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    Bounty $200: Monitor bandwidth use on IP adresses. NOW $250

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    • I
      imoex2
      last edited by

      i will contrib $25 to this bounty

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • M
        MJK
        last edited by

        Comment for Scott, in case it's of any interest:

        While still messing with the non-creation of the INDEX files, I sometimes tweaked that actual BANDWIDTHD.CONF file manually. If this file is updated via the GUI, I noticed the following:
          - If the LAN/WAN option is changed, then internal subnet is automatically inserted (LAN), or removed (WAN). Nice!
          - The SKIP_INTERVALS, GRAPH (draw graphs), and META_REFRESH parameters are not inserted to the CONF file. However, they are retained (somewhere?) for the GUI!
          - All other parameters are retained in the CONF file, as per the GUI.

        Re the persistent non-updating of the INDEX files:
          - I looked, briefly, at the source.
          - There's one proc to create "empty" INDEX files, with a message that there's no data to graph - I'm assuming that proc is not being used (though ASS-U-ME could be tragic!!).
          - The proc "MakeIndexPages()" is defined in GRAPH.C, and called from BANDWIDTHD.C. It refreshes the INDEX files, and the SUBNET-xxx-xxx.HTML files. If it has trouble opening the INDEX files, a message should appear in the LOG files.

        In my case:
          - I get no messages in the LOG file. Maybe "logging" is broken?
          - The INDEX.HTML files are created/overwritten - based on the time-stamp. If I delete the files, they're re-created. But, no data is retained in them. Perhaps some data is written, but the "closing" is broken?
          - The SUBNET-xx-xx.HTML files are NOT refreshed, through the code should attempt to re-build these also.
          - …suggesting that the proc blows up at an early stage??
          - File-Permissions look OK to me.
          - Inserting some traces, and re-compiling the package is probably beyond me...

        ...just in case anything here rings bells with others who have had similar experiences...

        - Mike

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • D
          dakiller
          last edited by

          Hi, thanks for this great package, I have it up running just fine but have a little problem

          I got 2 WAN's and a wired LAN and a wireless LAN that is bridged to the wired and as such with monitoring on the LAN I am seeing the local traffic between the wired and wireless. I see that there is a field to enter in filter rules but I got no idea how to format them to ignore local traffic. Googling hasn't turned up anything that I can follow, so has anyone got a link to a page that shows all the options and how to use them or can even just give me the command needed to filter local traffic.

          Thanks,
          Dan.

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • S
            sullrich
            last edited by

            Thats a good question.  I reinstalled the FreeBSD package and it did not contain a man page.  I'll poke around and see if I can locate something.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • S
              sullrich
              last edited by

              Here is the contents of the readme file.

              Programmed by David Hinkle, Commissioned by DerbyTech of Illinois. 
              Special thanks goes to Brice Beaman at brice@beamans.org for releasing
              the software, testing and debugging, Blaze at ts@spective.net for his
              excellent logo, Andreas Henriksson for polishing, testing, fixing, and
              all the guys at havok for distributing clue.

              LISCENCE

              You may use this software under any version of the GPL that is current
              as of your download.  For exact terms and conditions please see www.gnu.org.

              WHAT IT IS

              Bandwidthd is a UNIX daemon/Windows service for graphing the traffic
              generated by each machine on several configurable subnets.  It is much
              easier to configure than MRTG, and provides significantly more useful
              information.  MRTG only tells you how much bandwidth you are using,
              Bandwidthd tells you that, and who is using it.

              Each IP address that has moved any significant volume of traffic has its
              own graph.  The graphs are color coded to help you figure out at a glance
              if your user is surfing the web, or surfing Kazaa.

              Bandwidthd is targeted to run on my routing platforms.  It is very low
              overhead.  Easily graphing small business traffic on a 133Mhz Elan 486
              every 2.5 minutes. My entire ISP (2000-3000 IP addresses across 4 states)
              is graphed on a Celeron 450 every 10 minutes.

              PORTABILITY

              Bandwidthd compiles clean on:

              ix86 Solaris 9
              Debian 2.2
              Fedora Core 2
              OpenBSD 3.4
              FreeBSD 4.8
              NetBSD 1.6.1
              AMD64 Fedora Core 3
              PPC G4 MacOSX 10.2

              Thanks goes to SourceForge for providing the test platforms.

