain name is found, a TCP Connect operation to the appropriate HTTP server is performed and the RTT for this operation is measured. The final operation is an HTTP request and the RTT to retrieve the home HTML page from the HTTP server is measured. One other measurement is made and called the time to first byte which measures the time from the start of the TCP Connect operation to the first HTML byte retrieved by the HTTP operation. The total HTTP RTT is a sum of the DNS RTT, the TCP Connect RTT, and the HTTP RTT.
For GET requests, IP SLAs will format the request based on the specified URL. For RAW requests, IP SLAs requires the entire content of the HTTP request. When a RAW request is configured, the raw commands are specified in HTTP RAW configuration mode. A RAW request is flexible and allows you to control fields such as authentication. An HTTP request can be made through a proxy server.
The results of an HTTP operation can be useful in monitoring your web server performance levels by determining the RTT taken to retrieve a web page.
Regardless of the HTTP errors, the IP SLA works fine. Currently, the error codes are determined, and the IP SLA HTTP operation goes down only if the return code is not 200.
Note | The only time the SLA probe goes down is when the SLA is unable to establish a TCP connection or is unable to receive an answer from the Remote server to its HTTP request. |
How to Configure IP SLAs HTTP Operations
- Configuring an HTTP GET Operation on the Source Device
- Configuring an HTTP RAW Operation on the Source Device
- Scheduling IP SLAs Operations
Configuring an HTTP GET Operation on the Source Device
Note | This operation does not require an IP SLAs Responder on the destination device. |
Perform only one of the following tasks:
- Configuring a Basic HTTP GET Operation on the Source Device
- Configuring an HTTP GET Operation with Optional Parameters on the Source Device
Configuring a Basic HTTP GET Operation on the Source Device
1.
enable
2.
configure
terminal
3.
ip
sla
operation-number
4.
http
{get |
raw}
url [name-server
ip-address] [version
version-number] [source-ip {ip-address |
hostname}] [source-port
port-number] [cache {enable |
disable}] [proxy
proxy-url]
5.
frequency
seconds
6.
end
DETAILED STEPS
Configuring an HTTP GET Operation with Optional Parameters on the Source Device
1.
enable
2.
configure
terminal
3.
ip
sla
operation-number
4.
http
{get |
raw}
url [name-server
ip-address] [version
version-number] [source-ip {ip-address |
hostname}] [source-port
port-number] [cache {enable |
disable}] [proxy
proxy-url]
5.
history
distributions-of-statistics-kept
size
6.
frequency
seconds
7.
history
hours-of-statistics-kept
hours
8.
http-raw-request
9.
owner
owner-id
10.
history
statistics-distribution-interval
milliseconds
11.
tag
text
12.
threshold
milliseconds
13.
timeout
milliseconds
14.
tos
number
15.
end
DETAILED STEPS
Configuring an HTTP RAW Operation on the Source Device
Note | This operation does not require an IP SLAs Responder on the destination device. |
1.
enable
2.
configure
terminal
3.
ip
sla
operation-number
4.
http
{get |
raw}
url [name-server
ip-address] [version
version-number] [source-ip {ip-address |
hostname}] [source-port
port-number] [cache {enable |
disable}] [proxy
proxy-url]
5.
http-raw-request
6. Enter the required HTTP 1.0 command syntax.
7.
end
DETAILED STEPS
Scheduling IP SLAs Operations
- ip sla schedule operation-number [life {forever | seconds}] [start-time {[hh:mm:ss] [month day | day month] | pending | now | after hh:mm:ss}] [ageout seconds] [recurring]
- ip sla group schedule group-operation-number operation-id-numbers {schedule-period schedule-period-range | schedule-together} [ageout seconds] frequency group-operation-frequency [life {forever | seconds}] [start-time {hh:mm [:ss] [month day | day month] | pending | now | after hh:mm [:ss]}]
1.
enable
2.
configure
terminal
3.
Enter one of
the following commands:
4.
end
5.
show
ip
sla
group
schedule
6.
show
ip
sla
configuration
DETAILED STEPS
Troubleshooting Tips
If the IP Service Level Agreements (SLAs) operation is not running and not generating statistics, add the verify-data command to the configuration (while configuring in IP SLA configuration mode) to enable data verification. When data verification is enabled, each operation response is checked for corruption. Use the verify-data command with caution during normal operations because it generates unnecessary overhead.
