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diff --git a/docs/configuration/system/flow-accounting.rst b/docs/configuration/system/flow-accounting.rst new file mode 100644 index 00000000..f09c1c9a --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/configuration/system/flow-accounting.rst @@ -0,0 +1,203 @@ +.. _flow-accounting: + +############### +Flow Accounting +############### + +VyOS supports flow-accounting for both IPv4 and IPv6 traffic. The system acts +as a flow exporter, and you are free to use it with any compatible collector. + +Flows can be exported via two different protocols: NetFlow (versions 5, 9 and +10/IPFIX) and sFlow. Additionally, you may save flows to an in-memory table +internally in a router. + +.. warning:: You need to disable the in-memory table in production environments! + Using :abbr:`IMT (In-Memory Table)` may lead to heavy CPU overloading and + unstable flow-accounting behavior. + + +NetFlow / IPFIX +=============== +NetFlow is a feature that was introduced on Cisco routers around 1996 that +provides the ability to collect IP network traffic as it enters or exits an +interface. By analyzing the data provided by NetFlow, a network administrator +can determine things such as the source and destination of traffic, class of +service, and the causes of congestion. A typical flow monitoring setup (using +NetFlow) consists of three main components: + +* **exporter**: aggregates packets into flows and exports flow records towards + one or more flow collectors +* **collector**: responsible for reception, storage and pre-processing of flow + data received from a flow exporter +* **application**: analyzes received flow data in the context of intrusion + detection or traffic profiling, for example + +For connectionless protocols as like ICMP and UDP, a flow is considered +complete once no more packets for this flow appear after configurable timeout. + +NetFlow is usually enabled on a per-interface basis to limit load on the router +components involved in NetFlow, or to limit the amount of NetFlow records +exported. + +Configuration +============= + +In order for flow accounting information to be collected and displayed for an +interface, the interface must be configured for flow accounting. + +.. cfgcmd:: set system flow-accounting interface <interface> + + Configure and enable collection of flow information for the interface + identified by `<interface>`. + + You can configure multiple interfaces which whould participate in flow + accounting. + +.. note:: Will be recorded only packets/flows on **incoming** direction in + configured interfaces. + + +By default, recorded flows will be saved internally and can be listed with the +CLI command. You may disable using the local in-memory table with the command: + +.. cfgcmd:: set system flow-accounting disable-imt + + Internally, in flow-accounting processes exist a buffer for data exchanging + between core process and plugins (each export target is a separated plugin). + If you have high traffic levels or noted some problems with missed records + or stopping exporting, you may try to increase a default buffer size (10 + MiB) with the next command: + +.. cfgcmd:: set system flow-accounting buffer-size <buffer size> + + In case, if you need to catch some logs from flow-accounting daemon, you may + configure logging facility: + +.. cfgcmd:: set system flow-accounting syslog-facility <facility> + + TBD + +Flow Export +----------- + +In addition to displaying flow accounting information locally, one can also +exported them to a collection server. + +NetFlow +^^^^^^^ + +.. cfgcmd:: set system flow-accounting netflow version <version> + + There are multiple versions available for the NetFlow data. The `<version>` + used in the exported flow data can be configured here. The following + versions are supported: + + * **5** - Most common version, but restricted to IPv4 flows only + * **9** - NetFlow version 9 (default) + * **10** - :abbr:`IPFIX (IP Flow Information Export)` as per :rfc:`3917` + +.. cfgcmd:: set system flow-accounting netflow server <address> + + Configure address of NetFlow collector. NetFlow server at `<address>` can + be both listening on an IPv4 or IPv6 address. + +.. cfgcmd:: set system flow-accounting netflow source-ip <address> + + IPv4 or IPv6 source address of NetFlow packets + +.. cfgcmd:: set system