              CONFIGURATION INSTRUCTIONS

              There are now two ways to install Bandwidthd.  The fast easy way, which uses
              the built in Bandwidthd graphing system to generate static HTML pages and graphs,
              and the much more complicated way that supports multiple sensors, stores it's
              data in a back end database, and generates reports and graphs with easily
              customized php scripts.

              If you are new to Bandwidthd I would recommend just installing it the following the
              instructions in the bandwidthd.conf file.  If you are interested in customizing
              your output or you need a more scalable solution, you can always come back and
              jump through the database hoops later.

              See "DATABASE SUPPORT" for information on Bandwidthd's advanced configuration.

              GRAPHING INTERVAL

              Bandwidthd defaults to graph up to 4000 local IPs every 200 seconds.  If you need
              to track more IPs, change IP_NUM in bandwidthd.h.

              The weekly graph updates every 10 minutes, monthly every hour, and yearly every
              12 hours.

              A graphing run will automatically be "skipped" if that last one isn't finished
              before the new one would begin.

              CDF LOGGING

              Bandwidthd can be made to log to CDF by setting "output_cdf" to true. This will
              now log out each interval's traffic, so you can import them into a database and
              use a tool like access to create your own graphs, or implement 95 percentile
              billing, for example.  Sending Bandwidthd a HUP will cause it to rotate it's logs.
              It will rotate out 5 times before deleting the oldest log file.

              These logs are log.1.0.cdf-log.1.5.cdf for daily, log.2.0.cdf-log.2.5.cdf for
              weekly, etc, etc.

              If you are upgrading from an older version of Bandwidthd from before all 4 logs
              rotated you must rename your log files for the new Bandwidthd to find them:

              mv log.cdf log.1.0.cdf
              mv log.1.cdf log.1.1.cdf
              mv log.2.cdf log.1.2.cdf
              mv log.3.cdf log.1.3.cdf
              mv log.4.cdf log.1.4.cdf
              mv log.5.cdf log.1.5.cdf
              mv log2.cdf log.2.1.cdf
              mv log3.cdf log.3.1.cdf
              mv log4.cdf log.4.1.cdf

              The log format is best documented in the "StoreIPDataInCDF" function in
              bandwidthd.c.  As of this writing, it consists of one line for each  IP address
              for each interval.  The line contains only data for the previous interval.

              Fields:
              IP Address,Timestamp,Total Sent,Icmp Sent,Udp Sent,Tcp Sent,Ftp Sent,Http Sent, P2P Sent,Total Received,Icmp Received,Udp Received,Tcp Received,Ftp Received,Http Received, P2P Received

              HOW TO KEEP YOUR GRAPHS BETWEEN REBOOTS

              Following is the easy way to keep your graphs between reboots.  You can also opt
              to build and use bandwidthd with database support, as described in "DATABASE SUPPORT"
              below.

              In the bandwidthd.conf file set:
              output_cdf true
              recover_cdf true

              output_cdf will cause Bandwidthd to log all of it's data to the log.cdf file
              in it's directory.  recover_cdf will cause Bandwidthd to load that file when
              it starts.  You will also want to make a crontab entry like so:

              0 0 * * * * /bin/kill -HUP cat /var/run/bandwidthd.pid

              This will send Bandwidthd a HUP every night at midnight.  When Bandwidthd
              receives a HUP it schedules a rotation of it's log files during the next
              graphing run.  Daily log files rotate each HUP.  Weekly/Monthly/Yearly log
              files rotate every so many HUPs.  Log files get rotated out 5 times before
              deletion.

              Fyi, if you use killall instead of kill, each of the children will receive
              the HUP command twice, causing them to rotate their log files twice as
              often as they should.

              GRAPHING

              Also note that Bandwidthd does not bother to graph an IP that has transmitted
              less than 1Mbit of data.  It does however, include that IP in the table of IPs
              at the top of the page, so it's traffic can still be viewed.  This cutoff can be
              changed by modifying graph_cutoff in bandwidthd.conf.  "graph_cutoff" is in
              kilobytes.

              Graphing can be disabled by setting "graph" to false.  This will still log, but
              will use almost no ram or CPU cycles.

