Provided by: argus-client_3.0.8.2-6.2ubuntu1_amd64 bug

NAME

       rarc - ra client resource file.

SYNOPSIS

       rarc

DESCRIPTION

       Ra*  clients will open this file if its in the users $HOME directory, or in the $ARGUSHOME
       directory, and parse it to set common configuration options.  All of these values will  be
       overriden  by  options  set  on  the  command line, or in the file specified using the '-F
       conffile' option.

       Values can be quoted to make string  denotation  easier,  however,  the  parser  does  not
       require  that  string  values be quoted.  To support this, the parse will remove " (double
       quote) characters from input strings, so do not use this character in strings themselves.

       Values specified as "" will be treated as a NULL string, and the parser  will  ignore  the
       variable setting.

RA_ARGUS_SERVER

       All  ra* clients can attach to a remote server, and collect argus data in real time.  This
       variable can be a name or a dot notation IP address.  Optionally you can  specify  a  port
       number using a ':' and then providing the port number desired.

       RA_ARGUS_SERVER=localhost:561

RA_SOURCE_PORT

       You  can  change  the  default  source  port value that will be used on remote TCP and UDP
       connections, using this variable.  When you specify the remote server using the -S option,
       when you don't specify a port number, this is the port number it will use.

       The default port number is 561.

       RA_SOURCE_PORT=561

PID FILE SUPPORT

       Any  ra*  program  can  generate  a  pid  file, which can be used to control the number of
       instances that the system can support.

       Creating a system pid file may require priviledges that may not be inappropriate  for  all
       cases.   By  specifying  RA_PID_PATH,  you can create personal pid files that will enforce
       your own policy for your own use of the ra* programs.

       When configured to generate a pid file for a ra* program, if a file called ra*.pid  (where
       ra*  is  the  name  of the program in question) exists in the RA_PID_PATH directory, and a
       program exists with a pid that matches the one contained in the  file,  then  the  program
       will not start.  If the pid does not exist, then the ra* program replaces the value in the
       file, with its own pid.   If a pid file does not exist, then the ra* program  will  create
       it  in  the  RA_PID_PATH  directory,  if  it  can.  The end result is that the system will
       support only one instanace of the program, based on name, running at a time.

       The default value is to not generate a pid.   The  default  path  for  the  pid  file,  is
       /var/run.

       No Commandline equivalent

       RA_SET_PID="no"
       RA_PID_PATH="/var/run"

RA_OUTPUT_FILE

       All ra* clients can support writing output as Argus Records into a file or stdout.  Stdout
       is specified as '-'.

       RA_OUTPUT_FILE="filename"

RA_TIMERANGE

       All ra* clients can support input filtering on a time range. The format is:
            timeSpecification[-timeSpecification]

       where the format of a timeSpecification can be:
            [[[yy/]mm/]dd.]hh[:mm[:ss]]
            [yy/]mm/dd

       RA_TIMERANGE="55/12/04.00:00:01-55/12/04.23:59:59"
       RA_TIMERANGE="12/04-12/05"

RA_RUN_TIME

       All ra* clients can support running for a number of seconds, while attached  to  a  remote
       source  of  argus  data.  This is a type of polling.  The default is zero (0), which means
       run indefinately.

       RA_RUN_TIME=0

RA_PRINT_MAN_RECORDS

       Specify if ra* clients should print management records by default.  This does  not  affect
       management record processing, nor down stream management record propagation.

       Commandline equivalents: -M [no]man

       RA_PRINT_MAN_RECORDS=no RA_PRINT_EVENT_RECORDS=no

RA_PRINT_LABELS

       Most  ra*  clients  are  designed  to  print  argus records out in ASCII, with each client
       supporting its own output formats.  For ra() like clients,  this  variable  will  generate
       column  headers  as  labels.   The  number  is the number of lines between repeated header
       labeling.  Setting this value to zero (0) will cause the labels to be  printed  once.   If
       you don't want labels,  comment this line out, delete it or set the value to -1.

       RA_PRINT_LABELS=0

RA_FIELD_DELIMITER

       Most  ra*  clients  are  designed  to  print  argus records out in ASCII, with each client
       supporting its own output formats.  For ra() like clients, this variable can  overide  the
       default  field  delimiter,  which  are variable spans of space (' '), to be any character.
       The most common are expected to be '' for tabs, and ',' for comma separated fields.

