rwfilter(1) SiLK Tool Suite rwfilter(1)NAMErwfilter - Choose which SiLK Flow records to process
SYNOPSISrwfilter INPUT_ARGS OUTPUT_ARGS PARTITIONING_ARGS [MISC_ARGS]
Selection switches, input switches, or input files are required:
rwfilter ...
{{ [--class=CLASS] [--type={all | TYPE[,TYPE ...]}]
| [--flowtype=CLASS/TYPE[,CLASS/TYPE ...]] }
[--sensors=SENSOR[,SENSOR ...]]
[--start-date=YYYY/MM/DD[:HH] [--end-date=YYYY/MM/DD[:HH]]]
[--data-rootdir=ROOT_DIRECTORY] [--print-missing-files] }
| [--input-pipe=INPUT_PATH]
| [--xargs] | [--xargs=INPUT_PATH]
| [INPUT_PATH [INPUT_PATH...]]
One or more output switches are required:
rwfilter ...
[--all-destination=ALL_PATH [--all-destination=ALL_PATH ...]]
[--fail-destination=FAIL_PATH [--fail-destination=FAIL_PATH ...]]
[--pass-destination=PASS_PATH [--pass-destination=PASS_PATH ...]]
[{ --print-statistics[=STATS_PATH]
| --print-volume-statistics[=STATS_PATH] }]
One or more partitioning switches are required:
rwfilter ...
[--ack-flag=SCALAR] [--active-time=TIME_WINDOW]
[{--any-address=IP_WILDCARD | --not-any-address=IP_WILDCARD}]
[--any-cc=COUNTRY_CODE_LIST]
[{--any-cidr=IP_OR_CIDR_LIST | --not-any-cidr=IP_OR_CIDR_LIST}]
[--any-index=INTEGER_LIST]
[{--anyset=IP_SET_FILENAME | --not-anyset=IP_SET_FILENAME}]
[--aport=INTEGER_LIST] [--application=INTEGER_LIST]
[--attributes=ATTRIBUTES_LIST]
[--bytes=INTEGER_RANGE] [--bytes-per-packet=DECIMAL_RANGE]
[--cwr-flag=SCALAR]
[{--daddress=IP_WILDCARD | --not-daddress=IP_WILDCARD}]
[--dcc=COUNTRY_CODE_LIST]
[{--dcidr=IP_OR_CIDR_LIST | --not-dcidr=IP_OR_CIDR_LIST}]
[{--dipset=IP_SET_FILENAME | --not-dipset=IP_SET_FILENAME}]
[--dport=INTEGER_LIST] [--dtype=SCALAR]
[--duration=DECIMAL_RANGE] [--ece-flag=SCALAR]
[--etime=TIME_WINDOW] [--fin-flag=SCALAR]
[--flags-all=HIGH_MASK_FLAGS_LIST]
[--flags-initial=HIGH_MASK_FLAGS_LIST]
[--flags-session=HIGH_MASK_FLAGS_LIST]
[--icmp-code=INTEGER_LIST] [--icmp-type=INTEGER_LIST]
[--input-index=INTEGER_LIST] [--ip-version=INTEGER_LIST]
[--ippair-any=FILENAME] [--ipport-any=FILENAME]
[{--next-hop-id=IP_WILDCARD | --not-next-hop-id=IP_WILDCARD}]
[{--nhcidr=IP_OR_CIDR_LIST | --not-nhcidr=IP_OR_CIDR_LIST}]
[{--nhipset=IP_SET_FILENAME | --not-nhipset=IP_SET_FILENAME}]
[--output-index=INTEGER_LIST] [--packets=INTEGER_RANGE]
[--pmap-file=MAPNAME:PATH [--pmap-file=MAPNAME:PATH ...]
{ [--pmap-src-MAPNAME=LABELS] [--pmap-dst-MAPNAME=LABELS]
[--pmap-any-MAPNAME=LABELS] } ]
[--protocol=INTEGER_LIST] [--psh-flag=SCALAR]
[--python-expr=PYTHON_EXPR]
[--python-file=FILENAME [--python-file=FILENAME ...]]
[--rst-flag=SCALAR]
[{--saddress=IP_WILDCARD | --not-saddress=IP_WILDCARD}]
[--scc=COUNTRY_CODE_LIST]
[{--scidr=IP_OR_CIDR_LIST | --not-scidr=IP_OR_CIDR_LIST}]
[{--sipset=IP_SET_FILENAME | --not-sipset=IP_SET_FILENAME}]
[--sport=INTEGER_LIST] [--stime=TIME_WINDOW] [--stype=SCALAR]
[--syn-flag=SCALAR] [--tcp-flags=TCP_FLAGS]
[--tuple-file=TUPLE_FILENAME { [--tuple-fields=FIELDS]
[--tuple-direction=DIRECTION]
[--tuple-delimiter=CHAR] } ]
[--urg-flag=SCALAR]
Miscellaneous switches:
rwfilter ...
[--compression-method=COMP_METHOD] [--dry-run]
[--max-fail-records=N] [--max-pass-records=N]
[--note-add=TEXT] [--note-file-add=FILE]
[--plugin=PLUGIN [--plugin=PLUGIN ...]]
[--print-filenames] [--site-config-file=FILENAME]
[--threads=N]
Help switches:
rwfilter [--pmap-file=MAPNAME:PATH [--pmap-file=MAPNAME:PATH ...]]
[--plugin=PLUGIN ...] [--python-file=PATH]
[--data-rootdir=ROOT_DIRECTORY] [--site-config-file=FILENAME]
--help
rwfilter--version
DESCRIPTIONrwfilter serves two purposes: (1) It acts as an interface to the data
store to select which SiLK Flow records to process, and (2) it
partitions those records into one or more pass and/or fail streams.
The "Selection Switches" let one choose flow records from the SiLK data
store by specifying where the flow was collected (its sensor), the date
of collection, and/or the flow's direction. The act of selecting
records from the data store is sometimes called a "data pull".
The "Partitioning Switches" describe various types of traffic behavior
(e.g., TCP traffic, or all traffic going to port 80). When a flow
record matches all of the behaviors, it can be written to a pass stream
(i.e., file). If a record fails to match any of these behavior
predicates, it can be written to a fail stream. (You may also write
every record rwfilter reads to an all stream.) These output streams
from rwfilter are always binary SiLK Flow records. The output must be
either written to a file or piped into another tool in the SiLK Suite,
and rwfilter complains if it determines you are attempting to send the
stream to a terminal. To view the records, pipe the records into
rwcut(1).
In addition to the partitioning switches built in to rwfilter,
additional partitioning predicates can be created as C or PySiLK plug-
ins, and these can be loaded into rwfilter using the --plugin and/or
--python-file switches as described below.
Instead of using the selection switches to choose flow records from the
data store, rwfilter can apply the partitioning switches to existing
files of SiLK flow records---such as files generated by a previous
invocation of rwfilter. To run rwfilter in this mode, you may
· specify, on the command line, the files and/or named pipes from
which rwfilter should read SiLK Flow records. Specifying "stdin"
or "-" or the command line causes rwfilter to read flow records
from the standard input.
· use the --input-pipe switch to specify a named pipe, or specify
"stdin" or "-" as the argument to this switch to have rwfilter read
flow records from the standard input.
· use the --xargs switch to specify a file that contains the names of
the input files to process. When --xargs is used without an
argument, rwfilter attempts to read the names of the file from the
standard input. The name of each input file must appear on a
single line.
When rwfilter is reading flow records from input files, some of the
selection switches act as partitioning switches. The remaining
selection switches may not be specified when using the alternate forms
of input, and it is an error to specify multiple types of input.
Unlike many other tools in the SiLK tool suite, rwfilter requires that
you specify one or more "Output Switches" that tell rwfilter what types
of output to produce.
Finally, there are "Miscellaneous Switches" that control other aspects
of rwfilter.
