Provided by: nfdump_1.6.18-2_amd64 bug

NAME

       nfcapd - netflow capture daemon

SYNOPSIS

       nfcapd [options]

DESCRIPTION

       nfcapd  is  the  netflow  capture  daemon of the nfdump tools. It reads netflow data from the network and
       stores it into files. The output file is automatically rotated and renamed every n minutes - typically  5
       min  -  according  the timestamp YYYYMMddhhmm of the interval e.g.  nfcapd.201107110845 contains the data
       from July 11th 2011 08:45 onward.

       Netflow version v1, v5, v7 and v9 and IPFIX are transparently supported.

       Extensions: nfcapd supports a large number of v9 tags. In order to optimise disk space  and  performance,
       v9  tags  are  grouped  into  a  number  of extensions which may or may not be stored into the data file.
       Therefore the v9 templates configured on the exporter may be tuned according the  collector.  Only  those
       tags common to both are stored into the data files.

       Sampling: By default, the sampling rate is set to 1 (unsampled) or to any given value specified by the -s
       cmd line option. If sampling information is found in the netflow stream, it overwrites the default value.
       Sampling  is  automatically  recognised when announced in v9 option templates (tags #34, #35 or #48, #49,
       #50 ) or in the unofficial v5 header hack.  Note: Not  all  platforms  (or  IOS/JunOS  versions)  support
       exporting  sampling  information  in  netflow  data,  even  if  sampling  is  configured.  The  number of
       bytes/packets in each netflow record is automatically multiplied by the sampling rate.  The total  number
       of  flows  is not changed as this is not accurate enough. (Small flows versus large flows) If the default
       sampling rate given by -s is negative, this will hard overwrite any device  specific  announced  sampling
       rates.

       NSEL/ASA Support: nfcapd can be compiled with NSEL/ASA support included. See notes on NSEL/ASA

       NEL (NAT Event logging): nfcapd can be compiled with CISCO NEL support included.  See notes on NEL.

OPTIONS

       -p portnum
          Specifies the port number to listen. Default port is 9995

       -b bindhost
          Specifies  the  hostname/IPv4/IPv6  address  to  bind  for  listening.  This can be an IP address or a
          hostname, resolving to an IP address attached  to  an  interface.   Defaults  to  any  available  IPv4
          interface, if not specified.

       -4 Forces nfcapd to listen on IPv4 addresses only. Can be used together with -b if a hostname has an IPv4
          and IPv6 address record.

       -6 Forces nfcapd to listen on IPv6 addresses only. Can be used together with -b if a hostname has an IPv4
          and IPv6 address record. Depending on the socket implementation -6 also accepts IPv4 data.

       -J MulticastGroup
          Join the specified IPv4 or IPv6 multicast group for listening.

       -R host[/port}
          Enable  packet  repeater.  Send all incoming packets to another host and port.  host is either a valid
          IPv4/IPv6 address, or a valid symbolic hostname, which resolves to a IPv6 or IPv4 address. port may be
          omitted  and  defaults  to  port 9995. Note: Due to IPv4/IPv6 accepted addresses the port separator is
          '/'. Up to 8 repeaters my be defined.

       -I IdentString ( capital letter i )
          Specifies an ident string, which describes the source e.g. the name of the router. This string is  put
          into  the stat record to identify the source. Default is 'none'. This is for compatibility with nfdump
          1.5.x and used to specify a single netflow source. See -n

       -l base_directory ( letter ell )
          Specifies the base directory to store the output files.  If a sub hierarchy is specified with  -S  the
          final directory is concatenated to base_directory/sub_hierarchy. This is for compatibility with nfdump
          1.5.x and used to specify a single netflow source. See -n

       -n <Ident,IP,base_directory>
          Configures a netflow source named Ident and identified by source IP address IP.   The  base  directory
          for  the  flow files is base_directory. If a sub hierarchy is specified with -S the final directory is
          concatenated to base_directory/sub_hierarchy. Multiple netflow sources can be specified. All  data  is
          sent  to  the  same port specified by -p.  Note: You must not mix -n option with -I and -l. Use either
          syntax.