Use the debug ip sla trace and debug ip sla error commands to help troubleshoot issues with an IP SLAs operation.
What to Do Next
To add proactive threshold conditions and reactive triggering for generating traps (or for starting another operation) to an IP Service Level Agreements (SLAs) operation, see the “Configuring Proactive Threshold Monitoring” section.
Configuration Examples for IP SLAs HTTP Operations
- Example Configuring an HTTP GET Operation
- Example Configuring an HTTP RAW Operation
- Example Configuring an HTTP RAW Operation Through a Proxy Server
- Example Configuring an HTTP RAW Operation with Authentication
Example Configuring an HTTP GET Operation
The following example show how to create and configure operation number 8 as an HTTP GET operation. The destination URL IP address represents the www.cisco.com website. The following figure depicts the HTTP GET operation.
Device B Configuration
ip sla 8 http get url http://198.133.219.25 ! ip sla schedule 8 start-time now
Example Configuring an HTTP RAW Operation
The following example shows how to configure an HTTP RAW operation. To use the RAW commands, enter HTTP RAW configuration mode by using the http-raw-request command in IP SLA configuration mode. The IP SLA HTTP RAW configuration mode is indicated by the (config-ip-sla-http) router prompt.
ip sla 8 http raw url http://198.133.219.25 http-raw-request GET /en/US/hmpgs/index.html HTTP/1.0\r\n \r\n end ip sla schedule 8 life forever start-time now
Example Configuring an HTTP RAW Operation Through a Proxy Server
The following example shows how to configure an HTTP RAW operation through a proxy server. The proxy server is www.proxy.cisco.com and the HTTP server is www.yahoo.com.
ip sla 8 http raw url http://www.proxy.cisco.com http-raw-request GET http://www.yahoo.com HTTP/1.0\r\n \r\n end ip sla schedule 8 life forever start-time now
Example Configuring an HTTP RAW Operation with Authentication
The following example shows how to configure an HTTP RAW operation with authentication.
ip sla 8 http raw url http://site-test.cisco.com http-raw-request GET /lab/index.html HTTP/1.0\r\n Authorization: Basic btNpdGT4biNvoZe=\r\n \r\n end ip sla schedule 8 life forever start-time now
Additional References
Related Documents
Related Topic |
Document Title |
---|---|
Cisco IOS commands |
|
Cisco IOS IP SLAs commands |
Standards and RFCs
Standard/RFC |
Title |
---|---|
No new or modified standards or RFCs are supported by this feature, and support for existing standards has not been modified by this feature. |
-- |
MIBs
MIBs |
MIBs Link |
---|---|
CISCO-RTTMON-MIB |
To locate and download MIBs for selected platforms, Cisco IOS releases, and feature sets, use Cisco MIB Locator found at the following URL: |
Technical Assistance
Description |
Link |
---|---|
The Cisco Support and Documentation website provides online resources to download documentation, software, and tools. Use these resources to install and configure the software and to troubleshoot and resolve technical issues with Cisco products and technologies. Access to most tools on the Cisco Support and Documentation website requires a Cisco.com user ID and password. |
Feature Information for IP SLAs HTTP Operations
The following table provides release information about the feature or features described in this module. This table lists only the software release that introduced support for a given feature in a given software release train. Unless noted otherwise, subsequent releases of that software release train also support that feature.
Use Cisco Feature Navigator to find information about platform support and Cisco software image support. To access Cisco Feature Navigator, go to www.cisco.com/go/cfn. An account on Cisco.com is not required.
Feature Name |
Releases |
Feature Information |
---|---|---|
IP SLAs HTTP Operation |
Cisco IOS XE Release 2.1 |
The Cisco IOS IP SLAs Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) operation allows you to measure the network response time between a Cisco device and an HTTP server to retrieve a web page. |
IPSLA 4.0 - IP v6 phase2 |
Cisco IOS XE Release 3.7S |
Support was added for operability in IPv6 networks. The following commands are introduced or modified: http (IP SLA), show ip sla configuration, show ip sla summary. |
IP SLAs VRF Aware 2.0 |
Cisco IOS XE Release 3.8S |
Support was added for IP SLAs VRF-aware capabilities for TCP connect, FTP, HTTP and DNS client operation types. |