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nfdump(1)							     nfdump(1)

NAME
       nfdump - netflow display and analyze program

SYNOPSIS
       nfdump [options] [filter]

DESCRIPTION
       nfdump  is the netflow display and analyzing program of the nfdump tool
       set.  It reads the netflow data from files stored by  nfcapd  and  pro‐
       cesses the flows according the options given. The filter syntax is com‐
       parable to tcpdump and extended for netflow data. Nfdump can also  dis‐
       play many different top N flow and flow element statistics.

OPTIONS
       -r inputfile
	  Read input data from inputfile. Default is read from stdin.

       -R expr
	  Read	input from a sequence of files in the same directory. expr may
	  be one of:
	   /any/dir	     Read recursively all files in directory dir.
	   /dir/file	     Read all files beginning with file.
	   /dir/file1:file2  Read all files from file1 to file2.

	   When using in combination with a sub hierarchy:
	   /dir/sub1/sub2/file1:sub3/sub4/file2
	   Read all files from sub1/sub2/file1 sub3/sub4/file2 iterating  over
	   all required hierarchy levels.

	   Note: files are read in alphabetical sequence.

       -M expr
	  Read	 input	 from	multiple   directories.	  expr	 looks	 like:
	  /any/path/to/dir1:dir2:dir3 etc. and will be expanded to the	direc‐
	  tories:  /any/path/to/dir1,  /any/path/to/dir2 and /any/path/to/dir3
	  Any number of colon separated directories may be given. The files to
	  read	are specified by -r or -R and are expected to exist in all the
	  given directories.  The options -r  and  -R  must  not  contain  any
	  directory part when used in conjunction with -M.

       -m depricated option. Use -O tstart instead.

       -O order
	  Set sort order to print flows or aggregated flows. order can be:
	    flows    Sort according the number of flows
	    packets  Sort according to (in)packets
	    ipkg     Same as packets
	    opkg     Sort according to output packets
	    bytes    Sort according to (in)bytes
	    ibyte    Same as bytes
	    obyte    Sort according to output bytes
	    pps	     Sort according to (in)packets per second
	    ipps     Same as ipps
	    opps     Sort according to out packets per second
	    bps	     Sort according to (in)bytes per second
	    ibps     Same as bps
	    obps     Sort according to output bytes per second
	    bpp	     Sort according to (in)bytes per packet
	    ibpp     Same as bpp
	    obpp     Sort according to output packets
	    tstart   Sort according to start time of flow - former -m
	    tend"    Sort according to end time of flows

       -w outputfile
	  If specified writes binary netflow records to outputfile ready to be
	  processed again with nfdump. The default output is ASCII on  stdout.
	  In  combination  with	 options  -m,  -a, -b, and -B write aggregated
	  and/or sorted flow cache in binary format to disk.

       -f filterfile
	  Reads the filter syntax from filterfile. Note: Any filter  specified
	  directly on the command line takes precedence over -f.

       -t timewin
	  Process  only	 flows,	 which	fall in the time window timewin, where
	  timewin is YYYY/MM/dd.hh:mm:ss[-YYYY/MM/dd.hh:mm:ss]. Any  parts  of
	  the	time   spec   may   be	 omitted  e.g  YYYY/MM/dd  expands  to
	  YYYY/MM/dd.00:00:00-infinity and processes all flow from a given day
	  onwards.  The	 time  window  may also be specified as +/- n. In this
	  case it is relativ to the beginning or end of all flows.  +10	 means
	  the  first 10 seconds of all flows, -10 means the last 10 seconds of
	  all flows.

       -c num
	  Limit the number of records to read and process from file(es) to the
	  first num flows.

       -a Aggregate  netflow  data.  Automatically  implies -a. Aggregation is
	  done at connection level by  taking  the  5-tuple  protocol,	srcip,
	  dstip, srcport and dstport.

