Provided by: natlog_3.00.00-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       natlog - source-nat logging tool

SYNOPSIS

       natlog [OPTIONS] command

DESCRIPTION

       Firewalls  like  iptables(1)  may  offer  POSTROUTING (source network address translation,
       snat) facilities changing the source address of a host behind the firewall to the  address
       of  the  host  connected  to  the  outer world. With snat the following combinations of IP
       addresses and port numbers are encountered:

       o      the IP address and port number used by the host protected  by  (i.e.,  behind)  the
              firewall initiates a connection to the outer world (the source host, in this manual
              page referred to as IPsrc, sport);

       o      the IP address and port number of the host outside (i.e., before) the firewall that
              IPsrc  connects to (the destination host, in this manual page referred to as IPdst,
              dport);

       o      the IP address and port number of the host where the firewall has  been  installed.
              This host performs the source natting, and its IP-address and the port it uses when
              forwarding IPsrc, sport’s requests to IPdst, dport are in this manual page referred
              to as IPfw, fwport.  )

       Source  natting  usually uses sport for fwport, but fwport may already be in use, in which
       case the firewalling host must use another, available port to forward  communication  from
       IPsrc, sport to IPdst, dport.

       The general scheme that applies to source natting, therefore, looks like this:

           IPsrc:sport is translated by the firewall to IPfw:fwport;
           IPfw:fwport is used when communicating with IPdst:dport.

       From  the perspective of the destination host the communication originates at IPfw::fwport
       and  consequently  all  communication  (e.g.,  incident  reports)  sent  by  the   systems
       administrator maintaining IPdst to IPfw’s systems administrator will refer to IPfw:fwport,
       rather than to IPsrc::sport.

       Relating IPfw:fwport to IPsrc:sport is  difficult  when  merely  using  the  standard  log
       facilities provided by iptables and natlog was developed to fill in that particular niche.

       Natlog  provides  data  about  source  natting in various forms. The standard logging mode
       consists of messages sent to the syslog daemon (cf., rsyslogd(8)) and/or to  the  standard
       output  stream  showing the essential characteristics of connections using source natting.
       Here is an example of a logged message (log-entries occupy single lines;  the  line-breaks
       below are to enhance readability):

           NATLOG: from 1338990672:55588 thru 1338990747:807100 (UTC): tcp
               192.168.19.72:4467 (via: 129.125.90.132:4467) to
               to 200.49.219.180:443; sent: 802, received: 7669

       The  values  1338990672:55588 and 1338990747:807100 are time stamps showing the begin- and
       end-times in seconds:microseconds of a tcp connection since the  beginning  of  the  epoch
       (Jan  1,  1970,  0:00  UTC). Natlog offers the --time option for requesting human-readable
       time specifications like Nov 2 13:29:11 rather than time representations using seconds and
       micro seconds.

       The   next  value  (192.168.19.72:4467)  represents  IPsrc::sport.  This  is  followed  by
       129.125.90.132:4467,   representing   IPfw:fwport.    The    third    pair    of    values
       (200.49.219.180:443) represents IPdst:dport.

       In  this  example,  host 192.168.19.72, using port 4467, connected to host 200.49.219.180,
       port  443.  To  this  latter  host  the  connection  appears  to  have   originated   from
       129.125.90.132 port 4467. The log message allows us to associate this with the `real’ host
       and port from which the connection originated: 192.168.19.72:4467.

       The final entries show the number of bytes that were sent by the source-host  (IPsrc)  and
       received from the destination-host (IPdst).

       When  natlog  is  terminated  it  can  no longer track connections that are still open. If
       natlog was terminated (by a SIGINT or SIGTERM signal), then it logs a `terminating’  line,
       followed by an overview of all (potentially) still open connections. Those connections are
       flagged with a trailing ’(EOP)’ (end of program) log-element,  and  their  end-times  show
       natlog’s termination time. Incomplete connections show (EXPIRED).

