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gensynet

A JSONic way to interactively generate a synthetic network spec and its network host descriptions. These host JSON objects are then written to a timestamped file.

usage

usage: gensynet.py [-h] [-v] [-s] [--version]

optional arguments:
  -h, --help       show this help message and exit
  -v, --verbose    Provide program feedback
  -s, --summarize  Prints network configurations to output
  --version        Prints version

useful functions

The Python library can be imported as import gensynet with the following (hopefully helpful) internal functions:

generate_ip(prefix)

Takes in a partial IP string and returns a random IP string.

>>> import gensynet
>>> gensynet.generate_ip('10.0')
'10.0.128.53'

generate_fqdn(domain=None, subdomains=0)

Takes in a domain (or randomly generates a gibberish one if none is provided), and builds a FQDN with the specified number of subdomains.

>>> import gensynet
>>> gensynet.generate_fqdn(subdomains=1)
'awf.9c24by18nc.local'
>>> gensynet.generate_fqdn()
'nm3li.local'
>>> gensynet.generate_fqdn(domain='a.internal', subdomains=2)
'dltyf.7jwmi.a.internal'

calculate_subnets(total, breakdown)

Given a total number of hosts and the desired breakdown in 2-tuples (with the first number being the percentage of the total number of hosts, and the second number being the percentage of occupied Class C address space), calculate how many subnets are needed to put every host in a subnet. This function returns -1 if the percentages or breakdowns don't make sense. Obviously, there will be some networks with sparser-than-specified occupancies, in the event that there still remains a surplus of hosts after dividing them up into the designated Class C space.

build_configs(total, net_div, dev_div, domain)

Takes the total number of hosts, the breakdown of the network as specified in 2-tuples, the breakdown of network devices (provided as a dictionary of 'device': integer(count)), and a domain (if any), and builds JSON profiles of each subnet space that makes up the rest of the network.

>>> import gensynet
>>> import json
>>> j = gensynet.build_configs(host_count=100, subnets=[50, 15, 35], dev_div={'Developer workstation': 35, 'Business workstation': 50, 'Smartphone': 5, 'Printer': 1, 'File server': 5, 'SSH server': 4}, domain=None)
>>> print(json.dumps(j, indent=2))
[
  {
"subnet": "10.0.2.0/24",
"hosts": 50,
"start_ip": "10.0.2.1",
"roles": {
  "Smartphone": 1,
  "SSH server": 1,
  "Business workstation": 22,
  "Developer workstation": 20,
  "File server": 5,
  "Printer": 1
}
  },
  {
"subnet": "10.0.1.0/24",
"hosts": 15,
"start_ip": "10.0.1.1",
"roles": {
  "Smartphone": 2,
  "SSH server": 0,
  "Business workstation": 13,
  "Developer workstation": 0,
  "File server": 0,
  "Printer": 0
}
  },
  {
"subnet": "10.0.0.0/24",
"hosts": 35,
"start_ip": "10.0.0.1",
"roles": {
  "Smartphone": 2,
  "SSH server": 3,
  "Business workstation": 15,
  "Developer workstation": 15,
  "File server": 0,
  "Printer": 0
}
  }
]

build_network(subnets, fname, randomspace, prettyprint)

This is the real meat and potatoes part of the script, which takes the subnet specifications as generated by build_configs() and outputs the JSON descriptions of each host into the file fname. There are two additional configurations that can be toggled: if randomspace is set to True, the IP addresses are randomized across their respective subnets, and are otherwise generated sequentially; if prettyprint is set to True, the JSON is broken up into a human-readable fashion, and are otherwise written to file in a single line.

>>> import gensynet
>>> j = gensynet.build_configs(host_count=100, subnets=[50, 15, 35], dev_div={'Developer workstation': 35, 'Business workstation': 50, 'Smartphone': 5, 'Printer': 1, 'File server': 5, 'SSH server': 4}, domain=None)
>>> gensynet.build_network(j, 'output.json', randomspace=True)

bugs and other questions

Please report bugs and issues by opening a ticket on the project's GitHub page.

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A command line tool used to create synthetic network profiles and synthetic hosts in JSON.

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