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    Logging my daily changing WAN-address

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved General pfSense Questions
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    • stephenw10S Offline
      stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
      last edited by

      Hmm, using in-line mode?

      fireodoF 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • fireodoF Offline
        fireodo @stephenw10
        last edited by

        @stephenw10 said in [somewhat solved] Easy solution for logging my daily changing WAN-address:

        Hmm, using in-line mode?

        No, legacy mode ...

        Kettop Mi4300YL CPU: i5-4300Y @ 1.60GHz RAM: 8GB Ethernet Ports: 4
        SSD: SanDisk pSSD-S2 16GB (ZFS) WiFi: WLE200NX
        pfsense 2.8.0 CE
        Packages: Apcupsd, Cron, Iftop, Iperf, LCDproc, Nmap, pfBlockerNG, RRD_Summary, Shellcmd, Snort, Speedtest, System_Patches.

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • stephenw10S Offline
          stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
          last edited by

          OK digging....

          fireodoF 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
          • fireodoF Offline
            fireodo @stephenw10
            last edited by

            @stephenw10 said in [somewhat solved] Easy solution for logging my daily changing WAN-address:

            OK digging....

            I have post a question also in IDS/IPS adressed to Bill Meeks

            Kettop Mi4300YL CPU: i5-4300Y @ 1.60GHz RAM: 8GB Ethernet Ports: 4
            SSD: SanDisk pSSD-S2 16GB (ZFS) WiFi: WLE200NX
            pfsense 2.8.0 CE
            Packages: Apcupsd, Cron, Iftop, Iperf, LCDproc, Nmap, pfBlockerNG, RRD_Summary, Shellcmd, Snort, Speedtest, System_Patches.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • stephenw10S Offline
              stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
              last edited by

              Yup replicated it here. Digging deeper...

              bmeeksB 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
              • bmeeksB Offline
                bmeeks @stephenw10
                last edited by bmeeks

                @stephenw10 said in Logging my daily changing WAN-address:

                Yup replicated it here. Digging deeper...

                The problem is within the Snort binary package. The new if_pppoe driver apparently returns a datalink type of DLT_PPP_ETHER (which is integer code '51'). But the Snort C source code is only looking for DLT_PPP (which is integer code '9'). Because the switch...case logic does not match on DLT_PPP_ETHER, the default statement at line 3257 prevails and Snort executes a fatal error and terminates.

                The code in question is within snort.c beginning at line 3118. Here is the module source code:

                /*
                 * Function: SetPktProcessor()
                 *
                 * Purpose:  Set root decoder based on datalink
                 */
                // TBD add GetDecoder(dlt) to decode module and hide all
                // protocol decoder functions.
                static int SetPktProcessor(void)
                {
                    const char* slink = NULL;
                    const char* extra = NULL;
                    int dlt = DAQ_GetBaseProtocol();
                
                    switch ( dlt )
                    {
                        case DLT_EN10MB:
                            slink = "Ethernet";
                            grinder = DecodeEthPkt;
                            break;
                
                #ifdef DLT_LOOP
                        case DLT_LOOP:
                #endif
                        case DLT_NULL:
                            /* loopback and stuff.. you wouldn't perform intrusion detection
                             * on it, but it's ok for testing. */
                            slink = "LoopBack";
                            extra = "Data link layer header parsing for this network type "
                                    "isn't implemented yet";
                            grinder = DecodeNullPkt;
                            break;
                
                        case DLT_RAW:
                        case DLT_IPV4:
                            slink = "Raw IP4";
                            extra = "There's no second layer header available for this datalink";
                            grinder = DecodeRawPkt;
                            break;
                
                        case DLT_IPV6:
                            slink = "Raw IP6";
                            extra = "There's no second layer header available for this datalink";
                            grinder = DecodeRawPkt6;
                            break;
                
                #ifdef DLT_I4L_IP
                        case DLT_I4L_IP:
                            slink = "I4L-ip";
                            grinder = DecodeEthPkt;
                            break;
                #endif
                
                #ifndef NO_NON_ETHER_DECODER
                #ifdef DLT_I4L_CISCOHDLC
                        case DLT_I4L_CISCOHDLC:
                            slink = "I4L-cisco-h";
                            grinder = DecodeI4LCiscoIPPkt;
                            break;
                #endif
                