              COLOR CODES

              RED ICMP
              BROWN UDP
              YELLOW IP ENCAPSULATED (IP over IP, IPSEC, most VPN's)
              BLUE HTTP (Port 80 TCP, actually)
              PURPLE Peer2Peer (Lots of TCP ports generally used by P2P software)
              GREEN TCP

              SPECIFYING THE LIBPCAP FILTER

              if you'd like more control over what traffic is counted, you can specify a Manuel
              filter to be passed to libpcap.  You can use this to remove certain IPs or only
              graph certain IPs, or limit the graphs to certain kinds of traffic.  You should
              always specify "ip" in the filter.  For example:

              filter "ip and host 64.215.40.1"

              HOW TO IMPROVE PERFORANCE

              Bandwidthd's primary bottleneck in static HTML mode is the drawing of graphs for
              IP addresses.  To improve bandwidthd's performance, therefore, the only thing you
              can really do is reduce the number of graphs it has to draw in any given run. 
              Adjust graph_cutoff in the bandwidthd.conf file in order to tune out the IP addresses
              that don't use so much bandwidth.  These IP addresses will still have their data
              displayed in the table at the top of the page, so you can still see what's going
              on with them.

              Alternatively, you can choose to graph less often.  Bandwidthd automatically skips
              a graphing run if the last one is still going when the new one is scheduled to start. 
              If you'd like to graph less often than your server is capeable of, you can edit
              skip_intervals in bandwidthd.conf.  A value of 1means to skip every other interval,
              3 would mean to skip three intervals between each run.  This doesn't disable
              Bandwidthd's automatic skipping.

              Also, you can choose to deploy Bandwidthd with database support, which provides
              significant performance gains.

              DATABASE SUPPORT

              Since version 2.0, Bandwidthd now has support for external databases.  This system
              consists of 3 major parts:

              1. The Bandwidthd binary which acts as a sensor, recording traffic information and
              storing it in a database across the network or on the local host.  In this mode
              Bandwidthd uses very little ram and CPU. In addition, multiple sensors can record
              to the same database.

              2. The database system.  Currently Bandwidthd only supports Postgresql.

              3. The webserver and php application.  Bundled with Bandwidthd in the "phphtdocs"
              directory is a php application that reports on and graphs the contents of the database. 
              This has been designed to be easy to customize.  Everything is passed around on the urls,
              just tinker with it a little and you'll see how to generate custom graphs pretty easy.

              Using Bandwidthd with a database has many advantages, such as much lower overhead, because
              graphs are only graphed on demand.  And much more flexibility, SQL makes building new
              reports easy, and php+sql greatly improves the interactivity of the reports.

              My ISP has now switched over to the database driven version of bandwidthd entirely, we
              have half a dozen sensors sprinkled around the country, writing millions of data points a
              day on our customers into the system.

              INSTRUCTIONS

              As a prerequisite for these instructions, you must have Postgresql installed and working,
              as well as a web server that supports php.

              Database Setup:
              1. Create a database for Bandwidthd.  You will need to create users that can access the
              database remotely if you want remote sensors.

              2. Bandwidthd's schema is in "schema.postgresql".  "psql mydb username < schema.postgresql"
              should load it and create the 2 tables and 4 indexes.

              Bandwidthd Setup:
              1. Add the following lines to your bandwidthd.conf file:

              Standard postgres connect string, just like php, see postgres docs for

              details

              pgsql_connect_string "user = someuser dbname = mydb host = databaseserver.com"

              Arbitrary sensor name, I recommend the sensors fully qualified domain

              name

              sensor_id "sensor1.mycompany.com"

              Tells Bandwidthd to keep no data and preform no graphing locally

              graph false

              If this is set to true Bandwidthd will try to recover the daily log

              into the database.  If you set this true on purpose only do it once.

              Bandwidthd does not track the fact that it has already transferred

              certain records into the database.

              recover_cdf false

              4. Simply start bandwidthd, and after a few minutes data should start appearing in
              your database.  If not, check syslog for error messages.

              Web Server Setup:
              1. Copy the contents of phphtdocs into your web tree some where.
              2. Edit config.conf to set your db connect string

              You should now be able to access the web application and see you graphs.  All graphing
              is done by graph.php,  all parameters are passed to it in it's url.  You can create
              custom urls to pull custom graphs from your own index pages, or use the canned
              reporting system.

              In addition, you should schedule bd_pgsql_purge.sh to run every so often.  I recomend
              running it weekly.  This script outputs sql statements that aggregate the older
              data points in your database in order to reduce the amount of data that needs to
              be slogged through in order to generate yearly, monthly, and weekly graphs.

              Example:
              bd_pgsql_purge.sh | psql bandwidthd postgres

              Will connect to the bandwidthd database on local host as the user postgres and summarize
              the data.