       RA_FIELD_DELIMITER=','

RA_PRINT_NAMES

       For ra(1) like clients, this variable will control the translation of various  numbers  to
       names,  such as address hostnames, port service names and/or protocol names.  There can be
       a huge performance impact with name lookup, so the default is to not resolve hostnames.

       RA_PRINT_NAMES=port

       Other valid options are none to print no names, proto to  translate  the  protocol  names,
       port to translate port names, and all to translate all the fields.  An invalid option will
       default to port, silently.

RA_CIDR_ADDRESS_FORMAT

       Use this variable to specify whether ra() clients, when  printing  numeric  IP  addresses,
       will  print  them  as  CIDR  addresses,  or not.  CIDR notation is constructed from the IP
       address and the prefix size, the latter being the number of leading 1 bits of the  routing
       prefix.  The  IP  address  is  expressed according to the standards of IPv4 or IPv6. It is
       followed by a separator character, the forward slash (/) character, and  the  prefix  size
       expressed as a decimal number.

       Argus  IPv4  data  contains  the CIDR mask length, when its less than 32, and ra* programs
       will by default provides the "/masklen" suffix when the mask is less than 32.

       This maybe confusing for some data processors, which would rather not see  the  "/masklen"
       never,  or  all  the  time.   Use  this  option to specify changes in the default printing
       stratgy.

       Accepatable values for this variable are:
           "no"     -  do not provide the CIDR mask length (legacy mode) [default]
           "yes"    -  print CIDR mask length when less than 32
           "strict" -  always print CIDR mask length

       RA_CIDR_ADDRESS_FORMAT="no"

RA_ASN_PRINT_FORMAT

       All ra() clients can print and process AS Numbers that have  been  added  to  the  records
       through  metadata  labeling,  or  were  a part of the original Netflow to argus conversion
       process..

       RFC 5396 specifies 3 formats for  representing  AS  Numbers,  and  all  3  are  acceptable
       formats. These format are:
           "asplain" - 2 and 4-byte ASNs are printed as decimal integers.
           "asdot+"  - 2 and 4-byte ASNs are printed using a dot notation.
           "asdot"   - 2 byte ASNs are printed as decimal, and 4-byte ASNs
                       are printed using a dotted notation..

       The default is 'asplain'.

       No Commandline equivalent

       RA_ASN_PRINT_FORMAT="asplain"

RA_PRINT_RESPONSE_DATA

       For  ra()  like  clients, this variable will include the response data that is provided by
       Argus.  This is protocol and state specific.

       RA_PRINT_RESPONSE_DATA=no

RA_PRINT_UNIX_TIME

       For ra() like clients, this variable will force the timestamp to be in Unix  time  format,
       which is an integer representing the number of elapsed seconds since the epoch.

       RA_PRINT_UNIX_TIME=no

RA_TIME_FORMAT

       For  ra()  like  clients,  the  format  that  is used to print timestamps, is based on the
       strftime() library call, with an extension to print fractions of a sec  using  "%f".   The
       default  is  "%T.%f".   You can overide this default time format by setting this variable.
       This string must conform to the format specified in  strftime().   Malformed  strings  can
       generate  interesting  output,  so  be  aware with this one, and don't forget the '.' when
       doing fractions of a second.

       RA_TIME_FORMAT="%T.%f"

RA_TZ

       The timezone used for timestamps is specified by the  tzset()  library  routines,  and  is
       normally  specified by factors such as the TZ environment variable found on most machines.
       You can override the TZ  environment  variable  by  specifying  a  time  zone  using  this
       variable.  The format of this string must conform to the format specified by tzset(3).

       RA_TZ="EST5EDT4,M3.2.0/02,M11.1.0/02"
       RA_TZ="PST8PDT"

RA_USEC_PRECISION

       For ra() like clients, this variable is used to override the time format of the timestamp.
       This variable specifies the  number  of  decimal  places  that  will  be  printed  as  the
       fractional  part  of the time.  Argus collects usec precision, and so a maximum value of 6
       is supported.  To not print the fractional part, specify the value zero (0).

       RA_USEC_PRECISION=6

RA_USERDATA_ENCODE

       Argus can capture user data, and the argus clients can print,  merge,  filter,  and  strip
       user  data from argus records.  When printing out the user data contents, using tools such
       as ra.1, the type of encoding used to print the buffers can be  specified  here.  This  is
       available because many user data buffers are not printable text, and other representations
       may be more appropriate.