                        case DLT_PPP:
                            slink = "PPP";
                            extra = "Second layer header parsing for this datalink "
                                    "isn't implemented yet";
                            grinder = DecodePppPkt;
                            break;
                
                #ifdef DLT_I4L_RAWIP
                        case DLT_I4L_RAWIP:
                            // you need the I4L modified version of libpcap to get this stuff
                            // working
                            slink = "I4L-rawip";
                            grinder = DecodeI4LRawIPPkt;
                            break;
                #endif
                
                #ifdef DLT_IEEE802_11
                        case DLT_IEEE802_11:
                            slink = "IEEE 802.11";
                            grinder = DecodeIEEE80211Pkt;
                            break;
                #endif
                #ifdef DLT_ENC
                        case DLT_ENC:
                            slink = "Encapsulated data";
                            grinder = DecodeEncPkt;
                            break;
                
                #else
                        case 13:
                #endif /* DLT_ENC */
                        case DLT_IEEE802:
                            slink = "Token Ring";
                            grinder = DecodeTRPkt;
                            break;
                
                        case DLT_FDDI:
                            slink = "FDDI";
                            grinder = DecodeFDDIPkt;
                            break;
                
                #ifdef DLT_CHDLC
                        case DLT_CHDLC:
                            slink = "Cisco HDLC";
                            grinder = DecodeChdlcPkt;
                            break;
                #endif
                
                        case DLT_SLIP:
                            slink = "SLIP";
                            extra = "Second layer header parsing for this datalink "
                                    "isn't implemented yet\n";
                            grinder = DecodeSlipPkt;
                            break;
                
                #ifdef DLT_PPP_SERIAL
                        case DLT_PPP_SERIAL:         /* PPP with full HDLC header*/
                            slink = "PPP Serial";
                            extra = "Second layer header parsing for this datalink "
                                    " isn't implemented yet";
                            grinder = DecodePppSerialPkt;
                            break;
                #endif
                
                #ifdef DLT_LINUX_SLL
                        case DLT_LINUX_SLL:
                            slink = "Linux SLL";
                            grinder = DecodeLinuxSLLPkt;
                            break;
                #endif
                
                #ifdef DLT_PFLOG
                        case DLT_PFLOG:
                            slink = "OpenBSD PF log";
                            grinder = DecodePflog;
                            break;
                #endif
                
                #ifdef DLT_OLDPFLOG
                        case DLT_OLDPFLOG:
                            slink = "Old OpenBSD PF log";
                            grinder = DecodeOldPflog;
                            break;
                #endif
                #endif  // NO_NON_ETHER_DECODER
                
                        default:
                            /* oops, don't know how to handle this one */
                            FatalError("Cannot decode data link type %d\n", dlt);
                            break;
                    }
                
                    if ( !ScReadMode() || ScPcapShow() )
                    {
                        LogMessage("Decoding %s\n", slink);
                    }
                    if (extra && ScOutputDataLink())
                    {
                        LogMessage("%s\n", extra);
                        snort_conf->output_flags &= ~OUTPUT_FLAG__SHOW_DATA_LINK;
                    }
                #ifdef ACTIVE_RESPONSE
                    Encode_Init();
                #endif
                    return 0;
                }
                

                The fix might be as simple as adding this additional code to the switch...case test, but that assumes the raw PPP data is exactly same between the old mpd driver and the new if_pppoe driver:

                case DLT_PPP_ETHER:
                           slink = "PPP";
                           extra = "Second layer header parsing for this datalink "
                                   "isn't implemented yet";
                           grinder = DecodePppPkt;
                           break;
                
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                • bmeeksB bmeeks referenced this topic on
                • stephenw10S Offline
                  stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                  last edited by

                  Yup, that's exactly what we thought. Just waiting for a build to test....

                  bmeeksB 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                  • stephenw10S Offline
                    stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                    last edited by

                    Opened a bug to track: https://redmine.pfsense.org/issues/16229

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
                    • bmeeksB Offline
                      bmeeks @stephenw10
                      last edited by

                      @stephenw10 said in Logging my daily changing WAN-address:

                      Yup, that's exactly what we thought. Just waiting for a build to test....