       -A aggregation
	  Similar to Flexible Netflow (FNF), netflow records can be aggregated
	  by any number of given v9 fields. aggregation	 is  a	','  separated
	  list of recognised tags of the following list:
	    proto      IP protocol
	    srcip      Source IP address
	    dstip      Destination IP address
	    srcip4/net IPv4 source IP address with applied netmask
	    srcip6/net IPv6 source IP address with applied netmask
	    dstip4/net IPv4 destination IP address with applied netmask
	    dstip6/net IPv6 destination IP address with applied netmask
	    srcnet     Apply netmask srcmask in netflow record for source IP
	    dstnet     Apply netmask dstmask in netflow record for dest IP
	    srcport    Source port
	    dstport    Destination port
	    srcmask    Source mask
	    dstmask    Destination mask
	    srcvlan    Source vlan label
	    dstvlan    Destination vlan label
	    srcas      Source AS number
	    dstas      Destination AS number
	    nextas     BGP Next AS
	    prevas     BGP Previous AS
	    inif       SNMP input interface number
	    outif      SNMP output interface number
	    next       IP next hop
	    bgpnext    BGP next hop
	    insrcmac   In source MAC address
	    outdstmac  out destination MAC address
	    indstmac   In destintation MAC address
	    outsrcmac  Out source MAC address
	    tos	       Source type of service
	    srctos     Source type of Service
	    dsttos     Destination type of Service
	    mpls1      MPLS label 1
	    mpls2      MPLS label 2
	    mpls3      MPLS label 3
	    mpls4      MPLS label 4
	    mpls5      MPLS label 5
	    mpls6      MPLS label 6
	    mpls7      MPLS label 7
	    mpls8      MPLS label 8
	    mpls9      MPLS label 9
	    mpls10     MPLS label 10
	    router     Exporting router IP

	  nfdump  automatically	 compiles an appropriate output format for the
	  selected aggregation unless an explicit output format is given.  The
	  automatic  output  format  is	 identical to -o 'fmt:%ts %td <fields>
	  %pkt %byt %bps %bpp %fl'  where  <fields>  represents	 the  selected
	  aggregation tags.

	  Example:
	      -A proto,srcip,dstport

	      -A srcas,dstas

       -b Aggregate  netflow  records  as  bidirectional  flows. Automatically
	  implies -a.  Aggregation is done on connection level by  taking  the
	  5-tuple  protocol, srcip, dstip, srcport and dstport, or the reverse
	  order for the corresponding connection flow. Input and output	 pack‐
	  ets/bytes  are  counted and reported separate. Both flows are merged
	  into a single record. An appropriate output format is selected auto‐
	  matically, which may be overwritten by any -o format option.

       -B Like	-b but automagically swaps flows, such that src port is > 1024
	  and dst port is < 1024 as some exporters do  not  care  sending  the
	  flows in proper order. It's considered to be a convenient option. If
	  src and dst port are > 1024 or < 1024, the flows are taken as is.

       -I Print flow statistics from file specified by -r, or timeslot	speci‐
	  fied by -R/-M.

       -D dns
	  Set dns as nameserver to lookup hostnames.

       -s statistic[:p][/orderby]
	  Generate the Top N flow or flow element statistic. statistic can be:
	    record    Statistic about arregated netflow records.
	    srcip     Statistic about source IP addresses
	    dstip     Statistic about destination IP addresses
	    ip	      Statistic about any (source or destination) IP addresses
	    nhip      Statistic about next hop IP addresses
	    nhbip     Statistic about BGP next hop IP addresses
	    router    Statistic about exporting router IP address
	    srcport   Statistic about source ports
	    dstport   Statistic about destination ports
	    port      Statistic about any (source or destination) ports
	    tos	      Statistic about type of service - default src
	    srctos    Statistic about src type of service
	    dsttos    Statistic about dst type of service
	    dir	      Statistic about flow directions ingress/egress
	    srcas     Statistic about source AS numbers
	    dstas     Statistic about destination AS numbers
	    as	      Statistic about any (source or destination) AS numbers
	    inif      Statistic about input interface
	    outif     Statistic about output interface
	    if	      Statistic about any interface
	    srcmask   Statistic about src mask
	    dstmask   Statistic about dst mask
	    srcvlan   Statistic about src vlan label
	    dstvlan   Statistic about dst vlan label
	    vlan      Statistic about any vlan label
	    insrcmac  Statistic about input src MAC address
	    outdstmac Statistic about output dst MAC address
	    indstmac  Statistic about input dst MAC address
	    outsrcmac Statistic about output src MAC address
	    srcmac    Statistic about any src MAC address
	    dstmac    Statistic about any dst MAC address
	    inmac     Statistic about any input MAC address
	    outmac    Statistic about any output MAC address
	    mask      Statistic about any mask
	    proto     Statistic about IP protocols
	    mpls1     Statistic about MPLS label 1
	    mpls2     Statistic about MPLS label 2
	    mpls3     Statistic about MPLS label 3
	    mpls4     Statistic about MPLS label 4
	    mpls5     Statistic about MPLS label 5
	    mpls6     Statistic about MPLS label 6
	    mpls7     Statistic about MPLS label 7
	    mpls8     Statistic about MPLS label 8
	    mpls9     Statistic about MPLS label 9
	    mpls10    Statistic about MPLS label 10
	    sysid     Internal SysID of exporter

