trace-summary
is a Python script that generates break-downs of
network traffic, including lists of the top hosts, protocols,
ports, etc. Optionally, it can generate output separately for
incoming vs. outgoing traffic, per subnet, and per time-interval.
You can find the latest trace-summary release for download at https://www.zeek.org/download.
trace-summary’s git repository is located at https://github.com/zeek/trace-summary
This document describes trace-summary 0.88-2. See the CHANGES
file for version history.
The trace-summary
script reads both packet traces in libpcap format and connection logs produced by the
Bro network security monitor
(for the latter, it supports both 1.x and 2.x log formats).
Here are two example outputs in the most basic form (note that IP addresses are ‘anonymized’). The first is from a packet trace and the second from a Bro connection log:
>== Total === 2005-01-06-14-23-33 - 2005-01-06-15-23-43
- Bytes 918.3m - Payload 846.3m - Pkts 1.8m - Frags 0.9% - MBit/s 1.9 -
Ports | Sources | Destinations | Protocols |
80 33.8% | 131.243.89.214 8.5% | 131.243.89.214 7.7% | 6 76.0% |
22 16.7% | 128.3.2.102 6.2% | 128.3.2.102 5.4% | 17 23.3% |
11001 12.4% | 204.116.120.26 4.8% | 131.243.89.4 4.8% | 1 0.5% |
2049 10.7% | 128.3.161.32 3.6% | 131.243.88.227 3.6% | |
1023 10.6% | 131.243.89.4 3.5% | 204.116.120.26 3.4% | |
993 8.2% | 128.3.164.194 2.7% | 131.243.89.64 3.1% | |
1049 8.1% | 128.3.164.15 2.4% | 128.3.164.229 2.9% | |
524 6.6% | 128.55.82.146 2.4% | 131.243.89.155 2.5% | |
33305 4.5% | 131.243.88.227 2.3% | 128.3.161.32 2.3% | |
1085 3.7% | 131.243.89.155 2.3% | 128.55.82.146 2.1% | |
>== Total === 2005-01-06-14-23-33 - 2005-01-06-15-23-42
- Connections 43.4k - Payload 398.4m -
Ports | Sources | Destinations | Services | Protocols | States |
80 21.7% | 207.240.215.71 3.0% | 239.255.255.253 8.0% | other 51.0% | 17 55.8% | S0 46.2% |
427 13.0% | 131.243.91.71 2.2% | 131.243.91.255 4.0% | http 21.7% | 6 36.4% | SF 30.1% |
443 3.8% | 128.3.161.76 1.7% | 131.243.89.138 2.1% | i-echo 7.3% | 1 7.7% | OTH 7.8% |
138 3.7% | 131.243.90.138 1.6% | 255.255.255.255 1.7% | https 3.8% | | RSTO 5.8% |
515 2.4% | 131.243.88.159 1.6% | 128.3.97.204 1.5% | nb-dgm 3.7% | | SHR 4.4% |
11001 2.3% | 131.243.88.202 1.4% | 131.243.88.107 1.1% | printer 2.4% | | REJ 3.0% |
53 1.9% | 131.243.89.250 1.4% | 117.72.94.10 1.1% | dns 1.9% | | S1 1.0% |
161 1.6% | 131.243.89.80 1.3% | 131.243.88.64 1.1% | snmp 1.6% | | RSTR 0.9% |
137 1.4% | 131.243.90.52 1.3% | 131.243.88.159 1.1% | nb-ns 1.4% | | SH 0.3% |
2222 1.1% | 128.3.161.252 1.2% | 131.243.91.92 1.1% | ntp 1.0% | | RSTRH 0.2% |
trace-summary
with packet traces (versus Bro connection logs)Simply copy the script into some directory which is in your PATH
.
The general usage is:
trace-summary [options] [input-file]
Per default, it assumes the input-file
to be a libpcap
trace
file. If it is a Bro connection log, use -c
. If input-file
is
not given, the script reads from stdin. It writes its output to
stdout.
The most important options are summarized
below. Run trace-summary --help
to see the full list including
some more esoteric ones.
-c: | Input is a Bro connection log instead of a libpcap trace
file. |
---|---|
-b: | Counts all percentages in bytes rather than number of packets/connections. |
-E <file>: | Gives a file which contains a list of networks to ignore for the
analysis. The file must contain one network per line, where each
network is of the CIDR form a.b.c.d/mask (including the
corresponding syntax for IPv6 prefixes, e.g., 1:2:3:4::/64 ).
Empty lines and lines starting with a “#” are ignored. |
-i <duration>: | Creates totals for each time interval of the given length
(default is seconds; add “m ” for minutes and “h ” for
hours). Use -v if you also want to see the breakdowns for
each interval. |
-l <file>: | Generates separate summaries for incoming and outgoing traffic.
<file> is a file which contains a list of networks to be
considered local. Format as for -E . |
-n <n>: | Show top n entries in each break-down. Default is 10. |
-r: | Resolves hostnames in the output. |
-s <n>: | Gives the sample factor if the input has been sampled. |
-S <n>: | Sample input with the given factor; less accurate but faster and saves memory. |
-m: | Does skip memory-expensive statistics. |
-v: | Generates full break-downs for each time interval. Requires
-i . |