       -M <dynbase_directory>
          Specifies the base directory to store the output files. In contrast to -l -M allows to add dynamically
          new flow sources (exporters), as they appear. All exporters send netflow data to the same port and IP.
          For each dynamically added source, a new directory is created with the name of the  IPv4/IPv6  address
          of the exporter. All '.' and ':" in IP addresses are replaced be '-' e.g.  10.11.12.13 is converted to
          the directory name 10-11-12-13.  Note: Please make sure to restrict at host level the potential  range
          of  IP  addresses which are allowed to connect to nfcapd. Otherwise you risk a potential DoS attack on
          nfcapd, as nfcapd has no built in restrictions.

       -f <pcap_file>
          Read netflow packets from a give pcap_file instead of the network. This requires nfcapd to be compiled
          with the pcap option and is intended for debugging only.

       -s <rate>
          Apply  default sampling rate rate to all netflow records, unless the sampling rate is announced by the
          exporting device. In that case the announced sampling rate is applied. If  <rate>  is  negative,  this
          will hard overwrite any device specific announced sampling rates.

       -S <num>
          Allows  to specify an additional directory sub hierarchy to store the data files. The default is 0, no
          sub hierarchy, which means the files go directly in the base directory (-l). The base  directory  (-l)
          is  concatenated  with  the  specified  sub  hierarchy  format  to form the final data directory.  The
          following hierarchies are defined:
            0 default     no hierarchy levels
            1 %Y/%m/%d    year/month/day
            2 %Y/%m/%d/%H year/month/day/hour
            3 %Y/%W/%u    year/week_of_year/day_of_week
            4 %Y/%W/%u/%H year/week_of_year/day_of_week/hour
            5 %Y/%j       year/day-of-year
            6 %Y/%j/%H    year/day-of-year/hour
            7 %Y-%m-%d    year-month-day
            8 %Y-%m-%d/%H year-month-day/hour

       -T <extension list>
          Specifies the list of extensions, to be stored in the netflow file.  Regardless of the extension list,
          the  following netflow data is stored per record: first, last, fwd status, tcp flags, proto, (src)tos,
          src port, dst port, src ipaddr, dst ipaddr, in(packets), in(bytes). In addition nfcapd recognises  the
          extensions  as  described below. Some are valid for v5/v7/v9, but most of them make only sense for v9.
          Any specified extensions which do not exist in the input netflow records are ignored.

          Extensions:
           v5/v7/v9/IPFIX extensions:
            1 input/output interface SNMP numbers.
            2 src/dst AS numbers.
            3 src/dst mask, (dst)TOS, direction.
            4 line Next hop IP addr line
            5 line BGP next hop IP addr line
            6 src/dst vlan id labels
            7 counter output packets
            8 counter output bytes
            9 counter aggregated flows
           10 in_src/out_dst MAC address
           11 in_dst/out_src MAC address
           12 MPLS labels 1-10
           13 Exporting router IPv4/IPv6 address
           14 Exporting router ID
           15 BGP adjacent prev/next AS
           16 time stamp flow received by the collector
           NSEL/ASA/NAT extensions
           26 NSEL     ASA event, xtended event, ICMP type/code
           27 NSEL/NAT xlate ports
           28 NSEL/NAT xlate IPv4/IPv6 addr
           29 NSEL     ASA ACL ingress/egress acl ID
           30 NSEL     ASA username
           NEL/NAT extensions
           31 NAT event, ingress egress vrfid
           32 NAT Block port allocation - block start, end step and size
           latency extension
           64 nfpcapd/nprobe client/server/application latency"},

           IMPORTANT: By default only extension 1  and  2  are  selected  Extensions  can  be  added/deleted  by
           specifying a ',' separated list of extension ids. Each id may be prepended by an optional sign +/- to
           add or remove a given id from the extension list.  Shortcuts: The string 'all' means all  extensions.
           The strings
            'nsel' and 'nel' enable all NSEL or NEL extensions respectively.

