Provided by: nfdump_1.7.1-2_amd64 bug

NAME

     nfanon — anonymize the IP adresses

SYNOPSIS

     nfanon -r path [-w nffile] -K key [-q] [-h]

DESCRIPTION

     nfanon anonimizes all IP adresses ( src, dst, next hop, router IP etc. ) in the netflow
     records using the CryptoPAn (Cryptography-based  Prefix-preserving Anonymization) module.
     The key -K is used to initialize the Rijndael cipher. The key is either a 32 character
     string, or a 64 hex digit string starting with 0x. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crypto-
     PAn for more information on CryptoPAn.

     The source specified by argument -r path may point to a single nfdump file or to a directory
     containing many nfdump files.  All files in a directory are processed recursively.

     If the output argument -w nffile is given, all anonimized records are written into that
     single file, even if the source is a directory. If no argument -w is specified, nfanon
     overwrites the original source file with the anonymized flow records.  If the source is a
     directory, each flow file is anonymized respectively.

     The options are as follows:

     -r path
             Path to read flow files to anonymize. Path may point to a single file or a directory
             containing many flow files.

     [-w nffile]
             File name to write anonymized flow records to. If this argument is missing, the
             source file name is taken, which means the original file is overwritten.

     -k key  key is either a 32 character string, or a 64 char hex string starting with 0x. This
             key is used to initialize the anonymizer.

     -q      nfanon prints the file name to be processed and an actifivy spinner. This option
             disables both.

     -h      Print help text to stdout and exit.

EXAMPLES

     To create a random 64 character hex string you may use the following command:
           % xxd -u -l 32 -p -c 64 /dev/urandom
     Use the resulting output as key, prepended with 0x as -K argument.

RETURN VALUES

     nfanon returns 0 on success and 255 otherwise.

SEE ALSO

     nfdump(1)