xref: /freebsd/contrib/pf/pflogd/pflogd.8 (revision 0b3105a37d7adcadcb720112fed4dc4e8040be99)
1.\"	$OpenBSD: pflogd.8,v 1.37 2008/10/22 08:16:49 henning Exp $
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3.\" Copyright (c) 2001 Can Erkin Acar.  All rights reserved.
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27.\" $FreeBSD$
28.\"
29.Dd October 22 2008
30.Dt PFLOGD 8
31.Os
32.Sh NAME
33.Nm pflogd
34.Nd packet filter logging daemon
35.Sh SYNOPSIS
36.Nm pflogd
37.Bk -words
38.Op Fl Dx
39.Op Fl d Ar delay
40.Op Fl f Ar filename
41.Op Fl i Ar interface
42.Op Fl s Ar snaplen
43.Op Ar expression
44.Ek
45.Sh DESCRIPTION
46.Nm
47is a background daemon which reads packets logged by
48.Xr pf 4
49to a
50.Xr pflog 4
51interface, normally
52.Pa pflog0 ,
53and writes the packets to a logfile (normally
54.Pa /var/log/pflog )
55in
56.Xr tcpdump 1
57binary format.
58These logs can be reviewed later using the
59.Fl r
60option of
61.Xr tcpdump 1 ,
62hopefully offline in case there are bugs in the packet parsing code of
63.Xr tcpdump 1 .
64.Pp
65.Nm
66closes and then re-opens the log file when it receives
67.Dv SIGHUP ,
68permitting
69.Xr newsyslog 8
70to rotate logfiles automatically.
71.Dv SIGALRM
72causes
73.Nm
74to flush the current logfile buffers to the disk, thus making the most
75recent logs available.
76The buffers are also flushed every
77.Ar delay
78seconds.
79.Pp
80If the log file contains data after a restart or a
81.Dv SIGHUP ,
82new logs are appended to the existing file.
83If the existing log file was created with a different snaplen,
84.Nm
85temporarily uses the old snaplen to keep the log file consistent.
86.Pp
87.Nm
88tries to preserve the integrity of the log file against I/O errors.
89Furthermore, integrity of an existing log file is verified before
90appending.
91If there is an invalid log file or an I/O error, the log file is moved
92out of the way and a new one is created.
93If a new file cannot be created, logging is suspended until a
94.Dv SIGHUP
95or a
96.Dv SIGALRM
97is received.
98.Pp
99.Nm
100will also log the pcap statistics for the
101.Xr pflog 4
102interface to syslog when a
103.Dv SIGUSR1
104is received.
105.Pp
106The options are as follows:
107.Bl -tag -width Ds
108.It Fl D
109Debugging mode.
110.Nm
111does not disassociate from the controlling terminal.
112.It Fl d Ar delay
113Time in seconds to delay between automatic flushes of the file.
114This may be specified with a value between 5 and 3600 seconds.
115If not specified, the default is 60 seconds.
116.It Fl f Ar filename
117Log output filename.
118Default is
119.Pa /var/log/pflog .
120.It Fl i Ar interface
121Specifies the
122.Xr pflog 4
123interface to use.
124By default,
125.Nm
126will use
127.Ar pflog0 .
128.It Fl p Ar pidfile
129Writes a file containing the process ID of the program to
130.Pa /var/run .
131The file name has the form
132.Ao Ar pidfile Ac Ns .pid .
133The default is
134.Ar pflogd .
135.It Fl s Ar snaplen
136Analyze at most the first
137.Ar snaplen
138bytes of data from each packet rather than the default of 116.
139The default of 116 is adequate for IP, ICMP, TCP, and UDP headers but may
140truncate protocol information for other protocols.
141Other file parsers may desire a higher snaplen.
142.It Fl x
143Check the integrity of an existing log file, and return.
144.It Ar expression
145Selects which packets will be dumped, using the regular language of
146.Xr tcpdump 1 .
147.El
148.Sh FILES
149.Bl -tag -width /var/run/pflogd.pid -compact
150.It Pa /var/run/pflogd.pid
151Process ID of the currently running
152.Nm .
153.It Pa /var/log/pflog
154Default log file.
155.El
156.Sh EXAMPLES
157Log specific tcp packets to a different log file with a large snaplen
158(useful with a log-all rule to dump complete sessions):
159.Bd -literal -offset indent
160# pflogd -s 1600 -f suspicious.log port 80 and host evilhost
161.Ed
162.Pp
163Log from another
164.Xr pflog 4
165interface, excluding specific packets:
166.Bd -literal -offset indent
167# pflogd -i pflog3 -f network3.log "not (tcp and port 23)"
168.Ed
169.Pp
170Display binary logs:
171.Bd -literal -offset indent
172# tcpdump -n -e -ttt -r /var/log/pflog
173.Ed
174.Pp
175Display the logs in real time (this does not interfere with the
176operation of
177.Nm ) :
178.Bd -literal -offset indent
179# tcpdump -n -e -ttt -i pflog0
180.Ed
181.Pp
182Tcpdump has been extended to be able to filter on the pfloghdr
183structure defined in
184.Aq Ar net/if_pflog.h .
185Tcpdump can restrict the output
186to packets logged on a specified interface, a rule number, a reason,
187a direction, an IP family or an action.
188.Pp
189.Bl -tag -width "ruleset authpf " -compact
190.It ip
191Address family equals IPv4.
192.It ip6
193Address family equals IPv6.
194.It ifname kue0
195Interface name equals "kue0".
196.It on kue0
197Interface name equals "kue0".
198.It ruleset authpf
199Ruleset name equals "authpf".
200.It rulenum 10
201Rule number equals 10.
202.It reason match
203Reason equals match.
204Also accepts "bad-offset", "fragment", "bad-timestamp", "short",
205"normalize", "memory", "congestion", "ip-option", "proto-cksum",
206"state-mismatch", "state-insert", "state-limit", "src-limit",
207and "synproxy".
208.It action pass
209Action equals pass.
210Also accepts "block".
211.It inbound
212The direction was inbound.
213.It outbound
214The direction was outbound.
215.El
216.Pp
217Display the logs in real time of inbound packets that were blocked on
218the wi0 interface:
219.Bd -literal -offset indent
220# tcpdump -n -e -ttt -i pflog0 inbound and action block and on wi0
221.Ed
222.Sh SEE ALSO
223.Xr pcap 3 ,
224.Xr pf 4 ,
225.Xr pflog 4 ,
226.Xr pf.conf 5 ,
227.Xr newsyslog 8 ,
228.Xr tcpdump 1
229.Sh HISTORY
230The
231.Nm
232command appeared in
233.Ox 3.0 .
234.Sh AUTHORS
235.Nm
236was written by
237.An Can Erkin Acar Aq canacar@openbsd.org .
238