       In  addition to the standard logs the option --log-data is available. This option requires
       the path to a file where information is logged  in  tabular  form,  which  can  easily  be
       processed  by statistical software like R(1). When specifying this option information will
       be appended to an existing file. When the log file does not yet exist it is  created.  The
       first  line of the thus written log files names the columns of the table. The column names
       are (all on one line):

           type, srcNr, srcIP, srcPort, dstNr, dstIP, dstPort,
               sent, recvd, begin,  end, beginTime, endTime, status

       Most column labels will be self-explanatory. Type indicates the connection type, logged as
       icmp,  tcp,  or  udp;  srcNr and dstNr are the 32 bit numeric values of, respectively, the
       source host’s IP address and the destination host’s IP address (decimal  representations);
       begin  and end are the times in seconds since the beginning of the epoch, corresponding to
       the times displayed at, respectively, beginTime and endTime; status indicates  the  status
       of  the  logged  connection  information:  ok  indicates  a  connection  that was normally
       completed; expired indicates that the connection was  recognized,  but  was  not  normally
       completed;  eop  is  used  for  connections  that  were  still  active  by the time natlog
       terminates. When the status equals expired, the time entries show the times  of  receiving
       the  first and last packets of that connection; when eop, then the end and endTime entries
       show natlog’s termination time.

       Log entries look like this (each entry occupies one line,  header  line  and  logged  data
       lines are right-aligned):

           tcp, 101820608,    192.168.17.6,        48886,
               4012145084,  188.121.36.239,           80,
                      430,            2266,   1517387644,    1517387644,
               Jan 31 08:34:04:318340, Jan 31 08:34:04:383170,  ok

MODES AND COMMANDS

       o      conntrack:  the  `conntrack’-mode. This command can only be used on platforms using
              iptables(1) where conntrack(1) has also  been  installed.  Information  about  snat
              connections is obtained from conntrack(1)’s output. In this mode all, or one of the
              tcp (the protocol used by default), udp, and  icmp  layer  four  protocols  can  be
              monitored.

              When  using  the conntrack mode the conntrack program will report sent and received
              number of bytes unless the option no-bytes has been specified.

              Conntrack includes the sizes of the IP headers (usually 20 bytes) in reported  byte
              counts.  Thus,  icmp  packets  are  usually reported as having size 84, even though
              ping(1) reports a payload of 64 bytes. Since the actual sizes of IP headers  cannot
              be  determined  from  conntrack’s  output,  the  sizes reported when using natlog’s
              conntrack mode are as reported by conntrack, and are therefore not corrected for IP
              header  lengths.  The  option --conntrack-ip-header-size can be used to correct for
              the (assumed) IP header sizes.

              Conntrack can also be used to track all connections, not just the snat connections.
              If  that’s  required  omit  conntrack’s  option  -n,  and optionally specify option
              no-via.

              See also the conntrack-command option.

       o      indevice outdevice: the `devices’-mode. Here, indevice is the name  of  the  device
              behind  the firewall: addresses living behind the indevice are source-natted to the
              firewall host’s IP address when passed on to the outdevice.

              Outdevice is the name of the device where source-natted packets are  forwarded  to,
              and  from  where  replies  for  source-natted  hosts living behind the indevice are
              received. With this command all, or  any  combination  of  the  tcp  (the  protocol
              monitored by default), udp, and icmp layer four protocols can be monitored.

              For example, when specifying the arguments

                  eth1 eth0

              thene  eth1  is  the  device  behind  the firewall, and eth0 is the device to where
              source-natted packets are forwared.

