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Manpage of ARGUS
ARGUS
Section: Maintenance Commands (8)
Updated: 10 November 2000
Index
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NAME
argus - audit record generation and utilization system
SYNOPSIS
argus
[
options
] [
filter expression
]
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2000 QoSient, LLC All rights reserved.
DESCRIPTION
Argus
is an IP transaction auditing tool that categorizes
IP packets which match the boolean
expression
into a protocol-specific network transaction model.
Argus
reports on the transactions that it discovers, as they occur.
Designed to run as a daemon,
argus
generally reads packets directly from a network interface, and writes the
transaction status information to a log file or open socket connected to an
argus
client (such as
ra(1)).
Argus
can also read packet information from
tcpdump(1) ,
snoop(1)
or
NLANR's Moat Time Sequence Header
raw packet files. Argus can also be configured to write its
transaction logs to stdout.
Argus
provides access control for its socket connection facility using
tcp_wrapper
technology. Please refer to the tcp_wrapper distribution
for a complete description.
OPTIONS
- -b
-
Dump the compiled packet-matching code to stdout and stop. This is
used to debug filter expressions.
- -d
-
Run argus as a daemon. This will cause argus to do the things that
Unix daemons do and return, if there were no errors, with argus
running as a detached process.
- -D
-
<level>
Print debug messages to stderr. The higher the <level> the more
information printed. Acceptable levels are 1-8.
- -e
-
<value>
Specify the source identifier for this argus. Acceptable values are
numbers, hostnames or ip address.
- -h
-
Print an explanation of all the arguments.
- -F
-
Use conffile as a source of configuration information.
Options set in this file override any other specification, and so
this is the last word on option values.
- -i
-
<interface>
Specify the physical network <interface> to be audited.
The default is the first network interface that is up and running.
- -J
-
Generate packet peformance data in each audit record.
- -M
-
<secs>
Specify the interval in <secs> of argus status records. These records
are used to report the internal status of argus itself. The default is
300 seconds.
- -m
-
Don't provide MAC addresses information in argus records.
- -O
-
Turn off Berkeley Packet Filter optimizer. No reason to do this unless
you think the optimizer generates bad code.
- -p
-
Do not set the physical network interface in promiscuous mode. If the
interface is already in promiscuous mode, this option may have no effect.
Do this to audit only the traffic coming to and from the system argus
is running on.
- -P
-
<portnum>
Specifies the <portnum> for remote client connection.
The default is to not support remote access.
Setting the value to zero (0) will forceably turn off the
facility.
- -r
-
Read from
tcpdump(1) ,
snoop(1)
or
NLANR's Moat Time Sequence Header
(tsh) packet capture files. If the packet capture file is a tsh
format file, then the -t option must also be used. Argus will read
from only one input packet file at a time.
If the
-r
option is specified,
argus
will not put down a
listen(2)
to support remote access.
- -R
-
Generate argus records such that response times can be derived from
transaction data.
- -S
-
<secs>
Specify the status reporting interval in <secs> for all traffic flows.
- -t
-
Indicate that the expected packet capture input file is a
NLANR's Moat Time Sequence Header
(tsh) packet capture file.
- -U
-
Specify the number of user bytes to capture.
- -w
-
<file ["filter"]
Write transaction status records to output-file. An output-file
of '-' directs argus to write the resulting argus-file output
to stdout.
- -X
-
Clear existing argus configuration. This removes any initialization done prior
to encountering this flag. Allows you to eliminate the effects of the
/etc/argus.conf file, or any argus.conf files that may have been loaded.
- expression
-
This
tcpdump(1)
expression
specifies which transactions will be selected. If no expression
is given, all transactions are selected. Otherwise,
only transactions for which expression is `true' will be dumped.
For a complete expression format description, please refer to the
tcpdump(1)
man page.
SIGNALS
Argus catches a number of signal(3) events.
The three signals SIGHUP, SIGINT, and SIGTERM
cause argus to exit, writing TIMEDOUT status records for
all currently active transactions. The signal SIGUSR1
will turn on debug reporting, and subsequent SIGUSR1
signals, will increment the debug-level. The signal SIGUSR2
will cause argus to turn off all debug reporting.
ENVIRONMENT
$ARGUSHOME - Argus Root directory
$ARGUSPATH - Argus.conf search path (/etc:$ARGUSHOME:$HOME)
FILES
/etc/argus.conf - argus daemon configuration file
/var/run/argus.#.#.pid - PID file
EXAMPLES
Run argus as a daemon, writing all its transaction status reports to
output-file. This is the typical mode.
-
argus -d -e `hostname` -w output-file
If ICMP traffic is not of interest to you, you can filter out ICMP
packets on input.
-
argus -w output-file - ip and not icmp
Argus supports both input filtering and output filtering,
and argus supports multiple output streams, each with their
own independant filters.
If you are interested in tracking IP traffic only (input
filter) and want to report ICMP traffic in one output file,
and all other IP traffic in another file.
-
argus -w outfile1 "icmp" -w outfile2 "not icmp" - ip
Audit the network activity that is flowing between the two
gateway routers, whose ethernet addresses are 00:08:03:2D:42:01 and
00:00:0C:18:29:F1. Without specifying an output-file, it is
assumed that the transaction status reports will be written to a
remote client. In this case we have changed the port that the
remote client will use to port 430/tcp.
-
argus -P 430 ether host (0:8:3:2d:42:1 and 0:0:c:18:29:f1) &
Audit each individual ICMP ECHO transaction. You would do this
gather Round Trip Time data within your network. Write the output to
output-file.
-
argus -R -w output-file "echo" - icmp
Audit all NFS transactions involving the server fileserver
and increase the reporting interval to 3600 seconds (to provide high
data reduction). Write the output to output-file.
-
argus -S 3600 -w output-file udp and port 2049 &
AUTHORS
Carter Bullard (carter@qosient.com)
SEE ALSO
hosts_access(5),
hosts_options(5),
tcpd(8),
tcpdump(1)
Index
- NAME
-
- SYNOPSIS
-
- COPYRIGHT
-
- DESCRIPTION
-
- OPTIONS
-
- SIGNALS
-
- ENVIRONMENT
-
- FILES
-
- EXAMPLES
-
- AUTHORS
-
- SEE ALSO
-
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Time: 23:41:27 GMT, March 15, 2001