           Examples:
           -T all       Enables all possible extensions.
           -T +3,+4     Adds extensions 3 and 4 to the defaults 1 and 2.
           -T all,-8,-9 Set all extensions but 8 and 9
           -T -1,4      Removes default extension 1 and adds extension 4
           -T nsel      Enables all required ASA?NSEL extensions
           -T nel       Enables all required nell extensions
           Note:  Only  those  tags  in common with the exporting device and enabled extensions at the collector
           side are stored into the data files. A detailed list which v9 tags are mapped into  which  extensions
           is given in the section NOTES

       -t interval
          Specifies the time interval in seconds to rotate files. The default value is 300s ( 5min ).

       -w Align  file  rotation with next n minute ( specified by -t ) interval.  Example: If interval is 5 min,
          sync at 0,5,10... wall clock minutes Default: no alignment.

       -x cmd
          Run command cmd at the end of every interval, when a new file becomes available. The following command
          expansion is available:
           %f   Replaced by the file name e.g nfcapd.200907110845 inluding any
                sub hierarchy. ( 2009/07/11/nfcapd.200907110845 )
           %d   Replaced by the directory where the file is located.
           %t   Replaced by the time ISO format e.g. 200907110845.
           %u   Replaced by the UNIX time format.
           %i   Replaced ident string given by -I

       -X Collect  and  embed  extended  statistics.  Currently  a  port  and  bpp histogram is embedded. Mostly
          experimental for now

       -e Auto expire files at every cycle. max lifetime and max filesize are defined using nfexpire(1)

       -P pidfile
          Specify name of pidfile. Default is no pidfile.

       -D Daemon mode: fork to background and detach from terminal.  Nfcapd terminates on signal TERM,  INT  and
          HUP.

       -u userid
          Change to the user userid as soon as possible. Only root is allowed to use this option.

       -g groupid
          Change to the group groupid as soon as possible. Only root is allowed use this option.

       -B bufflen
          Specifies  the  socket input buffer length in bytes. For high volume traffic ( near GB traffic ) it is
          recommended to set this value as high as possible ( typically > 100k ), otherwise  you  risk  to  lose
          packets. The default is OS ( and kernel )  dependent.

       -E Print  netflow  records  in nfdump raw format to stdout. This option is for debugging purpose only, to
          see how incoming netflow data is processed and stored.

       -j Compress flows. Use bz2 compression in output file. Note: not recommended while collecting

       -y Compress flows. Use LZ4 compression in output file.

       -z Compress flows. Use fast LZO1X-1 compression in output file.

       -V Print nfcapd version and exit.

       -h Print help text to stdout with all options and exit.

RETURN VALUE

       Returns 0 on success, or 255 if initialization failed.

LOGGING

       nfcapd logs to syslog with SYSLOG_FACILITY LOG_DAEMON For normal  operation  level  'warning'  should  be
       fine.  More information is reported at level 'info' and 'debug'.

       A  small statistic about the collected flows, as well as errors are reported at the end of every interval
       to syslog with level 'info'.

EXAMPLES

       All flows are sent to port 9995 from all exporters and stored into a single file. All known v9  tags  are
       taken.
              nfcapd -z -w -D -T all -l /netflow/spool/allflows -I any -S 2 -P /var/run/nfcapd.allflows.pid

       All  flows  from  2 different exporters are sent to port 8877 and stored in separate directory trees. All
       known v9 tags are taken. Input buffer size is set to 128000 bytes
              nfcapd  -z  -w  -D   -T   all   -p   8877   -n   upstream,192.168.1.1,/netflow/spool/upstream   -n
              peer,192.168.2.1,/netflow/spool/peer -S 2 -B 128000

       Only  accept  from  from a single exporter and only extension 3,4 and 5 are accepted. Run a given command
       when files are rotated and automatically expire flows:
              nfcapd -w -D -T 3,4,5 -n upstream,192.168.1.1,/netflow/spool/upstream -p 23456 -B 128000 -s 100 -x
              '/path/command -r %d/%f'  -P /var/run/nfcapd/nfcapd.pid -e

NOTES

       Multiple netflow sources:

       Netflow  data  may  be  sent  from  different exporters to a single nfcapd process.  Use the -n option to
       separate each netflow source to a different data directory.  For compatibility  with  nfdump  1.5.x,  old
       style  -l/-I  options  are  still  valid.  In that case all flows from all sources are stored in a single
       file. For high volume netflow streams, it is still recommended  to  have  a  single  nfcapd  process  per
       netflow source.

