Have you considered argus? It can deliver "argus flows" from multiple interfaces. From http://www.qosient.com/argus/ :
Argus can be considered an implementation of the architecture described in the IETF IPFIX Working Group. Argus pre-dates IPFIX, and the project has actively contributed to the IPFIX effort, however, Argus technology should be considered a superset of the IPFIX architecture, providing "proof of concept" implementations for most aspects of the IPFIX applicability statement. Argus technology can read and process Cisco Netflow data, and many sites develop audits using a mixture of Argus and Netflow records.
Ken On 12/6/2010 2:44 PM, Thomas York wrote:
fprobe doesn't work properly because it has the input and output interface IDs as both 0. In Scrutinizer, this makes the flow look like all the data came in the interface and immediately left via the same interface. Also, this causes problems when running multiple instances of fprobe.
This seems to be the issue with most of the flow software I've tried.
-----Original Message----- From: Samuel Petreski [mailto:sp446@georgetown.edu] Sent: Monday, December 06, 2010 3:38 PM To: 'Thomas York'; nanog@nanog.org Subject: RE: ipfix/netflow/sflow generator for Linux
I've used fprobe with great success. You can run multiple instances of fprobe for the different interfaces.
--Samuel
fprobe: a NetFlow probe - libpcap-based tool that collects network traffic data and emit it as NetFlow flows towards the specified collector.
WWW: http://sourceforge.net/projects/fprobe
-- Samuel Petreski Sr. Security Analyst Georgetown University
-----Original Message----- From: Thomas York [mailto:straterra@fuhell.com] Sent: Monday, December 06, 2010 2:15 PM To: nanog@nanog.org Subject: ipfix/netflow/sflow generator for Linux
At my current place of work, we use all Linux routers. I need to do some IP accounting/reporting and am currently trying to use Scrutinizer. Scrutinizer can use netstream, jstream, ipfix, netflow, and sflow data without qualms. My only issue is that I can't seem to find any good software for Linux that works with multiple interfaces to generate the flow information. I've tried ndsad, nprobe, softflowd, host sflow, and ipcad without much luck. Most of the software only works on one interface (which is useless as I need to do accounting for numerous interfaces).
I've had the best luck with ipcad. The only thing that seems to not work with it is that it doesn't correctly give the interface number in the flow information. It refers to all interfaces as interface 65535. I've tried the config option for ipcad to map an interface directly to an SNMP interface ID, but that option of the config file seems to be ignored.
Ntop functionally does exactly what I need, but it's extremely buggy. It segfaults after a few minutes, regardless of Linux distro or Ntop version. So..any ideas on what I can do to get good flow information from our Linux routers?
-- Ken Anderson Pacific Internet - http://www.pacific.net