NF2CSV
Section: User Commands (1)
Updated: Jun, 2006
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NAME
nf2csv
- iptables to CSV data
SYNOPSIS
nf2csv [options]
DESCRIPTION
nf2csv
Parses iptables log messages and generates comma-separate value formatted data.
This is useful to provide input to the
AfterGlow
project (see http://afterglow.sourceforge.net) so iptables logs can be visualized
graphically. An interesting application of
nf2csv
and
AfterGlow
is to parse and visualize the iptables logfiles made available by the Honeynet
project in their Scan of the Month challenges. The Scan30 and Scan34 challenges
(see http://www.honeynet.org/scans/scan30/ and http://www.honeynet.org/scans/scan34/)
contain extensive iptables logfiles, and some graphical representations of these
can be viewed here: http://www.cipherdyne.org/psad/honeynet/.
The
psad
program also has the ability to generate CSV data from iptables logs with its
--CSV
mode.
OPTIONS
- -f, --fields <tokens>
-
Specify the set of fields that should be printed from iptables log messages. The
most common usage of this argument is
SRC DST DPT
to print the source and destination IP addresses, followed by the destination port
number. Available fields to print include: SRC, SPT, DST, DPT, PROTO, LEN, IN, TOS, TTL,
SEQ, ID, TYPE, CODE (and these can also be referred to as src, dst, sp, dp, proto, ip_len,
intf, tos, and ttl). There are several additional fields that are not given specific
tags within iptables log messages, and these can be included by specifying one of
the following: flags, top_opts, ip_opts, chain, log_prefix, frag_bit, src_mac,
dst_mac, and udp_len. Each of these fields accepts a search criteria in the form of
a numeric comparison, string match, or IP match. See the EXAMPLES section below for
more information.
- -u, --unique-lines
-
Only print unique output lines. This can drastically reduce the output of
nf2csv
depending on the characteristics of the iptables logfile that is being parsed.
- -m, --max-lines <num>
-
Specify the maximum number of output lines
nf2csv
will generate. This is useful for providing a limited set of data to AfterGlow
in order to make visualizations more clear and less cluttered.
- -r, --regex <regex>
-
Specify a regular expression that must match against the entire iptables log message
in order for it to be included within the CSV output. This allows log messages to
be included from the output with all of the flexibility of regular expressions.
See the EXAMPLES section below for more information.
- -n, --neg-regex <regex>
-
Specify a regular expression that must not match against the iptables log message
in order for it to be included within the CSV output. This allows log messages to
be excluded from the output with all of the flexibility of regular expressions.
See the EXAMPLES section below for more information.
- -s, --start-line <line>
-
Specify the starting line where
nf2csv
begins to process iptables log data. If you are processing a huge file with
thousands of iptables log messages this option can be useful to parse a specific
chunk of this data. Also see the
--end-line
option below.
- -e, --end-line <line>
-
Specify the last line of iptables log data that
nf2csv
will parse.
EXAMPLES
The following examples illustrate the command line arguments that could
be supplied to
nf2csv
in a few situations:
Print source and destination IP addresses and the destination port number:
$ nfcsv -f src dst dp
Same as above, but now require that the source IP come from the 11.11.11.0/24 subnet:
$ nfcsv -f src:11.11.11.0/24 dst dp
Display instances of the MyDoom worm:
$ nfcsv -f src dst dp:3127
Display packets that have low TTL values:
$ nfcsv -f src dst ttl:<10
Display all traffic to or from the host 11.11.11.67 (this sets up an OR condition
between the src and dst fields):
$ nfcsv -f src dst dp -r 11.11.11.67
Display likely instances of Window Messanger popup spam attempts (note the use of
the --regex argument to require minimal lengths on the UDP length field and source
port, but the output contains the destination port of 1026):
$ nfcsv -f src dst dp -r SPT={4}.*LEN=[4-9]{2}
SEE ALSO
psad(8)
AUTHOR
Michael Rash <mbr@cipherdyne.org>
BUGS
Send bug reports to mbr@cipherdyne.org. Suggestions and/or comments are
always welcome as well.
DISTRIBUTION
nf2csv
is distributed with the psad project (http://www.cipherdyne.org/psad/)
under the GNU General Public License (GPL), and the latest
version may be downloaded from
http://www.cipherdyne.org/
Index
- NAME
-
- SYNOPSIS
-
- DESCRIPTION
-
- OPTIONS
-
- EXAMPLES
-
- SEE ALSO
-
- AUTHOR
-
- BUGS
-
- DISTRIBUTION
-
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Time: 01:55:14 GMT, January 06, 2010