OPTIONS
Option names may be abbreviated if the abbreviation is unique or is an
exact match for an option. A parameter to an option may be specified
as --arg=param or --arg param, though the first form is required for
options that take optional parameters.
Selection Switches
To read files from the data store, use the following options to specify
which files to process. When rwfilter gets its input from files listed
on the command line or from the --xargs or --input-pipe switches, the
first four switches (--class, --type, --flowtypes, and --sensors) act
as partitioning switches, and specifying any other selection switch
produces an error.
--class=CLASS
The --class switch is used to specify a group of data to process.
Only a single class may be selected with the --class switch; for
multiple classes, use the --flowtypes switch. Classes are defined
in the silk.conf(5) site configuration file. If the --class option
is not given, the default-class as specified in silk.conf is used.
To see the available classes and the default class, either examine
the output from rwfilter--help or invoke rwsiteinfo(1) with the
switch --fields=class,default-class.
--type={"all" | TYPE[,TYPE]}
The --type predicate further specifies data within the selected
CLASS by listing the TYPEs of traffic to process. The switch takes
a comma-separated list of types or the keyword "all" which
specifies all types for the specified CLASS. Types are defined in
silk.conf, they typically refer to the direction of the flow, and
they may vary by class. When the --type switch is not specified, a
list of default types is used. The default-type list is determined
by the value of CLASS, and the default types generally include only
incoming traffic. To see the available types and the default types
for each class, examine the --help output of rwfilter or run
rwsiteinfo with --fields=class,type,default-type.
--flowtypes=CLASS/TYPE[,CLASS/TYPE ...]
The --flowtype predicate provides an alternate way to specify
class/type pairs. The --flowtypes switch allows a single rwfilter
invocation to process data from multiple classes. The keyword
"all" may be used for the CLASS and/or TYPE to select all classes
and/or types.
--sensors=SENSOR[,SENSOR ...]
The --sensor switch is used to select data from specific sensors.
The parameter is a comma separated list of sensor names, sensor IDs
(integers), and/or ranges of sensor IDs. Sensors are defined in
the silk.conf(5) site configuration file, and the rwsiteinfo(1)
command can be used to print a mapping of sensor names to IDs and
classes. When the --sensor switch is not specified, the default is
to use all sensors which are valid for the specified class(es).
--start-date=YYYY/MM/DD[:HH]
--end-date=YYYY/MM/DD[:HH]
The date predicates indicate which days and hours to consider when
creating the list of files. The dates may be expressed as seconds
since the UNIX epoch or in "YYYY/MM/DD[:HH]" format, where the hour
is optional. A "T" may be used in place of the ":" to separate the
day and hour. Whether the "YYYY/MM/DD[:HH]" strings represent
times in UTC or the local timezone depend on how SiLK was compiled.
To determine how your version of SiLK was compiled, see the
"Timezone support" setting in the output from rwfilter--version.
When times are expressed in "YYYY/MM/DD[:HH]" format:
· When both --start-date and --end-date are specified to hour
precision, all hours within that time range are processed.
· When --start-date is specified to day precision, the hour
specified in --end-date (if any) is ignored, and files for all
dates between midnight on start-date and 23:59 on end-date are
processed.
· When --start-date is specified to hour precision and --end-date
is specified to day precision, the hour of the start-date is
used as the hour for the end-date.
· When --end-date is not specified and --start-date is specified
to day precision, files for that complete day are processed.
· When --end-date is not specified and --start-date is specified
to hour precision, files for that single hour are processed.
When at least one time is expressed as seconds since the UNIX
epoch:
· When --end-date is specified in epoch seconds, the given
--start-date and --end-date are considered to be in hour
precision.
· When --start-date is specified in epoch seconds and --end-date
is specified in "YYYY/MM/DD[:HH]" format, the start-date is
considered to be in day precision if it divisible by 86400, and
hour precision otherwise.
· When --start-date is specified in epoch seconds and --end-date
is not given, the start-date is considered to be in hour-
precision.
When neither --start-date nor --end-date is given, rwfilter
processes all files for the current day.
It is an error to specify --end-date without specifying
--start-date.
It is an error to specify --start-date when rwfilter believes there
is some other input specified (see "Non-Selection Input Switches").
--data-rootdir=ROOT_DIRECTORY
Tell rwfilter to use ROOT_DIRECTORY as the root of the data
repository, which overrides the location given in the
SILK_DATA_ROOTDIR environment variable, which in turn overrides the
location that was compiled into rwfilter (/data). It is an error
to specify this switch when files are specified on the command line
or "Non-Selection Input Switches" are given.
--print-missing-files
This option prints to the standard error the names of the files
that rwfilter's file selection switches expected to find but did
not. The file names are preceded by the text 'Missing '; each file
name appears on a separate line. This switch is useful for
debugging, but the list of files it produces can be misleading.
For example, suppose there is a decommissioned sensor that still
appears in the silk.conf file; rwfilter considers these data files
as missing even though their absence is expected. Use the output
from this switch judiciously. It is an error to specify this
switch when files are specified on the command line or "Non-
Selection Input Switches" are given.
Non-Selection Input Switches
Instead of using the "Selection Switches" to read flow records from
files in the data store, you can tell rwfilter to process files named
on the command line or use one (and only one) of the following
switches. To have rwfilter read flow records from the standard input,
specify "stdin" or "-" as the name of an input file or use the
(deprecated) --input-pipe switch.
--input-pipe=INPUT_PATH
Specify a source for SiLK Flow records, where INPUT_PATH is a named
pipe or the string "stdin" or "-" to represent the standard input.
You do not need to use this switch, you can simply specify the
named pipe or the strings "stdin" or "-" on the command line.
NOTE: This switch is deprecated, and it will be removed in the SiLK
4.0 release.
--xargs
--xargs=INPUT_PATH
Tell rwfilter to read file names from INPUT_PATH; if INPUT_PATH is
not provided, the names of the files are read from the standard
input. The input should have one file name per line. rwfilter
opens each file in turn and read records from it.
Output Switches
At least one of the following output switches must be provided:
--all-destination=ALL_PATH
Write every SiLK Flow record to ALL_PATH, where ALL_PATH refers to
a file, a named pipe, the string "stderr" to refer to the standard
error, or the strings "stdout" or "-" to refer to the standard
output. This switch may be repeated to write all input records to
multiple locations.
--fail-destination=FAIL_PATH
Write SiLK Flow records that have failed ANY of the partitioning
predicates to FAIL_PATH, where FAIL_PATH refers to a non-existent
file, a named pipe, the string "stderr" to refer to the standard
error, or the strings "stdout" or "-" to refer to the standard
output. This switch may be repeated to write records that fail any
predicate to multiple locations.
--pass-destination=PASS_PATH
Write SiLK Flow records that have passed ALL of the partitioning
predicates to PASS_PATH, where PASS_PATH refers to a non-existent
file, a named pipe, the string "stderr" to refer to the standard
error, or the strings "stdout" or "-" to refer to the standard
output. This switch may be repeated to write records that pass
every predicate to multiple locations.
--print-statistics
--print-statistics=STATS_PATH
Print a one line summary specifying the number of files processed,
the total number of records read, the number of records that passed
all partitioning predicates, and the number of records that failed.
If STATS_PATH is provided, the summary is printed there; otherwise
it is printed to the standard error. This switch cannot be mixed
with --print-volume-statistics. When running rwfilter with
multiple threads and --max-pass-records or --max-fail-records is
specified, the statistics may not match the number of records
written by rwfilter.
--print-volume-statistics
--print-volume-statistics=STATS_PATH
Print a four line summary of rwfilter's processing. For each of
all records, records that pass all the partitioning predicates, and
records that fail, print the number of flow records and the number
of packets and bytes represented by those flow records. The output
also includes the number of files processed. If STATS_PATH is
provided, the summary is printed there; otherwise it is printed to
the standard error. This switch cannot be mixed with
--print-statistics. When running rwfilter with multiple threads
and --max-pass-records or --max-fail-records is specified, the
statistics may not match the number of records written by rwfilter.