                      Note that Suricata likely has the same issue. See my comment in this thread for the relevant section of source code: https://forum.netgate.com/topic/197701/error-on-snort-with-if_pppoe/8.

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                      • V Offline
                        VinnieNZ
                        last edited by

                        I see this issue still exists in Suricata on 25.07.1 - the redmine bug ticket has been open 3 months, but doesn't look like there has been any action on it.

                        On Suricata, if you leave the service running against an if_pppoe interface, it will continuously log "Error: pcap: datalink type 51 not yet supported" into suricata.log for the PPPoE interface and eventually fill the disk (if not caught).

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                        • J Offline
                          jrey @Bob.Dig
                          last edited by

                          @Bob.Dig said in Logging my daily changing WAN-address:

                          Is there a package where I can log only my dynamic IP-address on WAN?

                          I can't test this because I'm static - but I think if you simply want to log the IP changing on the WAN, a script and a cron job might do the trick --

                          hopefully there are no typos
                          you need to change "/path/to" to some appropriate directory ( perhaps something in var/log)
                          you need to change usewebinterfacehere" to the name of your WAN interface, you can get that from ifconfig (em0, mvneta0, or whatever it is on your system)

                          call the script whatever you like. mywanwatcher.sh find a suitable directory for it
                          make it executable, schedule it with cron at some reasonable interval (every 5 minutes)

                          You might need to add a rotation if the file grows to big or simply off load it and start a new one every 1000 lines or so

                          # File to store the previous IP address
                          PREVIOUS_IP_FILE="/path/to/previous_ip.txt"
                          # Log file to record changes
                          LOG_FILE="/path/to/ip_change_log.txt"
                          # Specify the interface to check
                          INTERFACE="usewebinterfacehere"
                          
                          # Get the current WAN IP address
                          CURRENT_IP=$(ifconfig $INTERFACE | grep 'inet ' | awk '{print $2}')
                          
                          # Check if the previous IP file exists
                          if [ -f "$PREVIOUS_IP_FILE" ]; then
                              # Read the previous IP address
                              PREVIOUS_IP=$(cat "$PREVIOUS_IP_FILE")
                          
                              # Compare the current IP with the previous IP
                              if [ "$CURRENT_IP" != "$PREVIOUS_IP" ]; then
                                  echo "IP address has changed from $PREVIOUS_IP to $CURRENT_IP"
                                  # Log the change to the log file
                                  echo "$(date): IP address changed from $PREVIOUS_IP to $CURRENT_IP" >> "$LOG_FILE"
                                  # Update the previous IP file with the new IP
                                  echo "$CURRENT_IP" > "$PREVIOUS_IP_FILE"
                              fi
                          else
                              # If the file does not exist, create it and store the current IP
                              echo "$CURRENT_IP" > "$PREVIOUS_IP_FILE"
                          fi
                          
                          
                          GertjanG J Bob.DigB 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • GertjanG Offline
                            Gertjan @jrey
                            last edited by Gertjan

                            @jrey (Bob) said in Logging my daily changing WAN-address:

                            Is there a package where I can log only my dynamic IP-address on WAN?

                            World's most simple solution : your mail box. This means you have the WAN IP thus a possible remote access possible where ever your are.
                            The setup :

                            Set one up here :

                            4efbaf1f-a1dc-4a03-87ba-bbae97d776f8-image.png

                            and set up this :

                            87084091-a50a-400c-83b1-f7a99292e76c-image.png

                            and done.

                            edit : no script, no maintenance.

                            No "help me" PM's please. Use the forum, the community will thank you.
                            Edit : and where are the logs ??

                            J Bob.DigB 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • J Offline
                              jrey @jrey
                              last edited by jrey

                              @Bob.Dig

                              revised
                              actually that first echo "IP address has changed .." you want to remove that line or the cron job will attempt to email the output and typically that emailing service is not available.

                              and if you want to trim the file to when it hits 1000 lines something like this in that same if statement should do the trick .