              This command can also be used to track  all  connections  using  a  single  device,
              instead  of merely tracking snat connections. In that case specify the same devices
              for indevice and outdevice, and optionally specify option no-via. E.g.,

                  eth0 eth0

       o      infile in-address in-mask outfile out-address out-mask:  the  `tcpdump’-mode.  This
              command  can be used to process tcpdump(1) generated binary files, generated on the
              source-natting host. If a source  natting  host  uses  interface  eth1  behind  the
              firewall and eth0 to connect to the outside world, then the follow tcpdump commands
              produce the required binary files (these commands  will  normally  be  run  in  the
              background, hence the trailing &):

                  tcpdump -wi eth0 /tmp/eth0 &
                  tcpdump -wi eth1 /tmp/eth1 &

              To  have  natlog  process  these files, end the tcpdump processes, and transfer the
              files /tmp/eth0 and /tmp/eth1 to the host where  natlog  has  been  installed.  The
              required addresses and masks are shown by the ifconfig(1) command. E.g.,

              eth0: flags=4163<UP,BROADCAST,RUNNING,MULTICAST>  mtu 1500
                    inet 129.125.1.123  netmask 255.255.0.0
                                        broadcast 129.125.255.255

              eth1: flags=4163<UP,BROADCAST,RUNNING,MULTICAST>  mtu 1500
                      inet 192.168.1.1  netmask 255.255.255.0
                                        broadcast 192.168.1255

              The  relevant  info is shown in the lines following the interface’s name: the value
              following inet is the interface’s IP address, and the value  following  netmask  is
              the network’s mask.

              Combining files and addresses, natlog is run as follows (all on one line):

                  natlog  /tmp/eth0 129.125.1.123  255.255.0.0
                          /tmp/eth1 192.168.1.1 255.255.255.0

              Instead  of  fully specifying the netmask, netmaks specifications like /24 are also
              accepted. In that case the number following  the  slash  indicates  the  number  of
              non-zero  bits of the netmask. In practice, each value of the netmask is either 255
              (8 bits are set) or 0 (0 bits are set), and so 255.255.0.0 can also be specified as
              /16, while 255.255.255.0 can be specified like /24.

OPTIONS

       See also section SYSTEMD.

       o      --config=config-path (-c)
              The  argument  config-path  defines  the  path  to  natlog’s configuration file. By
              default it is /etc/natlog.conf. All configuration options have defaults, which  are
              used when no configuration file and no command-line options were provided.

              All options, except for config, help, S, terminate, verbose and version can also be
              specified in the configuration file. The configuration file ignores empty lines and
              all  information on lines beginning with a hash-mark (#). In the configuration file
              initial hyphens should be omitted, and option names may immediately be followed  by
              a colon. Do not surround option values with quotes. Examples:

                  stdout
                  syslog-facility: LOCAL0

              Command-line options override configuration file options.

       o      --conntrack-command=path [options]
              The path and options to the conntrack(1) program. By default this is

                  /usr/sbin/conntrack -p tcp -E -n -o timestamp -e NEW,DESTROY

              resulting in:

              - Monitoring the tcp layer four protocol;
              - Displaying real-time event logs (-E);
              - Only use snat connections (-n);
              - Displaying time stamps (-o timestamp);
              - Logging all new and destroyed (ended) events (-e NEW,DESTROY);
              - Reporting the number of bytes sent- and received by connections;

              By default tcp is monitored. Other protocols can be configured using the --protocol
              option.

              The conntrack program must be available when requesting natlog’s conntrack command.
              Layer  four  protocols  other than tcp, udp and icmp are currently not supported. A
              subset of the supported protocols may be requested using conntrack’s -p tcp, -p udp
              or -p icmp options.

              When  all  connections  should  be  logged  (not  just  snat connections) then omit
              conntrack’s -n option. See also option --no-via below.

              Unless option --no-bytes is specified the conntrack program reports the  number  of
              sent and received bytes of connections. Conntrack does so when the value 1 has been
              written  to  /proc/sys/net/netfilter/nf_conntrack_acct.  When  natlog  starts,  and
              no-bytes has not been specified then natlog writes 1 to nf_conntrack_acct.