Partitioning Switches
rwfilter supports the following partitioning switches, at least one of
which must be specified (unless the only Output Switch is
--all-destination). The switches are AND'ed together; i.e., to pass
the filter, the record must pass the test implied by each switch. Any
record that does not pass is written to the fail-destination(s), if
specified.
Each partitioning switch defines a test. These tests can be grouped
into several broad categories; within each category, the tests are
applied in the order in which the switches appear on the command line.
The categories of the partitioning tests are:
· tests for IP addresses (including the IPset checks), ports,
protocol, times, TCP flags, byte and packet counts, IP version,
application, country codes
· tests based on the --tuple-file switch
· tests that use the address type or prefix map mapping files
· tests that use the IP-Association plug-in
· tests based on the --python-expr and --python-file switches
· tests defined in C-plugins and loaded via --plugin
Partitioning Switches for IP Addresses
There are three families of switches that partition based on an IP
address. Each family can partition by the source IP, the destination
IP, the next hop IP, or either source or destination IP. Each family
includes a --not-* variant to reverse the sense of the test.
The --*cidr-family takes as its argument an IP_OR_CIDR_LIST, which is a
single IP address 10.1.2.3, a single CIDR block "FF01::/16", or a comma
separated list of IPs and/or CIDR blocks
"10.0.1.0/24,10.0.2.3,10.0.4.0/24". The IP_OR_CIDR_LIST supports IPv4
and IPv6 addresses.
The --*address-family (which includes --next-hop-id) takes as its
argument an IP_WILDCARD. An IP_WILDCARD is a single IP address, a
single CIDR block, or a single SiLK IP Wildcard. A SiLK IP Wildcard
can represent multiple IPv4 or IPv6 addresses. An IP Wildcard contains
an IP in its canonical form, except each part of the IP (where part is
an octet for IPv4 or a hexadectet for IPv6) may be a single value, a
range, a comma separated list of values and ranges, or the letter "x"
to signify any value for that part of the IP (that is, "0-255" for
IPv4). You may not specify a CIDR suffix when using the IP Wildcard
notation. The following IP_WILDCARDs all represent the same value:
::ffff:0:0/112
::ffff:0:x
::ffff:0:aaab-ffff,aaaa,0-aaa9
::ffff:0.0.0.0/112
::ffff:0.0.128-254,0-126,255,127.x
The --*set-family requires that you store the IPs in a binary IPset
file and pass the name of the file to the switch. IPset files are
created from SiLK Flow records with rwset(1), or from textual input
with rwsetbuild(1). Currently, IPsets only support IPv4 addresses.
The next hop address often has a value of 0.0.0.0 since the default
configuration of SiLK does not store the next hop address in the data
repository.
The address-partitioning switches are:
--scidr=IP_OR_CIDR_LIST
Pass the record if its source IP address matches a value in
IP_OR_CIDR_LIST, a comma separated list of IPs and/or CIDR blocks.
See also --saddress and --sipset.
--dcidr=IP_OR_CIDR_LIST
Pass the record if its destination IP address matches a value in
IP_OR_CIDR_LIST. See also --daddress and --dipset.
--any-cidr=IP_OR_CIDR_LIST
Pass the record if either its source or its destination IP address
matches a value in IP_OR_CIDR_LIST. This switch does not consider
the next hop IP address. See also --any-address and --anyset.
--nhcidr=IP_OR_CIDR_LIST
Pass the record if its next hop IP address matches a value in
IP_OR_CIDR_LIST. See also --next-hop-id and --nhipset.
--not-scidr=IP_OR_CIDR_LIST
Pass the record if its source IP address does not match a value in
IP_OR_CIDR_LIST, a comma separated list of IPs and/or CIDR blocks.
See also --not-saddress and --not-sipset.
--not-dcidr=IP_OR_CIDR_LIST
Pass the record if its destination IP address does not match a
value in IP_OR_CIDR_LIST. See also --not-daddress and
--not-dipset.
--not-any-cidr=IP_OR_CIDR_LIST
Pass the record if neither its source nor its destination IP
address matches a value in IP_OR_CIDR_LIST. See also
--not-any-address and --not-anyset.
--not-nhcidr=IP_OR_CIDR_LIST
Pass the record if its next hop IP address does not match a value
in IP_OR_CIDR_LIST. See also --not-next-hop-id and --not-nhipset.
--saddress=IP_WILDCARD
Pass the record if its source IP address is matched by the SiLK IP
Wildcard IP_WILDCARD. To match on multiple IPs, use --scidr or
create an IPset and use --sipset.
--daddress=IP_WILDCARD
Pass the record if its destination IP address is matched by
IP_WILDCARD, a SiLK IP Wildcard. See also --dcidr and --dipset.
--any-address=IP_WILDCARD
Pass the record if either its source or its destination IP address
is matched by IP_WILDCARD, a SiLK IP Wildcard. This switch does
not consider the next hop IP address. See also --any-cidr and
--anyset.
--next-hop-id=IP_WILDCARD
Pass the record if its next hop IP address is matched by this
IP_WILDCARD, a SiLK IP Wildcard. To match on multiple IPs, use
--nhcidr or create an IPset and use --nhipset.
--not-saddress=IP_WILDCARD
Pass the record if its source IP address is not matched by this
IP_WILDCARD, a SiLK IP Wildcard. See also --not-scidr and
--not-sipset.
--not-daddress=IP_WILDCARD
Pass the record if its destination IP address is not matched by
this IP_WILDCARD. See also --not-dcidr and --not-dipset.
--not-any-address=IP_WILDCARD
Pass the record if neither its source nor its destination IP
address is matched by this IP_WILDCARD. Does not consider the next
hop address. See also --not-any-cidr and --not-anyset.
--not-next-hop-id=IP_WILDCARD
Pass the record if its next hop IP address is not matched by this
IP_WILDCARD. See also --not-nhcidr and --not-nhipset.
--sipset=IP_SET_FILENAME
Pass the record if its source IP address is in the list of IPs
contained in the binary set file IP_SET_FILENAME. See also
--scidr.
--dipset=IP_SET_FILENAME
As --sipset for the destination IP address. See also --dcidr.
--anyset=IP_SET_FILENAME
Pass the record if either its source IP address or its destination
IP address is in the list of IPs contained in the binary set file
IP_SET_FILENAME. Does not consider the next hop IP. See also
--any-cidr.
--nhipset=IP_SET_FILENAME
As --sipset for the next-hop IP address. See also --nhcidr.
--not-sipset=IP_SET_FILENAME
Pass the record if its source IP address is not in the list of IPs
contained in the binary set file IP_SET_FILENAME. See also
--not-scidr.
--not-dipset=IP_SET_FILENAME
As --not-sipset for the destination IP address. See also
--not-dcidr.
--not-anyset=IP_SET_FILENAME
Pass the record if neither its source IP address nor its
destination IP address is in the list of IPs contained in the
binary set file IP_SET_FILENAME. Does not consider the next hop
IP. See also --not-any-cidr.
--not-nhipset=IP_SET_FILENAME
As --not-sipset for the next hop IP address. See also
--not-nhcidr.
Partitioning Switches for Remainder of Five-Tuple
The following switches partition based on the protocol and source or
destination port. The parameter to each of these switches is an
INTEGER_LIST, which is a comma-separated list of individual non-
negative integer values and ranges of those values. For example,
"1,2,3,5-10,99-103". A range may be specified without an upper limit,
such as "1-", in which case the upper limit is set to the maximum
value.
--sport=INTEGER_LIST
Pass the record if its source port is in this INTEGER_LIST,
possible values are 0-65535.
--dport=INTEGER_LIST
Pass the record if its destination port is in this INTEGER_LIST,
possible values are 0-65535
--aport=INTEGER_LIST
Pass the record if its source port and/or its destination port is
in this INTEGER_LIST, possible values are 0-65535. For example,
use --aport=25 to see all SMTP conversions regardless or where they
originated.