       The current v9 implementation of nfdump supports the following v9 elements: fields:
           v9 element          v9 ID     Extension
           NF9_LAST_SWITCHED      21       default
           NF9_FIRST_SWITCHED     22       default
           NF9_IN_BYTES            1       default
           NF9_IN_PACKETS          2       default
           NF9_IN_PROTOCOL         4       default
           NF9_SRC_TOS             5       default
           NF9_TCP_FLAGS           6       default
           NF9_FORWARDING_STATUS  89       default
           NF9_IPV4_SRC_ADDR       8       default
           NF9_IPV4_DST_ADDR      12       default
           NF9_IPV6_SRC_ADDR      27       default
           NF9_IPV6_DST_ADDR      28       default
           NF9_L4_SRC_PORT         7       default
           NF9_L4_DST_PORT        11       default
           NF9_ICMP_TYPE          32       default
           NF9_INPUT_SNMP         10             1
           NF9_OUTPUT_SNMP        14             1
           NF9_SRC_AS             16             2
           NF9_DST_AS             17             2
           NF9_DST_TOS            55             3
           NF9_DIRECTION          61             3
           NF9_SRC_MASK            9             3
           NF9_DST_MASK           13             3
           NF9_IPV6_SRC_MASK      29             3
           NF9_IPV6_DST_MASK      30             3
           NF9_V4_NEXT_HOP        15             4
           NF9_V6_NEXT_HOP        62             4
           NF9_BGP_V4_NEXT_HOP    18             5
           NF9_BPG_V6_NEXT_HOP    63             5
           NF9_SRC_VLAN           58             6
           NF9_DST_VLAN           59             6
           NF9_OUT_PKTS           24             7
           NF9_OUT_BYTES          23             8
           NF9_FLOWS_AGGR          3             9
           NF9_IN_SRC_MAC         56            10
           NF9_OUT_DST_MAC        57            10
           NF9_IN_DST_MAC         80            11
           NF9_OUT_SRC_MAC        81            11
           NF9_MPLS_LABEL_1       70            12
           NF9_MPLS_LABEL_2       71            12
           NF9_MPLS_LABEL_3       72            12
           NF9_MPLS_LABEL_4       73            12
           NF9_MPLS_LABEL_5       74            12
           NF9_MPLS_LABEL_6       75            12
           NF9_MPLS_LABEL_7       76            12
           NF9_MPLS_LABEL_8       77            12
           NF9_MPLS_LABEL_9       78            12
           NF9_MPLS_LABEL_10      79            12
           NF9_SAMPLING_INTERVAL  34            Sampling
           NF9_SAMPLING_ALGORITHM 35            Sampling
           NF9_FLOW_SAMPLER_ID    48            Sampling
           FLOW_SAMPLER_MODE      49            Sampling
           NF9_FLOW_SAMPLER_RANDOM_INTERVAL 50  Sampling
           IP addr of exporting router          13
           NF9_ENGINE_TYPE        38            14
           NF9_ENGINE_ID          39            14
           NF9_BGP_ADJ_NEXT_AS   128            15
           NF9_BGP_ADJ_PREV_AS   129            15
           collector received timestamp         16
       32 and 64 bit are supported for all counters. 32it AS numbers are supported.

       IPFIX  support  is  experimental.  Due  to  lack  of  implementation of sampling in many IPFIX exporters,
       sampling for IPFIX is not yet supported.

       The format of the data files is netflow version independent.

       Socket buffer: Setting the socket buffer size is system dependent.  When starting up, nfcapd returns  the
       number  of bytes the buffer was actually set. This is done by reading back the buffer size and may differ
       from what you requested.

SEE ALSO

       nfdump(1), nfprofile(1), nfreplay(1)

BUGS

       No software without bugs! Please report any bugs back to me.

                                                   2009-09-09                                          nfcapd(1)