              Note: when specifying the conntrack-command option in the configuration file do not
              sourround the command with quotes.

       o      --conntrack-device=dev
              By  default  conntrack   monitors   the   information   made   available   at   the
              /proc/net/nf_conntrack device. When another device should be used, specify it using
              this option.

       o      --conntrack-ip-header-size=size
              This option is used to correct for the  IP  header  sizes.  By  default,  conntrack
              includes  these  sizes  in  reported  byte counts. By specifying this option packet
              sizes reported by conntrack are reduced by size. Commonly IP headers consist of  20
              bytes (so, to correct for this specify --conntrack-ip-header-size 20).

       o      --conntrack-restart=max
              If  the conntrack process prematurely ends it is restarted at most max times (these
              are pure restarts: conntrack’s initial startup is not counted for this option).  By
              default 10 restarts are allowed.

       o      --debug
              Write  additional info to the log file. Currently, --debug writes information about
              memory consumption to the log file.

       o      --help (-h)
              Write basic usage information to the standard output stream and terminate.

       o      --log=argument
              By default natlog forwards log messages about natlog and connection information  to
              the  syslog daemon using the DAEMON facility with priority NOTICE (see below at the
              syslog* options). This is identical to specifying the argument syslog.

              Alternatively, specify the argument off to suppress writing log messages. Any other
              argument  is  interpreted  as  a  path-specification  to  a file to receive the log
              messages: log-messages are appended to existing files. If the log file does not yet
              exist it is first created.

              The  stdout  option is handled independently from the log option: log messages will
              appear to the standard output stream if stdout and log: off are both specified.

       o      --log-data=path
              Path  specifies  the  pathname  of  the  file  where  information  about   observed
              connections  is  written  in  tabular  form. If path does not yet exist it is first
              created. Refer to the DESCRIPTION section for information about the format  of  the
              generated  table.  Specify  ""  as  command-line  option  if the configuration file
              specifies a log data file, but no tabular data should be  logged  for  that  natlog
              run.

              Like  the  standard  log  file  (option  --log) the log-data file is not rotated if
              rotation is requested (cf. option log-rotate).  For  statistical  analyses  rotated
              log-data  files  can  be  concatenated (usually omitting the first (header) line of
              rotated log-data files).

       o      --log-rotate=spec
              This option specifies the frequency and the number of log-files that  are  rotated.
              By default log-files are not rotated.
              To rotate log-files use time[mhd] or time[mhd]nFiles. The ’time’ specification is a
              number, which must be followed by m for minutes, h  for  hours,  and  d  for  days.
              nFiles  specifies the max. number of rotated files. If only time[mhd] is specified,
              then nFiles is set to 1.  By default (or if time or nfiles are  specified  as  zero
              (0)) log files are not rotated.

       Note:  when  using  rsyslogd(1)  for logging (i.e., when specifying --log syslog, see also
       option syslog-facility below), then it is assumed that the syslog  daemon  or  a  log-file
       rotation  program  like logrotate(8) handles the log file rotations. Rotating the log-data
       file is not affected by specifying --log syslog.

       Natlog uses a built-in minimum rotation interval of 30 seconds.

       o      --no-bytes
              By default log-entries show numbers of sent and received bytes. Specify this option
              to omit these statistics from log-entries.

       o      --no-daemon
              By  default,  natlog  runs in the background (a daemon). Natlog runs as an ordinary
              program (i.e., in the foreground when the  option  no-daemon  is  specified).  When
              running  as  a  daemon,  --stdout (see below) is suppressed, and --verbose messages
              (see below) are sent to the syslog daemon, unless --no-syslog was  specified.  When
              using  the  tcpdump-mode  natlog  does  not run in the background. In this case, if
              no-daemon is omitted a warning message  is  logged,  and  natlog  continues  as  an
              ordinary program.