              KNOWN BUGS AND TROUBLESHOOTING

              If Bandwidthd shows you nothing but a message saying "Bandwidthd has nothing to graph",
              that means it currently has recorded no data.  The cause is most likely one of these:
              1. It's first interval hasn't expired yet (2.5 minutes).
              2. It is still chewing through large CDF logs.
              3. Bandwidthd's host machine is on a switch and therefor isn't seeing any traffic not
                destined to or from or going through it.
              4. You don't have a subnet line.
              5. You have a subnet line but it doesn't match any of the packets Bandwidthd is seeing.
              6. You have a filter line that is filtering out all the traffic Bandwidthd could be seeing.

              Bandwidthd doesn't do a very good job of tracking ftp.  This is because only some ftp
              server software follows the rfc standard of sourceing all ftp transfers from port 20. 
              Surprisingly, Microsofts ftp daemon is compliant in this regard, whereas most open source
              daemons are not.

              Bandwidthd forks to perform it's graphing functions.  After this fork finishes it remains
              as a zombie until the next interval, at which time it is reaped by the main process. 
              This zombie is nothing to worry about, it's just an entry in the process table waiting
              to be deleted.  With the new weekly, monthly, yearly graphs you'll have up to 4 zombies now.

              By default, Bandwidthd now runs in promiscuous mode.  This means it can be used to monitor
              traffic not routing through it's host.  Just make sure that the host and the actual router
              are on the same hub (Not switch) and everything will be ok. Under some circumstances, traffic
              may get counted twice.  If traffic routes to the other router, then routes back out along
              the same wire, it may get counted twice by Bandwidthd.  This is much less of a problem than
              you might think, due to a little known packet called an "icmp redirect" that causes all packets
              after the first to go directly to it's target.  If you find that traffic looks like it's 
              getting counted twice, make sure you're not firewalling off the icmp redirects. If you find that
              you actually see none of this traffic, it may be because the icmp redirects cause it to ultimately
              end up going from one port on a switch to another, never touching your hub. If you want
              Bandwidthd to only see traffic actually going into and out of the host set "promiscuous" to
              false in bandwidthd.conf.

              Bandwidthd supports ethernet, Linux cooked sockets, raw, and token ring, and most ppp packet
              encapsulation.  If you get an "Unknown Datalink Type" error, Bandwidthd has not been programed
              to handle the physical encapsulation of the ip packets on that interface.  If you send me a
              sample capture and a copy paste of the error message I'll see if I can make bandwidthd work for you.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • D
                dakiller
                last edited by

                Thanks, but that doesn't explain how to write the filters

                I need something that is going to ignore all traffic from my lan subnet to my lan subnet

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • S
                  sullrich
                  last edited by

                  @dakiller:

                  Thanks, but that doesn't explain how to write the filters

                  I need something that is going to ignore all traffic from my lan subnet to my lan subnet

                  Sure it does…

                  SPECIFYING THE LIBPCAP FILTER

                  if you'd like more control over what traffic is counted, you can specify a Manuel
                  filter to be passed to libpcap.  You can use this to remove certain IPs or only
                  graph certain IPs, or limit the graphs to certain kinds of traffic.  You should
                  always specify "ip" in the filter.  For example:

                  filter "ip and host 64.215.40.1"

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • M
                    Merl
                    last edited by

                    Hello,

                    maybe someone have a ideea … i'was install the bandwidthd package correct. put the generate of index.html stops every time. all graphs a correct generated if i look
                    in the directory /usr/local/bandwidthd/htdocs but the index.html is not full created (html code) for show all graphs.

                    ok ... maybe someone have the same problem .. or know why i have this problem.

                    bye
                    Merl

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • M
                      MJK
                      last edited by

                      Merl,

                      As posted above, I have a similar problem. And others have had the same issues - going way back to the original development of the package. Sometimes, the problem "just disappears"! In my case, the INDEXn.HTML files are always 0 bytes in size. Are your files also empty, or do they have some contents?

                      I've looked through the relevant bits of the source code, and it looks quite good. Empty INDEX files is quite unexpected - the code should put a simple piece of HTML into them if there's no data to graph, or some more HTML if there is some data.

                      So, I'm about to try some traces in the code (if I can get to the stage of compiling it…as mentioned on another thread here), and see if that throws up any ideas. I'll post any findings.

                      - Mike

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • S
                        sullrich
                        last edited by

                        Since this bounty has been completed, I am closing this thread.  Post again in a new thread.

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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