NAME¶
nacctd - network accounting daemon
SYNOPSIS¶
nacctd [-dD] [-c filename]
DESCRIPTION¶
The network accounting daemon logs network traffic in a format suitable for
generating billing information or usage statistics.
nacctd listens on
network interfaces and periodically writes information to a log file.
nacctd is configured by editing its configuration file,
/etc/nacctd.conf.
OPTIONS¶
- -d
- This will let nacctd run in debug mode
- -D
- This will make nacctd not to detach as a daemon, suitable
for running it from inittab.
- -c
- configfile Specify the path of an alternative config
file.
CONFIGURATION FILE OPTIONS¶
- flush <n>
- Flush every n seconds. This gives the interval in
seconds when the accumulated data is flushed to the output file. Typically
set to 300 (five minutes).
- fdelay <n>
- This defines after how many seconds of inactivity a certain
record of traffic information may be written out. This helps making the
log files smaller since only one output record will be generated for
related traffic. Typically set to 60 seconds.
- file <f>
- Specifies the main output file for the daemon to log
network traffic to.
- dumpfile <f>
- Specifies a file to dump data to that is not yet written to
the main output file. This is to prevent data loss should a crash occur.
On startup an existing file of this name will be moved to <f>.o
- notdev <interface>
- Don't log entries for this interface.
- device <interface>
- Specifies a network interface to put into promiscuous
mode.
- iflimit <interface>
- Log only packets on this interface. Mutually exclusive with
hostlimit.
- ignoremask <netmask>
- Specifies a netmask (in dotted quad format) for which
traffic is ignored. This allows traffic on the local LAN to be
excluded.
- ignorenet <network>
<netmask>
- Ignore traffic on this network. Ignoring a net with
ignorenet is not as efficient as ignoremask. Thus you should exclude your
local network with ignoremask in preference to ignorenet.
- masqif <ipaddr>
- Specifies an ip number we are masquerading as. This re-maps
ip/port for incoming connections (e.g. FTP-data) to ip/port of the
masqueraded destination.
- debug <n>
- Sets the debugging level to <n>.
- headers <interface-type> <data-start>
<type-field>
- Defines where the real data starts for each type of
interface. <interface-type> is one of eth, lo, plip, isdn
etc. <data-start> is the offset in bytes to the start of the
real data. <type-field> is the offset of the type field in
bytes, or a 0 if there is no type field. If SLIP or PPP devices are
specified here, association of dynamic ip addresses with usernames won't
work (see dynamicip below).
- dynamicip <dir>
- Specifies a directory to get username information from,
where users are logged into ppp or slip accounts and assigned dynamic ip
addresses. The directory should contain a file for each logged in user,
where the filename is their IP address, and the file contains their
username. Typically, these files will be created by ip-up scripts.
- dynamicnet <network>
<netmask>
- Specifies the network the slip/ppp dynamic ips are assigned
from.
- exclude-name-lookup <network>
<netmask>
- Specifies a (sub)net to exclude from dynamic ip name
lookup.
- hostlimit <ipaddr>
- Log only packets to/from this host. This may be specified
multiple times for multiple hosts. This option is mutually exclusive with
iflimit.
- disable <n>
- Don't include field <n> in the output
format.
- dontignore <network>
<netmask>
- Don't ignore hosts on the specified (sub)net that would
otherwise have been excluded by an ignorenet statement. This can be a
useful to account for proxy traffic by specifying the proxy servers'
subnet.
- line <interface> <device>
- Specifies fixed mapping of slip/ppp interface names to tty
devices. This is used to assign traffic to a user if nacctd runs on the
ppp/slip server and the relation between network interface and serial line
is fixed. This option is obsolete.
The output file consists of lines with up to 10 fields, or less if the
configuration file disables one or more fields.
timestamp protocol src-addr src-port dst-addr dst-port count size user
interface
- timestamp
- Time in seconds past the epoch (standard UNIX time
format)
- protocol
- IP protocol
- count
- count of packets
- size
- size of data
- user
- associated user in case of a slip/ppp link, this will
always be "unknown" for other interfaces.
If the type is an ICMP message, field 4 is the ICMP message type and field 6 is
the ICMP message code.
Please note that for forwarded packets there will be one line for EACH interface
the packet passed. So if you are running this on your slip-server you will get
all the traffic over the slip interfaces TWICE, once for the sl* devices and
once for the eth* device. The same goes for ppp and generally for all
forwarded traffic. You can specify with 'notdev' entries which interfaces you
don't want to see in the log.
FILES¶
- /etc/nacctd.conf
- Configuration file
- /var/log/net-acct
- Default location for the main output file
- /var/log/net-acct-dump
- Default location for the dump of data not yet written to
the main file.
SEE ALSO¶
/usr/share/doc/net-acct/*,
tcpdump(8),
trafshow(1).
CAVEATS¶
This manual page is incomplete, and possibly inaccurate.
AUTHORS¶
Ulrich Callmeier
Richard Clark <rclark@ethos.co.nz>
This manual page was written by Alex King <alex@king.net.nz>, for the
Debian GNU/Linux system, using material from the original documentation.