       Supported values are "Ascii", "Obfuscate", "Hex", "Encode32" or "Encode64".   The  default
       is "Ascii".

       Obfuscate  is  an  extension  to  the  Ascii print, that attempts to over-write plain text
       passwords, encountered in the user data, with 'x's.

       Commandline equivalent: -M printer=<printer>

       RA_USERDATA_ENCODE=Ascii

RA_FILTER

       You can provide a filter expression here, if you like.  It should  be  limited  to  2K  in
       length.  The default is to not filter.  See ra(1) for the format of the filter expression.

       RA_FILTER=""

RA_FILTER_TIMEOUT

       The  filter  is  compiled  in  a  separate  process,  and  all ra* programs need to wait a
       reasonable time for the filter compiler to finish, or time out and return an error, in the
       case  of a fatal error in compiling.  Many systems are very busy, and could benefit from a
       prolonged wait period, however, this timeout value could generate  a  significant  startup
       wait state for programs that have poor filter specifications, if the timer is too long.

       The current default is 1.5 seconds, but you can set this to any amount of time.

       No Commandline equivalent

       RA_FILTER_TIMEOUT=1.5

SASL SUPPPORT

       When  argus  is compiled with SASL support, ra* clients may be required to authenticate to
       the argus server before the argus will accept the connection.  This  variable  will  allow
       one  to  set  the user and authorization id's, if needed.  Although not the best practice,
       you can provide a password through the RA_AUTH_PASS variable.  If you do this, you  should
       protect the contents of this file.  The format for this variable is:

       RA_USER_AUTH="user_id/authorization_id"
       RA_AUTH_PASS="password"

       The  clients can specify a part of the negotiation of the security policy that argus uses.
       This is controlled through the use of a minimum and maximum allowable protection  strength
       values.  Set these variable to control this policy.

       RA_MIN_SSF=0
       RA_MAX_SSF=128

RA_DEBUG_LEVEL

       If  compiled  to  support  this option, ra* clients are capable of generating a lot of use
       [full | less | whatever] debug information.  The default value is zero (0).

       RA_DEBUG_LEVEL=0

RA_CONNECT_TIME

       Some ra style clients use a non-blocking method to connect to remote data sources, so  the
       user  many  need  to  control  how  long to wait if a remote source doesn't respond.  This
       variable sets the number of seconds to wait.  This number should be set  to  a  reasonable
       value (5 < value < 60).  The default value is 10 seconds.

       RA_CONNECT_TIME=10

RA_SORT_ALGORITHMS

       Many  ra*  programs  sort  records  as  a part of their function.  Programs like rasort.1,
       providing explicit command-line options to specify the sort algorithms  and  their  order,
       using the ยด-m field [field ...]' option.

       Use  this  configuration directive to specify the default sorting algorithm table for your
       ra* programs.  The default sort algorithm is record start time "stime".

       RA_SORT_ALGORITHMS="stime "

RA_TIMEOUT_INTERVAL

       Some ra* clients have a timeout based function.  Ratop, as an example, times out flows and
       removes  them  from   screen  at  a  fixed  interval.   This variable can be set using the
       RA_TIMEOUT_INTERVAL variable, which is a float in seconds. 60.0 seconds is the default.

       RA_TIMEOUT_INTERVAL=60.0

RA_UPDATE_INTERVAL

       Some ra* clients have an interval based function.  Ratop, as an example, can  refresh  the
       screen  at  a  fixed  interval.   This  variable  can  be set using the RA_UPDATE_INTERVAL
       variable, which is a float in seconds.  0.5 seconds is the default.

       RA_UPDATE_INTERVAL=0.5

RA_PRINT_ETHERNET_VENDORS

       All ra* clients have the ability to print vendor names for the  vendor  part  of  ethernet
       addresses that are in flow records.  ra* programs get its strings for the ethernet vendors
       using Wireshark 'manuf' files. One is provided with the distribution, and  installed  into
       /usr/local/argus.

