Date: Tue, 18 Oct 2005 00:59:32 -0600 From: Tyler <tyler@tylercentral.com> To: freebsd-pf@freebsd.org Subject: [Fwd: Re: Per Protocol Traffic Accounting] Message-ID: <1129618772.16152.0.camel@Ubuntu.tylercentral.com>
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Hi Travis, > > Thanks for the reply. However I want to capture data for each > protocol. So, I'd like to have data for HTTP, SMTP, POP3, etc. I've > done this before with ipfilter using the "count" command. (Eg. count > in on de0 from any to any proto http ) > > However PF doesn't have the count command. I've set labels on my ACL > entries, however when a new TCP session is established, the flow stays > with the "IN" rule because I'm keeping state on the connection. So > the IN counters show all the bytes Tx'd and Rx'd, and the OUT rule is > 0 because the flow never hits that rule due to keeping the state. > > (Hmm... confusing?) > > I was hoping someone out there has done per protocol accounting with > PF because I can't figure it out. :( > > I've also looked at ntop from a suggestion earlier in this thread. > However I was hoping to find a solution using just PF. > > Tyler > > On Mon, 2005-10-17 at 23:23 -0500, Travis H. wrote: > > > "set loginterface interface > > > > Sets the interface for which PF should gather statistics such as bytes > > in/out and packets passed/blocked. Statistics can only be gathered for > > one interface at a time. Note that the match, bad-offset, etc., > > counters and the state table counters are recorded regardless of > > whether loginterface is set or not. To turn this option off, set it to > > none. The default is none." > > > > > > Otherwise, couldn't you just use the ifconfig stats? I think there's > > a package for exporting this via SNMP, which could be queried using > > ifgraph or rrdtool. > > -- > > http://www.lightconsulting.com/~travis/ -><- > > "We already have enough fast, insecure systems." -- Schneier & Ferguson > > GPG fingerprint: 50A1 15C5 A9DE 23B9 ED98 C93E 38E9 204A 94C2 641B
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