--protocol=INTEGER_LIST
Pass the record if its IP Suite Protocol is in this INTEGER_LIST,
possible values are 0-255.
--icmp-type=INTEGER_LIST
Pass the record if its ICMP (or ICMPv6) type is in this
INTEGER_LIST; possible values 0-255. This switch also verifies
that the flow's protocol is 1 (or 58 if the flow is IPv6). It is
an error to specify a --protocol that does not include 1 and/or 58.
--icmp-code=INTEGER_LIST
Pass the record if its ICMP (or ICMPv6) code is in this
INTEGER_LIST; possible values 0-255. This switch also verifies
that the flow's protocol is 1 (or 58 if the flow is IPv6). It is
an error to specify a --protocol that does not include 1 and/or 58.
Partitioning Switches for Time
These switches partition based on whether the time stamps on the flow
record occur within the specified time window. The form of the
argument is range of two dates, start-window and end-window, each in
the form "YYYY/MM/DD[:HH[:MM[:SS[.ssssss]]]]", for example
"2003/01/31:23:45:00.000-2003/01/31:23:59:59.999" represents the last
fifteen minutes of Jan 31, 2003. (A "T" may be used in place of ":" to
separate the day and hour.) The start-window and end-window must be
set to at least day precision. For the start-window, unspecified hour,
minute, second, and millisecond values are set to 0; for the end-
window, those values are set to 23, 59, 59, and 999 respectively. Thus
"2003/01/31:23-2003/01/31:23" becomes
"2003/01/31:23:00:00.000-2003/01/31:23:59:59.999". If an end-window is
not given, it is set to the start-window, giving a window of a single
millisecond. The date strings are considered to be in the timezone
specified when SiLK was compiled, which you can determine from the
output of rwfilter--version. You may also specify the times as
seconds since the UNIX epoch; when the end-time is in epoch seconds, an
unspecified milliseconds value is set to 999 and otherwise the value is
unchanged.
--active-time=TIME_WINDOW
Pass the record if the record was active at ANY time during this
TIME_WINDOW. If a single time is specified, pass the record if it
was active at that instant.
--stime=TIME_WINDOW
Pass the record if its starting time is in this TIME_WINDOW.
--etime=TIME_WINDOW
As --stime for the ending time.
--duration=DECIMAL_RANGE
Pass the record if its duration--that is, the record's end time
minus its start time, as measured in seconds--is in this
DECIMAL_RANGE. Use floating point numbers to specify millisecond
values. The range should be specified as MIN-MAX; for example,
"5.0-10.031". If a single value is given, the duration must match
that value exactly. The upper limit may be omitted; for example, a
range of "1.5-" passes records whose duration is at least 1.5
seconds.
Partitioning Switches for Volume
The following switches partition based on the volume of the flow; that
is, the number of bytes or packets. For additional volume-related
switches, load the flowrate plug-in as described in the flowrate(3)
manual page.
These switches accept a range of non-negative integers or decimal
values. If the upper limit is omitted, the volume must be at least
that size. If the argument is a single value, the volume must match
that value exactly.
--bytes=INTEGER_RANGE
Pass the record if its byte count is in this INTEGER_RANGE.
--packets=INTEGER_RANGE
Pass the record if its packet count is in this INTEGER_RANGE.
--bytes-per-packet=DECIMAL_RANGE
Pass the record if its average bytes per packet count
(bytes/packet) is in this DECIMAL_RANGE.
Partitioning Switches for TCP Flags
When a flow generator creates a flow record from TCP packets, it
creates a field that is the bitwise OR of the TCP flags from all
packets that comprise that flow record. Some flow generators, such as
yaf(1), can export two TCP flag fields: one contains the flags on the
first packet in the flow, and the second contains the bitwise OR of the
remaining packets.
To partition records based on their TCP flags values, there is a
recommended set of switches and legacy-supported switches. The
switches accept the following letters to represent the named TCP flag:
"F"=FIN; "S"=SYN; "R"=RST; "P"=PSH; "A"=ACK; "U"=URG; "E"=ECE; "C"=CWR.
The recommended set of switches take a comma separated list of pairs of
TCP flags, where the pair is separated by a slash (/). The value to
the left of the slash is the HIGH_SET and it must be a subset of the
value to the right of the slash, which is the MASK_SET. For a record
to pass the filter, the flags in the HIGH_SET must be on and the
remaining flags in MASK_SET must be off. Flags not in MASK_SET may
have any value. If a list of pairs is given, the record passes if any
pair in the list matches. For example, "--flags-all=S/S,A/A" passes
flows that have either the SYN or the ACK flag set, "--flags-all=S/SA"
passes flow records where SYN is high and ACK is low, and
"--flags-all=/F" passes flows where FIN is off. This list of flag
pairs is called a HIGH_MASK_FLAGS_LIST.
The recommended switches for TCP flag partitioning are:
--flags-all=HIGH_MASK_FLAGS_LIST
Pass the record if any of the HIGH_SET/MASK_SET pairs is true when
looking at the bitwise OR of the TCP flags across all packets in
the flow.
--flags-initial=HIGH_MASK_FLAGS_LIST
As --flags-all, except this switch considers only the initial
packet in the flow, for flow generators that can generate that
field.
--flags-session=HIGH_MASK_FLAGS_LIST
As --flags-all, except this switch considers the bitwise OR of the
TCP flags across the second through the final packet in the flow;
that is, ignoring the flags on the first packet.
The TCP-flag partitioning switches supported for legacy reasons are:
--tcp-flags=TCP_FLAGS
Pass the record if, for any one of its packets, any of the
specified TCP_FLAGS was on, where TCP_FLAGS contains the letters
"F","S","R","P","A","U","E","C". For example, --tcp-flags=ASF
passes records where ACK is set, or SYN is set, or FIN is set.
--ack-flag={0|1}
Set to 0, only passes records where the ACK Flag is Low, Set to 1,
only passes records where the ACK Flag is high.
--cwr-flag={0|1}
As --ack-flag for the CWR Flag
--ece-flag={0|1}
As --ack-flag for the ECE Flag
--fin-flag={0|1}
As --ack-flag for the ACK Flag
--psh-flag={0|1}
As --ack-flag for the PSH Flag
--rst-flag={0|1}
As --ack-flag for the RST Flag
--syn-flag={0|1}
As --ack-flag for the SYN Flag
--urg-flag={0|1}
As --ack-flag for the URG Flag
Partitioning Switches for Other Flow Characteristics
Other than the --ip-version switch, the fields queried by the following
switches may always be zero. The default configuration of SiLK does
not store the fields that contain the SNMP values. The other fields
are not present in NetFlow v5, and require use of properly-configured
enhanced collection software, such as yaf(1),
<http://tools.netsa.cert.org/yaf/>.
--ip-version={4|6|4,6}
Passes the record if its IP Version is in the specified list. This
switch determines how IPv4 and IPv6 flow records are handled when
SiLK has been compiled with IPv6 support. When the argument to
this switch is 4, rwfilter writes records marked as IPv6 to the
fail-destination, regardless of the IP addresses it contains. When
the argument to this switch is 6, rwfilter writes records marked as
IPv4 to the fail-destination. When SiLK has not been compiled with
IPv6 support, the only legal value for this switch is 4, and any
IPv6 flows in the input ignored (that is, they are not written to
either the pass-destination nor the fail-destination).
--application=INTEGER_LIST
Some flow generation software can inspect the contents of the
packets that comprise a flow and use traffic signatures to label
the content of the flow. SiLK calls this label the application;
yaf refers to it as the appLabel (see the applabel(1) manual page
in the yaf distribution). The application value is the port number
that is traditionally used for that type of traffic (see the
/etc/services file on most UNIX systems). For example, traffic
that the flow generator recognizes as FTP has a value of 21, even
if that traffic is being routed through the standard HTTP/web
port (80). The flow generator uses a value for 0 if the
application cannot be determined. The --application switch passes
the flow if the flow's application value is in the specified
INTEGER_LIST, which is a comma separated list of integers from 0 to
65535 inclusive and ranges of those integers. The list of valid
appLabels is determined by your site's yaf installation.