       No Commandline equivalent

       RA_PRINT_ETHERNET_VENDORS="no"
       RA_ETHERNET_VENDORS="/usr/local/argus/wireshark.manuf.txt"

RA_DELEGATED_IP

       All ra* clients have the ability to print country codes for the IP addresses that are in a
       flow record.  Country codes are generated from the ARIN  delegated  address  space  files.
       Specify the location of your DELEGATED_IP file here.

       No Commandline equivalent

       RA_DELEGATED_IP="/usr/local/argus/delegated-ipv4-latest"

RA_RELIABLE_CONNECT

       All  ra* clients can reliably connect to remote data sources.  This causes the ra* program
       to try to reconnect to lost remote sources every 5 seconds, indefinately. This causes  ra*
       program to not terminate but retry connection attempts when they fail.

       This feature is implemented using threads, and so threads support must be compiled in.

       No Commandline equivalent

       RA_RELIABLE_CONNECT=no

MYSQL SUPPORT

       Many  ra*  clients can connect and use a MySQL database, either reading for writing.  This
       may require references to remotes database hosts, databases,  tables,  and  mysql  account
       names and passwords.

       Default values for these variables can be set here.  support must be compiled in.

       Commandline equivalents:
         -r mysql://[username[:password]@]hostname[:port]/database/tablename
         -w mysql://[username[:password]@]hostname[:port]/database/tablename
         -u username:password

       RA_DATABASE="argus"
       RA_DB_TABLE="table"
       RA_DB_USER="carter"
       RA_DB_PASS="whatever"

       Those  ra*  clients  that  can  create database tables may need to specify a table type or
       rather, a database engine other than the defaul, MyISAM.

       Commandline equivalents:
         -M mysql_engine=tableType
            Current tableTypes are
               MyISAM
               InnoDB
               Merge
               Memory
               Archive
               NDB
               Federated
               CSV

       MYSQL_DB_ENGINE="MyISAM"

COLOR SUPPORT

       For ra* programs that  use  curses,  these  variables  defined  color  schemes  and  color
       assignments.

       Argus uses a sixteen color palette, with 8 monotone and 8 accent colors, plus 16 colors of
       gray. Currently these color values are hard coded.   New  versions  should  allow  you  to
       provide color definitions for all internal values using a 256 Xterm color wheel, to assign
       foreground and background colors. But we're not there yet

       RA_COLOR_SUPPORT="yes"
       RA_COLOR_CONFIG="/usr/carter/.racolor.conf"

DIRECTION SUPPORT

       Many ra* clients process flow records based on source and destination properties.  TCP and
       UDP  ports  values can be used to assign direction, and are best used for well-known ports
       (< 1024), values that are in the /etc/services defintions, and the reserved ports (> 1023,
       < 49151).

       The syntax is:
           RA_PORT_DIRECTION="services"
           RA_PORT_DIRECTION="services,wellknown"
           RA_PORT_DIRECTION="services,wellknown,registered"

       We  recommend  the  wellknown and services options, as they are a bit more discriminating.
       If there are ports that you know are services that are in the registered  port  range,  we
       suggest  that  you  add them to your /etc/services file rather than include the registered
       port range; only because the registered range is so large. However, this option is applied
       only  to  flow  in which the direction is ambiguous, and as such, corrections based on the
       logic should have minimum effect on analytics.

       RA_PORT_DIRECTION="services,wellknown"

       Sites use locality for a number of features, such as  access control, and this support  is
       intended to support visualization, and analytics.

       Currently,  you can identify a collection of IP addresses that represent RA_LOCAL, and are
       specified using an iana-address-file formatted file.  (See ralabel.conf)

       RA_LOCAL="/usr/local/argus/local.addrs"

       When locality information is available, programs like ra(),  and  as  the  assignement  of
       source  when  there  is  ambiguity in the flow record as to who is the actual initiator or
       receiver of the flow.

       When locality information is available, programs like  ra(),  and  ratop()  can  use  that
       information to make display decisions, such

       RA_LOCAL_DIRECTION  provides  the  logic for using the locality information to assign flow
       direction.  You can force the  local  address  to  be  either  the  source  (src)  or  the
       destination (dst).

       The syntax is:
           RA_LOCAL_DIRECTION="local:src"
           RA_LOCAL_DIRECTION="local:dst"

       RA_LOCAL_DIRECTION="suggest:src"
       RA_LOCAL_DIRECTION="force:src

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright (c) 2000-2016 QoSient. All rights reserved.

SEE ALSO

       ra(1)