Skip to content
This repository has been archived by the owner on Mar 21, 2023. It is now read-only.

Latest commit

 

History

History
94 lines (61 loc) · 3.56 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

94 lines (61 loc) · 3.56 KB

DEPRECATION NOTICE

This project has been merged into graylog2-server, see #26

Please use the issue tracker in the graylog2-server repository for any feature requests or bug reports.


NetFlow Plugin for Graylog

Build Status

This plugin provides a NetFlow UDP input to act as a Flow collector that receives data from Flow exporters. Each received Flow will be converted to a Graylog message.

Required Graylog version: 2.3.0 and later

Supported NetFlow Versions

The version of the plugin now supports NetFlow V9. It can support IPv6 addresses without conversion and handles all of the fields from the fixed V5 format. In addition this plugin supports events from a CISCO ASA 5500, including firewall and routing events. Beware, there is significant duplication of typical syslog reporting in the v9 reporting.

Installation

Since Graylog Version 2.4.0 this plugin is already included in the Graylog server installation package as default plugin.

Download the plugin and place the .jar file in your Graylog plugin directory. The plugin directory is the plugins/ folder relative from your graylog-server directory by default and can be configured in your graylog.conf file.

Restart graylog-server and you are done.

Setup

In the Graylog web interface, go to System/Inputs and create a new NetFlow input like this:

NetFlow input creation dialog

Example Message

This is an example NetFlow message in Graylog:

NetFlow example fields screenshot

Example Dashboard

This is an example of a dashboard with NetFlow data:

NetFlow example dashboard screenshot

Credits

The NetFlow parsing code is based on the https://github.com/wasted/netflow project and has been ported from Scala to Java.

Plugin Development

Testing

To generate some NetFlow data for debugging and testing you can use softflowd.

Example command and output:

# softflowd -D -i eth0 -v 5 -t maxlife=1 -n 10.0.2.2:2055

Using eth0 (idx: 0)
softflowd v0.9.9 starting data collection
Exporting flows to [10.0.2.2]:2055
ADD FLOW seq:1 [10.0.2.2]:48164 <> [10.0.2.15]:22 proto:6
ADD FLOW seq:2 [10.0.2.2]:51428 <> [10.0.2.15]:22 proto:6
Starting expiry scan: mode 0
Queuing flow seq:1 (0x7fef0318bc70) for expiry reason 6
Finished scan 1 flow(s) to be evicted
Sending v5 flow packet len = 120
sent 1 netflow packets
EXPIRED: seq:1 [10.0.2.2]:48164 <> [10.0.2.15]:22 proto:6 octets>:322 packets>:7 octets<:596 packets<:7 start:2015-07-21T13:18:01.236 finish:2015-07-21T13:18:27.718 tcp>:10 tcp<:18 flowlabel>:00000000 flo
wlabel<:00000000  (0x7fef0318bc70)
ADD FLOW seq:3 [10.0.2.2]:2055 <> [10.0.2.15]:48363 proto:17
ADD FLOW seq:4 [10.0.2.2]:48164 <> [10.0.2.15]:22 proto:6

Plugin Release

We are using the Maven release plugin:

$ mvn release:prepare
[...]
$ mvn release:perform

This sets the version numbers, creates a tag and pushes to GitHub. Travis CI will build the release artifacts and upload to GitHub automatically.