--attributes=ATTRIBUTES_LIST
The attributes field in SiLK Flow records describes characteristics
about how the flow record was generated or about the packets that
comprise the flow record. The ATTRIBUTES_LIST argument is similar
to the HIGH_MASK_FLAGS_LIST argument to the --flags-all switch.
ATTRIBUTES_LIST is a comma separated list of up to 8
HIGH_ATTRIBUTES/MASK_ATTRIBUTES pairs, where HIGH_ATTRIBUTES and
MASK_ATTRIBUTES are strings of the characters "S","T","C","F", and
HIGH_ATTRIBUTES is a subset of MASK_ATTRIBUTES. rwfilter passes
the record if, for any pair of attributes in the list, the
attributes listed in HIGH_ATTRIBUTES are set and the remaining
attributes in MASK_ATTRIBUTES are not-set. The valid attributes
are:
"S" All the packets in this flow record are exactly the same size.
"T" The flow generator prematurely created a record for a long-
lived session due to the connection's lifetime reaching the
active timeout of the flow generator. (Also, when yaf is run
with the --silk switch, it prematurely creates a flow and marks
it with "T" if the byte count of the flow cannot be stored in a
32-bit value.)
"C" The flow generator created this flow as a continuation of long-
running connection, where the previous flow for this connection
met a timeout.
"F" The flow generator saw additional packets in this flow
following a packet with the FIN flag set (excluding ACK
packets).
For a long-lived connection spanning several flow records, the
first flow record is marked with a "T" indicating that it hit the
active timeout. The second through next-to-last records are marked
with "CT" indicating that the flow is a continuation of a
connection that timed out and that this flow also timed out. The
final flow is marked with a "C", indicating that it was created as
a continuation of an active flow.
--input-index=INTEGER_LIST
Pass the record if its "in" field is in this INTEGER_LIST, which is
a comma separated list of integers from 0 to 65535, inclusive, and
ranges of those integers. When present, the "in" field normally
contains the incoming SNMP interface, but it may contain the vlanId
if the packing tools were configured to capture it (see
sensor.conf(5)).
--output-index=INTEGER_LIST
Pass the record if its "out" field is in this INTEGER_LIST. When
present, the "out" field normally contains the outgoing SNMP
interface, but it may contain the postVlanId if the packing tools
were configured to capture it.
--any-index=INTEGER_LIST
Pass the record if its "in" field or if its "out" field is in this
INTEGER_LIST.
Selection Switches Acting as Partitioning Switches
The following four switches are normally file selection switches, that
is they select which files rwfilter reads within the data repository.
However, when rwfilter gets input without querying the data repository
(that is, from files listed on the command line, from files specified
by --xargs, or from the --input-pipe), these switches become
partitioning switches and determine whether a record is written to the
pass-destination or fail-destination.
--class=CLASS
Pass the record if its class is CLASS and its type is listed in the
--type switch, or its type is in the default type list for CLASS
when --type is not specified. Use rwfilter--help to see the list
of available classes and types, and the defaults.
--flowtypes=CLASS/TYPE[,CLASS/TYPE ...]
Pass the record its if class/type value is one of those listed.
The keyword "all" may be used for the CLASS and/or TYPE to select
all classes and/or types. This switch cannot be used when either
--class or --type is used. Use rwfilter--help to see the list of
available classes and types.
--sensors=SENSOR[,SENSOR ...]
Pass the record if its sensor is one of those listed. The
parameter is a comma separated list of sensor names, sensor IDs
(integers), and/or ranges of sensor IDs. Use the rwsiteinfo(1)
command to see the list of sensors.
--type={"all" | TYPE[,TYPE]}
Pass the record if its type is one of those listed and its class is
specified by --class, or its class is the default class when the
--class switch is not specified. Use rwfilter--help to see the
list of available classes and types, and the defaults.
Partitioning Switches that use Additional Mapping Files
Additional partitioning switches are available that allow one to
partition flow records depending on a label, where the label is
computed from an IP address or port on the record and an additional
mapping file.
--pmap-file=MAPNAME:PATH
--pmap-file=PATH
Instruct rwfilter to load the mapping file located at PATH and
create new switches --pmap-src-MAPNAME, --pmap-dst-MAPNAME, and
--pmap-any-MAPNAME. When MAPNAME is provided, it is used to refer
to the switches specific to that prefix map. If MAPNAME is not
provided, rwfilter checks the prefix map file to see if a map-name
was specified when the file was created. If no map-name is
available, rwfilter creates legacy switches as described below.
Multiple --pmap-file switches are supported as long as each uses a
unique map-name. The --pmap-fileswitch(es) must precede all other
--pmap-* switches. For more information, see pmapfilter(3).
--pmap-src-MAPNAME=LABELS
If the prefix map associated with MAPNAME is an IP prefix map, this
matches records with a source IPv4 address that maps to a label
contained in the list of labels in LABELS.
If the prefix map associated with MAPNAME is a proto-port prefix
map, this matches records with a protocol and source port
combination that maps to a label contained in the list of labels in
LABELS.
--pmap-dst-MAPNAME=LABELS
Similar to --pmap-src-MAPNAME, but uses the destination IP or the
protocol and destination port.
--pmap-any-MAPNAME=LABELS
If the prefix map associated with MAPNAME is an IP prefix map, this
matches records with a source IP address or a destination IP
address that maps to a label contained in the list of labels in
LABELS.
If the prefix map associated with MAPNAME is a port/protocol prefix
map, this matches records with a protocol and source port or
destination port combination that maps to a label contained in the
list of labels in LABELS.
--pmap-saddress=LABELS
--pmap-daddress=LABELS
--pmap-any-address=LABELS
These are deprecated switches created by pmapfilter that correspond
to --pmap-src-MAPNAME, --pmap-dst-MAPNAME, and --pmap-any-MAPNAME,
respectively. These switches are available when an IP prefix map
is used that is not associated with a MAPNAME.
--pmap-sport-proto=LABELS
--pmap-dport-proto=LABELS
--pmap-any-port-proto=LABELS
These are deprecated switches created by pmapfilter that correspond
to --pmap-src-MAPNAME, --pmap-dst-MAPNAME, and --pmap-any-MAPNAME,
respectively. These switches are available when a proto-port
prefix map is used that is not associated with a MAPNAME.
--scc=COUNTRY_CODE_LIST
--dcc=COUNTRY_CODE_LIST
--any-cc=COUNTRY_CODE_LIST
Pass the record if one its IP addresses maps to a country code that
is specified in COUNTRY_CODE_LIST. For --scc, the source IP must
match. For --dcc, the destination IP must match. For --any-cc,
either the source or the destination must match. COUNTRY_CODE_LIST
is a comma separated list of lowercase two-letter country
codes---based on the Root-Zone Whois Index (see for example
<http://www.iana.org/cctld/cctld-whois.htm>)---as well as the
following special codes:
"--"
N/A (e.g. private and experimental reserved addresses)
"a1"
anonymous proxy
"a2"
satellite provider
"o1"
other
For example: "cx,uk,kr,jp,--". To use this switch, the country
code mapping file must be available in the default location, or in
the location specified by the SILK_COUNTRY_CODES environment
variable. See ccfilter(3) for details.
--stype={0|1|2|3}
--dtype={0|1|2|3}
Pass a flow record depending on whether the IP address is internal,
external, or non-routable. These switches use the mapping file
specified by the SILK_ADDRESS_TYPES environment variable, or the
address_types.pmap mapping file, as described in addrtype(3). When
the parameter is 0, pass the record if its source (--stype) IP
address or destination (--dtype) IP address is non-routable. When
1, pass if internal. When 2, pass if external (i.e., routable but
not internal). When 3, pass if not internal (non-routable or
external).