                              revised sample so the previous IP file and log go to /var/log
                              commented out the echo (I don't have cron email configured)
                              and added a trim the file back to the last 10 lines when it hits 1000 line

                              
                              # File to store the previous IP address
                              PREVIOUS_IP_FILE="/var/log/previous_ip.txt"
                              # Log file to record changes
                              LOG_FILE="/var/log/ip_change_log.txt"
                              # Specify the interface to check
                              INTERFACE="usewaninterfacehere"
                              
                              # Get the current WAN IP address
                              CURRENT_IP=$(ifconfig $INTERFACE | grep 'inet ' | awk '{print $2}')
                              
                              # Check if the previous IP file exists
                              if [ -f "$PREVIOUS_IP_FILE" ]; then
                                  # Read the previous IP address
                                  PREVIOUS_IP=$(cat "$PREVIOUS_IP_FILE")
                              
                                  # Compare the current IP with the previous IP
                                  if [ "$CURRENT_IP" != "$PREVIOUS_IP" ]; then
                                      # uncomment the following line if your cron is configured to email job output
                                      # echo "IP address has changed from $PREVIOUS_IP to $CURRENT_IP"
                              
                                      # Log the change to the log file
                                      echo "$(date): IP address changed from $PREVIOUS_IP to $CURRENT_IP" >> "$LOG_FILE"
                                      # Update the previous IP file with the new IP
                                      echo "$CURRENT_IP" > "$PREVIOUS_IP_FILE"
                              
                                      # Check the number of lines in the log file
                                      LINE_COUNT=$(wc -l < "$LOG_FILE")
                                      if [ "$LINE_COUNT" -ge 1000 ]; then
                                          # Trim the log file to keep only the last 10 lines
                                          tail -n 10 "$LOG_FILE" > "$LOG_FILE.tmp" && mv "$LOG_FILE.tmp" "$LOG_FILE"
                                      fi
                                  fi
                              else
                                  # If the file does not exist, create it and store the current IP
                                  echo "$CURRENT_IP" > "$PREVIOUS_IP_FILE"
                              fi
                              
                              

                              to test since I'm on a static IP I did the following
                              created the script in /usr/local/pkg
                              made it executable chmod 755 (whatever you called it). in my test I used mywanwatcher.sh
                              run the script confirmed the file "previous" file was created in /var/log
                              edit the "previous" Ip recorded there to simulate the IP would change
                              run the script again. log file created and tells me that
                              at the date/time IP address changed from xx to yy

                              No I'm not testing the 1000 line trimmer

                              just change the INTERFACE variable at the top - should be fine.

                              works as expect ๐Ÿ˜Š

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                              • J Offline
                                jrey @Gertjan
                                last edited by

                                @Gertjan said in Logging my daily changing WAN-address:

                                your mail box

                                A log or clutter of email are very different things. maybe Bob has some other use for the logged information other than just a notification?

                                The original request was "where I can log", and not "where I can get notified when"
                                At least now there is a choice and in fact nothing to say you could not do both.

                                Personally if wanted this information logged I'd send it to syslog - on the other hand not sure what the reason for logging or notifying when the WAN changes would be in the first place. I'm on a static IP, but I'm sure Bob must have some reason for the "where can I log" request.
                                Do one, do both, do nothing, and at the end of the day - really up to Bob how to proceed with the various options presented.

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                                • Bob.DigB Offline
                                  Bob.Dig LAYER 8 @Gertjan
                                  last edited by Bob.Dig

                                  @Gertjan As explained before, I will get flooded with emails about some vpn gateway going down. I have those configured as failover and/or load-balancing and a lot of them.

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                                  • Bob.DigB Offline
                                    Bob.Dig LAYER 8 @jrey
                                    last edited by Bob.Dig

                                    @jrey said in Logging my daily changing WAN-address:

                                    schedule it with cron at some reasonable interval (every 5 minutes)

                                    Thanks jrey but this is no a slick as the old solution, which would be triggered only on a PPPoE reconnect.

                                    Also I am not in need for solution anymore because I will change my setup shortly to have another router before pfSense (again) and with that, I get good "logging" from that (via email) and I don't need do do PPPoE on pfSense anymore. This has not to with anything talked about in this thread, it is just a "design" decision. ๐Ÿ˜‰

                                    J 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • J Offline
                                      jrey @Bob.Dig
                                      last edited by

                                      @Bob.Dig
                                      No worries.

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