man flow-capture (Commandes) - Manage storage of flow file archives by expiring old data.

NAME

flow-capture - Manage storage of flow file archives by expiring old data.

SYNOPSIS

flow-capture [-hu] [-b big|little] [-C comment] [-c flow_clients] [-d debug_level] [-D daemonize] [-e expire_count] [-f filter_fname] [-F filter_definition] [-E expire_size] [-n rotations] [-N nesting_level] [-p pidfile] [-R rotate_program] [-S stat_interval] [-t tag_fname] [-T active_def|active_def,active_def ...] [-V pdu_version] [-z z_level] -w workdir [-x xlate_fname] [-X xlate_definition] localip/remoteip/port

DESCRIPTION

The flow-capture utility will receive and store NetFlow exports to disk. The flow files are rotated rotationstimes per day and expiration of old flow files can be configured by number of files or total space utilization. Files are stored in workdir and can optionally be stored in additional levels of directories. Active files created by flow-capture begin with 'tmp'. Files that are complete begin with 'ft'.

When the remoteip is configured only flows from that exporter will be processed, this is the most secure and recommended configuration. When the localip is configured flow-capture will only process flows sent to the localip IP address. If remoteip is 0 (not configured) flows from any source IP address are accepted. Multiple non aggregated PDU versions may be accepted at once to support Cisco's Catalyst 6500 NetFlow implementation which exports from both the supervisor and MSFC with the same IP address and same port but different export versions. In this case the exports will be stored in the format specified by pdu_version or whichever export type is received first.

NetFlow exports are UDP and do not employ congestion control or a retransmission mechanism. If the server flow-capture is configured on is too busy, or the network is congested or lossy NetFlow exports will be lost. An estimate of lost flows is recorded in the flow files, and logged via syslog. Most servers will provide a count of dropped packets due to full socket buffers via the netstat utility. For example netstat -s | grep full will provide a count of UDP packets dropped due to full socket buffers. If this is a persistent occurrence either flow-capture will need a larger server or the compression level should be decreased with -z.

A SIGHUP signal will cause flow-capture to close the current file and create a new one.

A SIGQUIT or SIGTERM signal will cause flow-capture to close the current file and exit.

OPTIONS

-b big|little
Byte order of output.
-c flow_clients
Enable flow_clients TCP clients. When libwrap is available the client must be in a permit list for the service flow-capture-client.
-C Comment
Add a comment.
-d debug_level
Enable debugging.
-e expire_count
Retain the maximum number of files so that the total file count is less than expire_count. Defaults to 0 (do not expire).
-E expire_size
Retain the maximum number of files so that the total storage is less than expire_size. The letters b,K,M,G can be used as multipliers, ie 16 Megabytes is 16M. Default to 0 (do not expire).
-f filter_fname
Filter list filename. Defaults to /etc/flow-tools/cfg/filter.
-F filter_definition
Select the active definition. Defaults to default.
-h
Display help.
-n rotations
Configure the number of times flow-capture will create a new file per day. The default is 95, or every 15 minutes.
-N nesting_level
Configure the nesting level for storing flow files. The default is 0. -3 YYYY/YYYY-MM/YYYY-MM-DD/flow-file -2 YYYY-MM/YYYY-MM-DD/flow-file -1 YYYY-MM-DD/flow-file 0 flow-file 1 YYYY/flow-file 2 YYYY/YYYY-MM/flow-file 3 YYYY/YYYY-MM/YYYY-MM-DD/flow-file
-p pidfile
Configure the process ID file. Use - to disable pid file creation.
-R rotate_program
Execute rotate_program with the first argument as the flow file name after rotating it.
-S stat_interval
When configured flow-capture will log a timestamped message every stat_interval minutes indicating counters such as the number of flows received, packets processed, and lost flows.
-t tag_fname
Load tags from tag_name
-T active_def|active_def,active_def...
Use active_def as the active tag definition(s).
-u
Preserve inherited umask. By default the umask will be set to 0022.
-V pdu_version
Use pdu_version format output.

    1    NetFlow version 1 (No sequence numbers, AS, or mask)
    5    NetFlow version 5
    6    NetFlow version 6 (5+ Encapsulation size)
    7    NetFlow version 7 (Catalyst switches)
    8.1  NetFlow AS Aggregation
    8.2  NetFlow Proto Port Aggregation
    8.3  NetFlow Source Prefix Aggregation
    8.4  NetFlow Destination Prefix Aggregation
    8.5  NetFlow Prefix Aggregation
    8.6  NetFlow Destination (Catalyst switches)
    8.7  NetFlow Source Destination (Catalyst switches)
    8.8  NetFlow Full Flow (Catalyst switches)
    8.9  NetFlow ToS AS Aggregation
    8.10 NetFlow ToS Proto Port Aggregation
    8.11 NetFlow ToS Source Prefix Aggregation
    8.12 NetFlow ToS Destination Prefix Aggregation
    8.13 NetFlow ToS Prefix Aggregation
    8.14 NetFlow ToS Prefix Port Aggregation
    1005 Flow-Tools tagged version 5
-w workdir
Work in workdir.
-x xlate_fname
Translation config file name. Defaults to /etc/flow-tools/cfg/xlate.c fg
-X xlate_definition
Translation definition. Defaults to default.
-z z_level
Configure compression level to z_level. 0 is disabled (no compression), 9 is highest compression.

EXAMPLES

Receive flows from the exporter at 10.0.0.1 port 9800. Maintain 5 Gigabytes of flow files in /flows/krc4. Mask the source and destination IP addresses contained in the flow exports with 255.255.248.0.

flow-capture -w /flows/krc4 -m 255.255.248.0 -E5G 0/10.0.0.1/9800

Receive flows from any exporter on port 9800. Do not perform any flow file space management. Store the exports in /flows/krc4. Emit a stat log message every 5 minutes.

flow-capture -w /flows/krc4 0/0/9800 -S5

BUGS

Empty directories are not removed.

FILES

Configuration files: Tag - /etc/flow-tools/cfg/tag.cfg. Filter - /etc/flow-tools/cfg/filter.cfg. Xlate - /etc/flow-tools/cfg/xlate.cfg.

AUTHOR

Mark Fullmer maf@splintered.net

SEE ALSO