Partitioning Switches across Multiple Fields
The --tuple-* family of switches allows the user to partition flow
records based on multiple values of the five-tuple.
--tuple-file=TUPLE_FILENAME
This switch provides support for partitioning by arbitrary subsets
of the basic five-tuple:
{source-ip,destination-ip,source-port,destination-ip-port,protocol}
A SiLK Flow record passes the test when the record's fields match
one of the tuples; if the SiLK record does not match any tuple, the
record fails. The tuples are read from the text file
TUPLE_FILENAME which must contain lines of delimited fields. The
default delimiter is "|", but may be specified with the
--tuple-delimiter switch. Each field contains one member of the
tuple; the fields may appear in any order. The fields may
represent any subset of the five-tuple, but each line in the file
must define the same subset. A field that is present but has no
value generates an error. If you want the field to match any
value, it is best that you not include that field in your input.
In addition to the tuple-lines, TUPLE_FILENAME may contain blank
lines and comments (which begin with "#" and continue to the end of
the line). The first line of TUPLE_FILENAME may contain a title
labeling the fields in the file. This title line is ignored when
the --tuple-fields switch is given.
The IP fields may contain an IPv4 address, an integer, or a IP in
CIDR block notation. Comma-separated lists ("80,443") and ranges
("0-1023,8080") are supported for the ports and protocol fields.
NOTE: Currently the code is not clever in its support for CIDR
notation and ranges in that each occurrence is fully expanded.
When this occurs, the memory required to hold the search tree
quickly grows.
--tuple-fields=FIELDS
FIELDS contains the list of fields (columns) to parse from the
TUPLE_FILENAME in the order in which they appear in the file. When
this switch is not provided, rwfilter treats the first line in
TUPLE_FILENAME as a title line and attempts to determine the fields
(a la rwtuc(1)); rwfilter exits if it cannot determine the fields.
FIELDS is a comma separated list of field-names, field-integers,
and ranges of field-integers; a range is specified by separating
the start and end of the range with a hyphen (-). Names can be
abbreviated to their shortest unique prefix. The field names and
their descriptions are:
sIP,sip,1
source IP address
dIP,dip,2
destination IP address
sPort,sport,3
source port
dPort,dport,4
destination port
protocol,5
IP protocol
--tuple-direction=DIRECTION
Allows you to change the comparison between the tuple and the SiLK
Flow record. This switch allows one to look for traffic in the
reverse direction (or both directions) without having to write all
of the rules twice. The available directions are:
forward
The tuple's fields are compared against the corresponding
fields on the flow; that is, sIP is compared with sIP, dIP with
dIP, sPort with sPort, dPort with dPort, and protocol with
protocol. This is the default.
reverse
The tuple's fields are compared against the opposite fields on
the flow; that is, sIP is compared with dIP, dIP with sIP,
sPort with dPort, dPort with sPort, and protocol with protocol.
both
Both of the above comparisons are performed.
--tuple-delimiter=CHAR
Specifies the character separating the input fields. When the
switch is not provided, the default of "|" is used.
Partitioning Switches that use the PySiLK Plug-in
The SiLK Python plug-in provides support for filtering by expressions
or complex functions written in the Python programming language. See
the silkpython(3) and pysilk(3) manual pages for information and
examples for how to use Python to manipulate SiLK data structures.
When multiple Partitioning Switches are given, the Python plug-in is
the next-to-last to be invoked. Only the code specified by the
--plugin switch is called after the Python code.
--python-file=FILENAME
Pass the record if the result of the processing the flow with the
function named rwfilter() in FILENAME is true. The function should
take a single silk.RWRec object as an argument. See silkpython(3)
for details.
--python-expr=PYTHON_EXPRESSION
Pass the record if the result of the processing the flow with the
specified PYTHON_EXPRESSION is true. The expression is evaluated
as if it appeared in the following context:
from silk import *
def rwfilter(rec):
return (PYTHON_EXPRESSION)
Partitioning Switches that use the IP-Association Plug-In
The IPA plug-in, ipafilter.so, provides switches that can partition
flows using data in an IP Association database. For this plug-in to be
available, SiLK must be compiled with IPA support and IPA must be
configured. See ipafilter(3) and <http://tools.netsa.cert.org/ipa/>
for additional information.
--ipa-src-expr=IPA_EXPR
Use IPA_EXPR to partition flows based on the source IP of the flow
matching the IPA_EXPR expression.
--ipa-dst-expr=IPA_EXPR
Use IPA_EXPR to partition flows based on the destination IP of the
flow matching the IPA_EXPR expression.
--ipa-any-expr=IPA_EXPR
Use IPA_EXPR to partition flows based on either the source or
destination IP of the flow matching the IPA_EXPR expression.
Miscellaneous Switches
--compression-method=COMP_METHOD
Specify how to compress the output. When this switch is not given,
output to the standard output or to named pipes is not compressed,
and output to files is compressed using the default chosen when
SiLK was compiled. The valid values for COMP_METHOD are determined
by which external libraries were found when SiLK was compiled. To
see the available compression methods and the default method, use
the --help or --version switch. SiLK can support the following
COMP_METHOD values when the required libraries are available.
none
Do not compress the output using an external library.
zlib
Use the zlib(3) library for compressing the output, and always
compress the output regardless of the destination. Using zlib
produces the smallest output files at the cost of speed.
lzo1x
Use the lzo1x algorithm from the LZO real time compression
library for compression, and always compress the output
regardless of the destination. This compression provides good
compression with less memory and CPU overhead.
best
Use lzo1x if available, otherwise use zlib. Only compress the
output when writing to a file.
--dry-run
Perform a sanity check on the input arguments to check that the
arguments are acceptable. In addition, prints to the standard
output the names of the files that would be accessed (and the names
of missing files if --print-missing is specified). rwfglob(1) can
also be used to generate the lists of files that rwfilter would
access.
--help
Print the available options and exit. Options that add fields (for
example, options that load plug-ins, prefix maps, or PySiLK
extensions) can be specified before the --help switch so that the
new options appear in the output. The available classes and types
are included in output; you may specify a different root directory
or site configuration file before --help to see the classes and
types available for that site.
--max-fail-records=N
Write N records to each --fail-destination.rwfilter stops reading
input once it has written these N records unless --pass-destination
or --all-destinationswitch(es) are also specified.
--max-pass-records=N
Write N records to each --pass-destination.rwfilter stops reading
input once it has written these N records unless --fail-destination
or --all-destinationswitch(es) are also specified.
--note-add=TEXT
Add the specified TEXT to the header of the output file as an
annotation. This switch may be repeated to add multiple
annotations to a file. To view the annotations, use the
rwfileinfo(1) tool.
--note-file-add=FILENAME
Open FILENAME and add the contents of that file to the header of
the output file as an annotation. This switch may be repeated to
add multiple annotations. Currently the application makes no
effort to ensure that FILENAME contains text; be careful that you
do not attempt to add a SiLK data file as an annotation.
--plugin=PLUGIN
Augment the partitioning switches by using run-time loading of the
plug-in (shared object) whose path is PLUGIN. The switch may be
repeated to load multiple plug-ins. The creation of plug-ins is
described in the silk-plugin(3) manual page. When multiple
partitioning switches are given, the code specified by the --plugin
switch(es) is last to be invoked. When PLUGIN does not contain a
slash ("/"), rwfilter attempts to find a file named PLUGIN in the
directories listed in the "FILES" section. If rwfilter finds the
file, it uses that path. If PLUGIN contains a slash or if rwfilter
does not find the file, rwfilter relies on your operating system's
dlopen(3) call to find the file. When the SILK_PLUGIN_DEBUG
environment variable is non-empty, rwfilter prints status messages
to the standard error as it attempts to find and open each of its
plug-ins.
--print-filenames
Print the names of input files as they are read. This can be
useful feedback for a long-running rwfilter process.
--site-config-file=FILENAME
Read the SiLK site configuration from the named file FILENAME.