       o      --no-dst
              Normally,  when  snat  connections are logged the destination IP addresses and port
              numbers are logged as ’dst’ entries in  log-data  files  and  as  ’to’  entries  in
              log-files.   If  these  destination  items  should  be  omitted  specify  no-via as
              configuration parameter or as option.

       o      --no-via
              Normally,  when  snat  connections  are  logged  the  host  handling  the   address
              translations are logged as ’via’ entries in log-files.  If the ’via’ entries should
              be omitted activate no-via as configuration parameter or as option.

       o      --pid-file=path (-p)
              When natlog runs in the background, then path is the name of the path of  the  file
              holding  the  daemon’s  process-id. By default this file is /run/natlog.pid. To end
              the daemon, simply call natlog --terminate (or send a SIGINT or SIGTERM  signal  to
              the  process  id mentioned in the pid-file). Natlog uses SIGHUP and SIGALRM signals
              for explicit rotations of log-files (see options --rotate and --rotate-data below.

       o      --protocol=specification (-P)
              The protocol(s) to monitor. By default the tcp layer four  protocol  is  monitored.
              Currently  natlog’s conntrack command can monitor the tcp, udp, and icmp layer four
              protocols.  Using the protocol option (note: only one  protocol  option  should  be
              specified)  any  subset  of  these  protocols  can  be  selected  by  specifying  a
              colon-separated subset of tcp,  udp,  and  icmp  (e.g.,  --protocol  udp:tcp).  The
              specification all can be used to monitor all three protocols (tcp, udp, and icmp).

       o      --rotate
              When   --log  has  been  used  then  this  option  forces  rotating  the  log  file
              independently from the interval specified by --log-rotate. Natlog uses  a  built-in
              minimum rotation interval of 30 seconds.

       o      --rotate-data
              When  --log-data  has  been used then this option forces rotating the log-data file
              independently from the interval specified by --log-rotate. Natlog uses  a  built-in
              minimum rotation interval of 30 seconds.

       o      -S
              Use  this  option  as  first  option,  immediately following the program name, when
              starting natlog from a systemd(1) natlog.service file.  See  also  section  SYSTEMD
              below.

       o      --stdout (-s)
              Syslog-equivalent  messages  are  sent  to  the  standard  output.   This option is
              suppressed when natlog runs as a daemon.

       o      --syslog-facility=facility
              The facility that is used to write the syslog  messages  to.  By  default  this  is
              DAEMON.  For  an  overview  of facilities and their meanings, see, e.g., syslog(3).
              With natlog the facilities DAEMON, LOCAL0, LOCAL1, LOCAL2, LOCAL3, LOCAL4,  LOCAL5,
              LOCAL6, LOCAL7, and USER can be used.

       When rsyslog filtering is used (see that section below) then rsyslogd(8) uses that instead
       of the specified facility.

       o      --syslog-priority=priority
              The priority that is used to write the syslog  messages  to.  By  default  this  is
              NOTICE.  For  an  overview  of priorities and their meanings, see, e.g., syslog(3).
              With natlog all defined priorities can be used. E.g.,   EMERG,  ALERT,  CRIT,  ERR,
              WARNING, NOTICE, INFO and DEBUG.

       o      --syslog-tag=tag
              When  syslog  messages  are generated they can be provided with a tag, which can be
              used to filter natlog’s syslog messages from the  log-files.  By  default  the  tag
              NATLOG is used. See also section RSYSLOG FILTERING below.

       o      --terminate
              When  natlog  runs  as  a  daemon,  the command natlog --terminate can be issued to
              terminate the daemon. By default it reads the daemon’s  process  ID  from  natlog’s
              pid-file  (cf.  option  pid-file)  /run/natlog.pid).  If another pid-file holds the
              process ID of the natlog program to terminate then  specify  the  location  of  the
              pid-file to use using a command like

                  natlog --terminate --pid-file=/path/to/the/pid-file

              When  the  daemon could be terminated 0 is returned. Otherwise, an error message is
              displayed and 1 is returned.

