Provided by: jnettop_0.13.0-1.2_amd64 bug

NAME

       jnettop - View hosts/ports taking up the most network traffic

SYNOPSIS

       jnettop [options] [-i interface] [-d filename] [-f filename] [-x rule]

DESCRIPTION

       This  manual  page  documents  briefly  the jnettop command. This manual page is OBSOLETE.
       Please use jnettop -h as a main source of information about usage.

       jnettop captures traffic coming across the host it is  running  on  and  displays  streams
       sorted by bandwidth they use. Result is a nice listing of communication on network by host
       and port, how many bytes went through this transport and the bandwidth it is consuming.

OPTIONS

       These programs follow the usual GNU command line syntax, with long options  starting  with
       two dashes (`-').  A summary of options is included below.

       -h, --help
              Show summary of options.

       -v, --version
              Show version of program.

       -c, --content-filter
              disable content filtering

       -d, --debug filename
              write debug information into file

       -f, --config-file filename
              reads  configuration from filename. defaults to ~/.jnettop. an example can be found
              at /usr/share/doc/jnettop/dot.jnettop.

       -i, --interface name
              capture packets on specified interface

       --local-aggr [none|host|port|host+port]
              set local aggregation to specified value

       -n, --no-resolver
              disable resolving of ip addresses

       -p, --promiscuous
              enables promiscuous mode on the sniffed interface

       --remote-aggr [none|host|port|host+port]
              set remote aggregation to specified value

       -s, --select-rule name
              selects one of the rules defined in .jnettop configuration file (by it's name)

       -x, --filter rule
              allows for specification of custom filtering rule. this allows for tcpdump(1) style
              syntax. don't forget to enclolse the filter into quotes when running from a shell.

CONFIGURATION

       Program  looks  for  settings  in  the  file  specified by parameter -f, which defaults to
       ~/.jnettop. Configuration file is an ordinary text file with keywords and their arguments.
       You HAVE to enclose arguments into double quotes. Available keywords are:

       interface "<interface_name>"
              The  interface  keyword  specifies  network  interface on which to start listening.
              Example:

              interface "eth0"

       local_aggregation [none|host|port|host+port]
              The local_aggregation keyword specifies initial  active  local  aggregation.  Valid
              values are none, host, port, and host+port. Example:

              local_aggregation host

       promisc [on|off]
              The  promisc  keyword  specifies,  whether  jnettop captures packets in promiscuous
              mode. Example:

              promisc on

       remote_aggregation [none|host|port|host+port]
              The remote_aggregation keyword specifies initial active remote  aggregation.  Valid
              values are none, host, port, and host+port. Example:

              remote_aggregation port

       resolve [on|off]
              The  resolve  keyword specifies, whether resolving is performed on the IP addresses
              or not.

              resolve off

       resolve_rule "<network address>" "<network mask>" [normal|external] (<arguments> ...)
              The resolve_rule keyword adds one resolver into list  of  resolvers  for  specified
              address.  When resolving, jnettop examines all the rules in the order how they were
              specified in configuration file. If the network address  matches  specified  range,
              declared  resolver  is  used.  Resolver can be normal, which means the standard DNS
              lookup or external, which executes specified external program to perform resolving.
              This  can  be  used  with  bundled  jnettop-lookup-nmb  script,  which  looks up IP
              addresses using nmblookup(1) tool. If a tool returns empty string  or  DNS  is  not
              found,  next  rule is examined. If jnettop runs out of rules, than the standard DNS
              lookup is executed.

              resolve_rule "192.168.0.0" "255.255.255.0" normal
              resolve_rule "192.168.0.0"  "255.255.255.0"  external  "/usr/share/jnettop/jnettop-
              lookup-nbm"

       rule "<rule_name>" "<rule_definition>"
              The  rule keyword defines a set of predefined tcpdump(1)-like filters to apply. You
              can specify various filters as "show me what 192.168.1.32" sends:

              rule "show 192.168.1.32" "src 192.168.1.32"

       select_rule "<rule_name>"
              The select_rule keyword specifies initial active predefined rule. The rule must  be
              defined before this keyword is used. Example:

              select_rule "show 192.168.1.32"

       variable "<variable_name>" "<variable_contents>"
              The  variable  keyword  introduces  a  string  variable  for  use  in  future  rule
              definitions. It can be used to shorten rule definitions. Example:

              variable "intranet" "net 192.168.0.0/16 or 10.0.0.0/8 or 172.16.0.0/12"

       For more information, see README file or .jnettop example configuration file  included  in
       distribution.

AUTHOR

       This  manual  page  was  originally written by Ari Pollak <ari@debian.org>, for the Debian
       GNU/Linux system. Small changes were introduced by Jakub Skopal <j@kubs.cz>

                                          April 8, 2006                                JNETTOP(8)