When this switch is not provided, rwfilter searches for the site
configuration file in the locations specified in the "FILES"
section.
--threads=N
Invoke rwfilter with N threads reading the input files. When this
switch is not provided, the value in the SILK_RWFILTER_THREADS
environment variable is used. If that variable is not set,
rwfilter runs with a single thread. Using multiple threads,
performance of rwfilter is greatly improved for queries that look
at many files but return few records. Preliminary testing has
found that performance peaks around four threads per CPU, but
performance varies depending on the type of query and the number of
records returned.
--version
Print the version number and information about how SiLK was
configured, then exit the application.
EXAMPLES
In the following examples, the dollar sign ("$") represents the shell
prompt. The text after the dollar sign represents the command line.
Lines have been wrapped for improved readability, and the back slash
("\") is used to indicate a wrapped line.
The most basic filtering involves looking at specific traffic over a
specific time. For example:
$ rwfilter --start-date=2003/02/19:00 --end-date=2003/02/19:23 \
--proto=6 --pass-destination=tcp-in.rw
creates a file, tcp-in.rw containing all incoming TCP traffic on
February 19, 2003. The --start-date and --end-date switches select
which files to examine. The --proto switch partitions the flow records
into a pass stream (records whose protocol is 6---that is, TCP) and a
fail stream (all other records). The --pass-destination switch (often
shortened to --pass) tells rwfilter to write the records that pass the
--proto test to the file tcp-in.rw.
The tcp-in.rw file contains SiLK Flow data in a binary format. To
examine the contents, use the command rwcut(1). This query only
selects incoming traffic because the silk.conf(5) configuration file at
most sites tells rwfilter to look at incoming traffic unless an
explicit --type switch is given.
The following query gets all TCP traffic (for the default class) for
February 19, 2003.
$ rwfilter --type=all --start-date=2003/02/19 \
--proto=6 --pass-destination=alltcp.rw
Note the addition of --type=all. This query also relies on the default
behavior of --start-date to consider a full day's worth of data when no
hour is specified.
The above query gets all traffic for the default class. If your
silk.conf file has a single class, that query captures all of it. For
silk.conf files that specify multiple classes, the following gets all
TCP traffic for February 19, 2003:
$ rwfilter --flowtypes=all/all --start-date=2003/02/19 \
--proto=6 --pass-destination=alltcp.rw
To get all non-TCP traffic, there are two approaches. rwfilter does
not supply a way to choose a negated set of protocols, but you can
choose all protocols other than TCP:
$ rwfilter --start-date=2003/02/19:00 --end-date=2003/02/19:23 \
--proto=0-5,7-255 --pass-destination=non-tcp.rw
The other approach is to use the --fail-destination switch (often
shortened to --fail) that contains the records that failed one or more
of the partitioning test(s):
$ rwfilter --start-date=2003/02/19:00 --end-date=2003/02/19:23 \
--proto=6 --fail-destination=non-tcp.rw
To print information about the number of flow records that pass a
filter, use --print-volume-statistics. This can be combined with other
output switches.
$ rwfilter --start-date=2003/02/19:00 --end-date=2003/02/19:23 \
--proto=6 --print-volume-stat --pass-destination=tcp-in.rw
| Recs| Packets| Bytes| Files|
Total| 515359| 2722887| 1343819719| 180|
Pass| 512071| 2706571| 1342851708| |
Fail| 3288| 16316| 968011| |
If you want to see the number of records in a file produced by
rwfilter, or to remind yourself how a file was created, use
rwfileinfo(1):
$ rwfileinfo tcp-in.rw
tcp-in.rw:
format(id)FT_RWGENERIC(0x16)
version 16
byte-order littleEndian
compression(id)lzo1x(2)
header-length 208
record-length 52
record-version 5
silk-version 2.4.0
count-records 512071
file-size 8576160
command-lines
1 rwfilter --start-date=2003/02/19:00 --end-date=2003/02/19:23 \
--proto=6 --print-volume-stat --pass-destination=tcp-in.rw
Once a file is written, rwfilter can process the file again. Traffic
on port 25 is most likely email (SMTP) traffic. To split the email
traffic from the other traffic, use:
$ rwfilter --aport=25 --pass=mail.rw --fail=not-mail.rw tcp-in.rw
This command puts traffic where the source or destination port was 25
into the file mail.rw, and all other traffic into the file not-mail.rw.
The --fail-destination is an effective way to reverse the sense of a
test. For example, to remove traffic on port 80 from the not-mail.rw
file, run the command:
$ rwfilter --aport=80 --fail=not-mail-web.rw not-mail.rw
To verify that the not-mail-web.rw file does not contain any traffic on
ports 25 or 80, you can use the --print-statistics switch and see that
0 records pass:
$ rwfilter --aport=25,80 --print-stat not-mail-web.rw
Files 1. Read 54641. Pass 0. Fail 54641.
The file maintains a history of the commands that created it:
$ rwfileinfo not-mail-web.rw
not-mail-web.rw:
format(id)FT_RWGENERIC(0x16)
version 16
byte-order littleEndian
compression(id)lzo1x(2)
header-length 364
record-length 52
record-version 5
silk-version 2.4.0
count-records 54641
file-size 762875
command-lines
1 rwfilter --start-date=2003/02/19:00 --end-date=2003/02/19:23 \
--proto=6 --print-volume-stat --pass-destination=tcp-in.rw
2 rwfilter --aport=25 --pass=mail.rw --fail=not-mail.rw \
tcp-in.rw
3 rwfilter --aport=80 --fail=not-mail-web.rw not-mail.rw
The following finds all outgoing traffic from February 19, 2003, going
to an external email server. Traffic going to a server contacts that
server on its well-known port, and the flow record's destination port
should hold that well-known port:
$ rwfilter --type=out --start-date=2003/02/19 --print-volume-stat \
--dport=25 --proto=6
To limit the result to completed connections, select flow records that
contain at least three packets, use the --packets switch with an open-
ended range:
$ rwfilter --type=out --start-date=2003/02/19 --print-volume-stat \
--dport=25 --proto=6 --packets=3-
To limit the search to a particular internal CIDR block, 10.1.2.0/24,
there are three different IP-partitioning switches you can use. The
final approach uses rwsetbuild(1) to create an IPset file from textual
input.
$ rwfilter --type=out --start-date=2003/02/19 --print-volume-stat \
--dport=25 --proto=6 --packets=3- --scidr=10.1.2.0/24
$ rwfilter --type=out --start-date=2003/02/19 --print-volume-stat \
--dport=25 --proto=6 --packets=3- --saddress=10.1.2.x
$ echo "10.1.2.0/24" | rwsetbuild > my-set.set
$ rwfilter --type=out --start-date=2003/02/19 --print-volume-stat \
--dport=25 --proto=6 --packets=3- --sipset=my-set.set
rwfilter does not have to output its records to a file; instead, the
output from rwfilter can be piped into a another SiLK tool. You must
still use the --pass-destination switch (or --fail-destination or
--all-destination switch), but by providing the argument of "stdout" or
"-" to the switch you tell rwfilter to write its output to the standard
output.