       o      --time=spec (-t)
              By default time stamps written by natlog are in raw, numeric form. E.g.,

                  NATLOG: From 1338990672:55588 thru 1338990747:807100

              These time stamps indicate times in seconds:microseconds since the beginning of the
              epoch,  January  1,  1970,  0:00 UTC. This option can be used to change the seconds
              part of the time stamps to more conventional representations.
              Specify raw (the default) for the  default  representation  in  seconds  since  the
              epoch;
              specify  utc  for  a  representation  like  Jun  6  13:29:11,  using Universal Time
              Coordinated;
              specify local for a representation like Jun 6 13:29:11, using the local  time  zone
              defined by the computer running natlog.

       o      --ttl=secs[ui] (-T)
              time-to-live  for received connections. At most two time-to-live specifications can
              be provided: for udp/icmp connections a letter u must be appended to the  specified
              seconds. By default 60u is used. For tcp connections a letter t must be appended to
              the specified seconds. By default 3000t is used. Both  time-to-live  specifications
              may  be  combined:  --ttl  120u1800t  specifies  a  time-to-live of two minutes for
              udp/icmp connections and a time-to-live  of  half  an  hour  for  tcp  connections.
              Time-to-live is not used in conntrack-mode.

       o      --verbose (-V)
              Additional  messages  about  natlog’s  mode  of  operation are sent to the standard
              output stream. When natlog runs as a daemon these messages are sent to  the  syslog
              daemon, unless --no-syslog was specified.

       When  --verbose is specified twice then all actual configuration parameters are shown just
       before natlog starts.

       When --verbose is specified more often then natlog ends after reporting the  configuration
       parameters.

       o      --version (-v)
              Write natlog’s version number to the standard output stream and terminate.

       )

SYSTEMD

       An  annoying  characteristic of systemd(1) is that environment variables containing blanks
       are passed as single arguments to the program being called by their .service files.  As  a
       consequence,   it   is   very   hard   to   provide  an  environment  variable  in,  e.g.,
       /etc/default/natlog specifying natlog’s arguments: in practice  the  number  of  arguments
       varies, and so even constructions like ARG1=value1, ARG2=value2, etc. are awkward at best.

       As  a stopgap for this unwelcome characteristic of systemd the option -S is provided. When
       used it must be specified as  natlog’s  first  argument.  Natlog  will  then  inspect  all
       remaining  arguments, splitting arguments containing blanks into separate arguments, which
       are then processed by natlog as intended. Be aware that, to limit the  complexity  of  the
       splitting-procedure,   it   is   not   full-proof:   double-   or  single-quote  delimited
       string-arguments will also be split into separate arguments. Unless  filenames  themselves
       containing  blanks  are passed as arguments to natlog this limitation is probably not very
       serious.

       As an example, here is an example of systemd’s ExecStart specification:

           ExecStart=/usr/bin/natlog -S -p ${PIDFILE} ${DAEMON_ARGS}

       where DAEMON_ARGS might have been specified in /etc/default/natlog as

           DAEMON_ARGS=--log /tmp/natlog.log --log-data /dev/null conntrack

RSYSLOG FILTERING

       When using rsyslogd(8) property based filters may be used to filter  syslog  messages  and
       write  them  to  a  file of your choice. E.g., to filter messages starting with the syslog
       message tag (e.g., NATLOG) use

       :syslogtag, isequal, "NATLOG:"   /var/log/natlog.log
       :syslogtag, isequal, "NATLOG:"   stop

       Note that the colon is part of the tag, but is not specified with the syslog-tag option.