flow-accounting netflow engine-id <id> + + NetFlow engine-id which will appear in NetFlow data. The range is 0 to 255. + +.. cfgcmd:: set system flow-accounting netflow sampling-rate <rate> + + Use this command to configure the sampling rate for flow accounting. The + system samples one in every `<rate>` packets, where `<rate>` is the value + configured for the sampling-rate option. The advantage of sampling every n + packets, where n > 1, allows you to decrease the amount of processing + resources required for flow accounting. The disadvantage of not sampling + every packet is that the statistics produced are estimates of actual data + flows. + + Per default every packet is sampled (that is, the sampling rate is 1). + +.. cfgcmd:: set system flow-accounting netflow timeout expiry-interval <interval> + + Specifies the interval at which Netflow data will be sent to a collector. As + per default, Netflow data will be sent every 60 seconds. + + You may also additionally configure timeouts for different types of + connections. + +.. cfgcmd:: set system flow-accounting netflow max-flows <n> + + If you want to change the maximum number of flows, which are tracking + simultaneously, you may do this with this command (default 8192). + +sFlow +^^^^^ + +.. cfgcmd:: set system flow-accounting sflow server <address> + + Configure address of sFlow collector. sFlow server at `<address>` can + be an IPv4 or IPv6 address. But you cannot export to both IPv4 and + IPv6 collectors at the same time! + +.. cfgcmd:: set system flow-accounting sflow sampling-rate <rate> + + Enable sampling of packets, which will be transmitted to sFlow collectors. + +.. cfgcmd:: set system flow-accounting sflow agent-address <address> + + Configure a sFlow agent address. It can be IPv4 or IPv6 address, but you + must set the same protocol, which is used for sFlow collector addresses. By + default, using router-id from BGP or OSPF protocol, or the primary IP + address from the first interface. + +Example: +-------- + +NetFlow v5 example: + +.. code-block:: none + + set system flow-accounting netflow engine-id 100 + set system flow-accounting netflow version 5 + set system flow-accounting netflow server 192.168.2.10 port 2055 + +Operation +========= + +Once flow accounting is configured on an interfaces it provides the ability to +display captured network traffic information for all configured interfaces. + +.. opcmd:: show flow-accounting interface <interface> + + Show flow accounting information for given `<interface>`. + + .. code-block:: none + + vyos@vyos:~$ show flow-accounting interface eth0 + IN_IFACE SRC_MAC DST_MAC SRC_IP DST_IP SRC_PORT DST_PORT PROTOCOL TOS PACKETS FLOWS BYTES + ---------- ----------------- ----------------- ------------------------ --------------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ----- --------- ------- ------- + eth0 00:53:01:a8:28:ac ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff 192.0.2.2 255.255.255.255 5678 5678 udp 0 1 1 178 + eth0 00:53:01:b2:2f:34 33:33:ff:00:00:00 fe80::253:01ff:feb2:2f34 ff02::1:ff00:0 0 0 ipv6-icmp 0 2 1 144 + eth0 00:53:01:1a:b4:53 33:33:ff:00:00:00 fe80::253:01ff:fe1a:b453 ff02::1:ff00:0 0 0 ipv6-icmp 0 1 1 72 + eth0 00:53:01:b2:22:48 00:53:02:58:a2:92 192.0.2.100 192.0.2.14 40152 22 tcp 16 39 1 2064 + eth0 00:53:01:c8:33:af ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff 192.0.2.3 255.255.255.255 5678 5678 udp 0 1 1 154 + eth0 00:53:01:b2:22:48 00:53:02:58:a2:92 192.0.2.100 192.0.2.14 40006 22 tcp 16 146 1 9444 + eth0 00:53:01:b2:22:48 00:53:02:58:a2:92 192.0.2.100 192.0.2.14 0 0 icmp 192 27 1 4455 + +.. opcmd:: show flow-accounting interface <interface> host <address> + + Show flow accounting information for given `<interface>` for a specific host + only. + + .. code-block:: none + + vyos@vyos:~$ show flow-accounting interface eth0 host 192.0.2.14 + IN_IFACE SRC_MAC DST_MAC SRC_IP DST_IP SRC_PORT DST_PORT PROTOCOL TOS PACKETS FLOWS BYTES + ---------- ----------------- ----------------- ----------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ----- --------- ------- ------- + eth0 00:53:01:b2:22:48 00:53:02:58:a2:92 192.0.2.100 192.0.2.14 40006 22 tcp 16 197 2 12940 + eth0 00:53:01:b2:22:48 00:53:02:58:a2:92 192.0.2.100 192.0.2.14 40152 22 tcp 16 94 1 4924 + eth0 00:53:01:b2:22:48 00:53:02:58:a2:92 192.0.2.100 192.0.2.14 0 0 icmp 192 36 1 5877 |