For example, to get the IPs of the external email servers that the
monitored network contacted, pipe the rwfilter output into rwset(1),
and tell rwset to store the destination addresses:
$ rwfilter --type=out --start-date=2003/02/19 --dport=25 \
--proto=6 --packets=3- --scidr=10.1.2.0/24 --pass=stdout \
| rwset --dip-file=external-mail-servers.set
rwfilter can also pipe its output as input to another rwfilter command,
which allows them to be chained together. rwfilter does not read from
the standard input by default; you must explicitly give "stdin" or "-"
as the stream to read:
$ rwfilter --type=out,outweb --start-date=2003/02/19 \
--scidr=10.1.2.0/24 --pass=stdout \
| rwfilter --proto=17 --pass=udp.rw --fail=stdout stdin \
| rwfilter --proto=6 --pass=stdout --fail=non-tcp-udp.rw stdin \
| rwfilter --aport=25 --pass=mail.rw --fail=stdout stdin \
| rwfilter --aport=80,443 --pass=web.rw \
--fail=tcp-non-web-mail.rw stdin
This chain of commands looks at outgoing traffic on February 19, 2003,
originating from the internal net-block 10.1.2.0/24, creates the
following files:
udp.rw
Outgoing UDP traffic
non-tcp-udp.rw
Outgoing traffic that is neither TCP nor UDP
mail.rw
Outgoing TCP traffic on port 25, most of which is probably email
(SMTP). Since the query looks at outgoing traffic and the --aport
switch was used, this file represents email going from the internal
10.1.2.0/24 to external mail servers, and the responses from any
internal mail servers that exist in the 10.1.2.0/24 net-block to
external clients.
web.rw
Outgoing TCP traffic on ports 80 and 443, most of which is probably
web traffic (HTTP,HTTPS). As with the mail.rw file, this file
represents queries to external web servers and responses from
internal web servers.
tcp-non-web-mail.rw
Outgoing TCP traffic other than that on ports 25, 80, and 443
Expert users can create even more complicated chains of rwfilter
commands using named pipes.
ENVIRONMENT
SILK_RWFILTER_THREADS
The number of threads to use while reading input files or files
selected from the data store.
PYTHONPATH
This environment variable is used by Python to locate modules.
When --python-file or --python-expr is specified, rwfilter must
load the Python files that comprise the PySiLK module, such as
silk/__init__.py. If this silk/ directory is located outside
Python's normal search path (for example, in the SiLK installation
tree), it may be necessary to set or modify the PYTHONPATH
environment variable to include the parent directory of silk/ so
that Python can find the PySiLK module.
SILK_PYTHON_TRACEBACK
When set, Python plug-ins output traceback information on Python
errors to the standard error.
SILK_COUNTRY_CODES
This environment variable allows the user to specify the country
code mapping file that the --scc and --dcc switches use. The value
may be a complete path or a file relative to the SILK_PATH. See
the "FILES" section for standard locations of this file.
SILK_ADDRESS_TYPES
This environment variable allows the user to specify the address
type mapping file that the --stype and --dtype switches use. The
value may be a complete path or a file relative to the SILK_PATH.
See the "FILES" section for standard locations of this file.
SILK_CLOBBER
The SiLK tools normally refuse to overwrite existing files.
Setting SILK_CLOBBER to a non-empty value removes this restriction.
SILK_CONFIG_FILE
This environment variable is used as the value for the
--site-config-file when that switch is not provided.
SILK_DATA_ROOTDIR
This environment variable specifies the root directory of data
repository. This value overrides the compiled-in value, and
rwfilter uses it unless the --data-rootdir switch is specified. In
addition, rwfilter may use this value when searching for the SiLK
site configuration files. See the "FILES" section for details.
SILK_PATH
This environment variable gives the root of the install tree. When
searching for configuration files and plug-ins, rwfilter may use
this environment variable. See the "FILES" section for details.
TZ When a SiLK installation is built to use the local timezone (to
determine if this is the case, check the "Timezone support" value
in the output from rwfilter --version), the value of the TZ
environment variable determines the timezone in which rwfilter
parses timestamps. If the TZ environment variable is not set, the
default timezone is used. Setting TZ to 0 or the empty string
causes timestamps to be parsed as UTC. The value of the TZ
environment variable is ignored when the SiLK installation uses
utc. For system information on the TZ variable, see tzset(3) or
environ(7).
SILK_PLUGIN_DEBUG
When set to 1, rwfilter prints status messages to the standard
error as it attempts to find and open each of its plug-ins.
SILK_LOGSTATS
When set to a non-empty value, rwfilter treats the value as the
path to an external program to execute with information about this
rwfilter invocation. If the value in SILK_LOGSTATS does not
contain a slash or if it references a file that does not exist, is
not a regular file, or is not executable, the SILK_LOGSTATS value
is silently ignored. The arguments to the external program are:
· The application name, i.e., "rwfilter". Note that "rwfilter"
is always used as this argument, regardless of the name of the
executable.
· The version number of this command line, currently "v0001".
· The start time of this invocation, as seconds since the UNIX
epoch.
· The end time of this invocation, as seconds since the UNIX
epoch.
· The number of data files opened for reading.
· The number of records read.
· The number of records written.
· A variable number of arguments that are the complete command
line used to invoke rwfilter, including the name of the
executable.
SILK_LOGSTATS_RWFILTER
If set, this environment variable overrides the value specified in
SILK_LOGSTATS.
SILK_LOGSTATS_DEBUG
If the environment variable is set to a non-empty value, rwfilter
prints messages to the standard error about the SILK_LOGSTATS value
being used and either the reason why the value cannot be used or
the arguments to the external program being executed.
FILES
${SILK_ADDRESS_TYPES}
${SILK_PATH}/share/silk/address_types.pmap
${SILK_PATH}/share/address_types.pmap
/usr/local/share/silk/address_types.pmap
/usr/local/share/address_types.pmap
Possible locations for the address types mapping file required by
the --stype and --dtype switches.
${SILK_CONFIG_FILE}
ROOT_DIRECTORY/silk.conf
${SILK_PATH}/share/silk/silk.conf
${SILK_PATH}/share/silk.conf
/usr/local/share/silk/silk.conf
/usr/local/share/silk.conf
Possible locations for the SiLK site configuration file which are
checked when the --site-config-file switch is not provided, where
ROOT_DIRECTORY/ is the directory rwfilter is using as the root of
the data repository.
${SILK_COUNTRY_CODES}
${SILK_PATH}/share/silk/country_codes.pmap
${SILK_PATH}/share/country_codes.pmap
/usr/local/share/silk/country_codes.pmap
/usr/local/share/country_codes.pmap
Possible locations for the country code mapping file required by
the --scc and --dcc switches.
${SILK_DATA_ROOTDIR}/
/data/
Locations for the root directory of the data repository when the
--data-rootdir switch is not specified.
${SILK_PATH}/lib64/silk/
${SILK_PATH}/lib64/
${SILK_PATH}/lib/silk/
${SILK_PATH}/lib/
/usr/local/lib64/silk/
/usr/local/lib64/
/usr/local/lib/silk/
/usr/local/lib/
Directories that rwfilter checks when attempting to load a plug-in.
NOTESrwfilter is the most commonly used application in the suite. It
provides access to the data files and performs all the basic queries.
rwfilter supports a variety of I/O options - in addition to reading
from the data store, rwfilter results can be chained together with
named pipes to output results to multiple files simultaneously. An
introduction to named pipes is outside the scope of this document,
however.
Two often underused options are --dry-run and --print-statistics.
--dry-run performs a sanity check on the arguments and can be used,
especially for complicated arguments, to check that the arguments are
acceptable. --print-statistics used without --pass-destination or
--fail-destination simply prints aggregate statistics to the standard
error on a single line, and it can be used to do a quick pass through
the data to get aggregate counts before going in deeper into the
phenomenon being investigated.
--print-filename can be used as a progress meter; during long jobs, it
shows which file is currently being read by rwfilter. --print-filename
does not provide meaningful feedback with piped input.
Filters are applied in the order given on the command line. It is best
to apply the biggest filters first.
The rwfilter command line is written into the header of the output
file(s). You may use the rwfileinfo(1) command to see this
information.
SEE ALSOrwcut(1), rwfglob(1), rwfileinfo(1), rwset(1), rwtuc(1), rwsetbuild(1),
rwsiteinfo(1), addrtype(3), ccfilter(3), flowrate(3), ipafilter(3),
pmapfilter(3), pysilk(3), silkpython(3), silk-plugin(3), silk.conf(5),
sensor.conf(5), silk(7), rwflowpack(8), yaf(1), applabel(1), zlib(3),
dlopen(3), tzset(3), environ(7), Analysts' Handbook: Using SiLK for
Network Traffic Analysis
SiLK 3.11.0.1 2016-02-19 rwfilter(1)