       This causes all messages having the NATLOG: tag to be written on /var/log/natlog.log after
       which  they  are  discarded.  More  extensive  filtering  is  also  supported,  see, e.g.,
       http://www.rsyslog.com/doc/rsyslog_conf_filter.html                                    and
       http://www.rsyslog.com/doc/property_replacer.html

EXAMPLES

       Examples of natlog activations:

       o      natlog --no-daemon --no-syslog -s br0 eth0
              Natlog  remains  active  as  a  foreground process, no syslog messages are written,
              syslog-equivalent message are written to the standard output. Natlog uses the  pcap
              library  to  capture  packets  from  the  br0  device,  which  is active behind the
              firewall, and to capture packets from the eth0 device, which is the device to where
              source-natted packages are sent.

       o      natlog conntrack
              Depending  on  the  options  specified  in  /etc/natlog.conf (or, if not available,
              natlog’s default options) source-natted connections are obtained from conntrack(1).
              By  default  natlog continues as a daemon process, generating syslog messages using
              syslog tags NATLOG:, and containing information about source-natted connections.

       Here is  natlog’s  default  configuration  file.  Empty  lines  and  lines  starting  with
       hash-marks (#) are ignored. Options adhere to the following syntax:

       option  value

       Option and value are separated by white space, a colon may be appended to option names:

       # This configuration file shows the default option values.
       #   Options that are *not* active by default have an extra comment-line
       #   showing ’not by default:’

       # all options and values are case sensitive
       # see `man natlog’ for further details

           # the path and options of the conntrack program:
           # when no filtering options are specified, the tcp
           # protocol is monitored
           # the default command is shown.
           # Note: do not surround the conntrack command specification with quotes
       #conntrack-command:  /usr/sbin/conntrack -E -n -o timestamp -e NEW,DESTROY

           # the device used by conntrack
       #conntrack-device:  /proc/net/nf_conntrack

           # correction for the IP header size
           # (standard IP header size is 20 bytes)
       #conntrack-ip-header-size:  0

           # max. number of conntrack restarts
       #conntrack-restart: 10

           # write additional info to the log file
       # not by default:
       #debug

           # log messages are written to ’pathname’; use ’log: off’ to suppress log
           # messages
       # not by default:
       #log: pathname

           # data file containing tabular logs
       # not by default:
       #log-data:  pathname

           # tmespec: time[mhd]nFiles - specification for rotating log-files
       # not by default:
       #log-rotate: timespec

           # do not log the sent/received byte counts (default: counts are logged)
       # not by default:
       #no-bytes

           # do not run as a daemon
       # not by default:
       #no-daemon

           # do not log the destination entries
       # not by default:
       #no-dst

           # do not log the via: entries
       # not by default:
       #no-via

           # the path to the pid-file of natlog’s daemon process
       #pid-file: /run/natlog.pid

           # the protocols that are scanned with the ’conntrack’ command:
           #   protocol: all       - monitors tcp, udp, icmp
           #   protocol: udp:tcp   - monitors upd and tcp (any non-empty subset,
           #                         possibly including icmp is OK)
       #protocol: tcp

           # write messages to stdout (ignored by daemons)
       # not by default:
       #stdout

           # the default syslog facility:
       #syslog-facility: DAEMON

           # the default syslog priority:
       #syslog-priority: NOTICE

           # the default syslog tag:
       #syslog-tag: NATLOG

           # the default time specification (alternatives: utc, local):
       #time: raw

           # ttl: time to live (seconds) for udp/icmp connections
       #ttl: 60

       # end of the configuration file

FILES

       o      /etc/natlog.conf: default configuration file location;

       o      /etc/default/natlog: arguments for startup scripts;

       o      /etc/init.d/natlog: SysV startup script;

       o      /etc/systemd/system/natlog.service:     systemd     startup     script     (calling
              /etc/init.d/natlog).

SEE ALSO

       conntrack(1),  ifconfig(1),  iptables(1),  logrotate(8),  pcap-filter(7),  ping(1),  R(1),
       rsyslogd(8), syslog(3), systemd(1), tcpdump(1)

BUGS

       Natlog currently can process tcp, udp and icmp layer four protocols.

AUTHOR

       Frank B. Brokken (f.b.brokken@rug.nl).