	    NSEL/ASA stats
	    event     NSEL/ASA event
	    xevent    NSEL/ASA extended event
	    xsrcip    NSEL/ASA translated src IP address
	    xsrcport  NSEL/ASA translated src port
	    xdstip    NSEL/ASA translated dst IP address
	    xdstport  NSEL/ASA translated dst port
	    iacl      NSEL/ASA ingress ACL
	    iace      NSEL/ASA ingress ACE
	    ixace     NSEL/ASA ingress xACE
	    eacl      NSEL/ASA egress ACL
	    eace      NSEL/ASA egress ACE
	    exace     NSEL/ASA egress xACE

	    NAT stats
	    nevent    NAT event
	    vrf/ivrf  NAT ingress vrf
	    evrf      NAT egress vrf
	    nsrcip    NAT src IP address
	    nsrcport  NAT src port
	    ndstip    NAT dst IP address
	    ndstport  NAT dst port

	  By adding :p to the statistic name, the resulting statistic is split
	  up into transport layer protocols.  Default  is  transport  protocol
	  independent statistics.

	  orderby  is optional and specifies the order by which the statistics
	  is ordered and can be flows, packets, bytes, pps, bps	 or  bpp.  You
	  may  specify more than one orderby which results in the same statis‐
	  tic but ordered differently. If no orderby is given, statistics  are
	  ordered  by  flows.  You can specify as many -s flow element statis‐
	  tics on the command line for the same run.

	  Example:
	     -s srcip -s ip/flows -s dstport/pps/packets/bytes -s record/bytes

       -O orderby
	  Specifies the default orderby for flow element statistics -s,	 which
	  applies  when no orderby is given at -s. orderby can be flows, pack‐
	  ets, bytes, pps, bps or bpp. Defaults to flows.

       -l [+/-]packet_num
	  Limit	 statistics  output  to	 those	records	 above	or  below  the
	  packet_num  limit.  packet_num  accepts positive or negative numbers
	  followed by 'K' , 'M' or 'G' 10E3, 10E6 or 10E9 flows	 respectively.
	  See also note at -L

       -L [+/-]byte_num
	  Limit statistics output to those records above or below the byte_num
	  limit. byte_num accepts positive or negative numbers followed by 'K'
	  , 'M' or 'G' 10E3, 10E6 or 10E9 bytes respectively. Note: These lim‐
	  its only apply to the statistics and	aggregated  outputs  generated
	  with -a -s.  To filter netflow records by packets and bytes, use the
	  filter syntax 'packets' and 'bytes' described below.

       -n num
	  For record statistics (-s .. ): Define the number  for  the  Top  N.
	  Defaults to 10.  Use -n 0 to list all records.
	  For  record sorting and aggregation (-a .. -O ..): Limit the records
	  to the first top num sorted records.	if not specified or  -n	 0  is
	  given, all records are listed.

       -o format
	  Selects  the	output format to print flows or flow record statistics
	  (-s record). The following formats are available:
	    raw	     Print each file flow record on multiple lines.
	    line     Print each flow on one line. Default format.
	    long     Print each flow on one line with more details
	    biline   Same as line, but for bidir flows
	    bilong   Same as long, but for bidir flows
	    extended Print each flow on one line with even more details.
	    nsel     Print each NSEL event on one line.	 Default  if  NSEL/ASA
	    enabled.
	    nel	     Print each NAT event on one line. Default if NEL enabled.
	    csv	     Comma separated output for machine readable processing.
	    pipe     Legacy machine readable format: fields '|' separated.
	    fmt:format User defined output format.
	  For  each  defined output format except -o fmt:<format> an IPv6 long
	  output format exists.	 line6, long6 and extended6. See  output  for‐
	  mats below for more information.

       -q Suppress the header line and the statistics at the bottom.

       -N Print plain numbers in output. Easier for post-parsing.

       -i ident
	  Change ident label in file, specified by -r to ident

       -v file
	  Verify  file. Print data file version, number of blocks and compres‐
	  sion status.

       -E file
	  Print exporter/sampler list found in file. In case of a nfcapd  col‐
	  lector  file,	 an additional statistics per exporter is printed with
	  number of flows, packets and sequence errors.

       -x file
	  Scan and print extension maps located in file file

       -z Compress flows. Use fast LZO1X-1 compression in output file.

       -j file
	  Compress/Uncompress a given file. If the file is compressed,	uncom‐
	  press it and vice versa.

       -Z Check filter syntax and exit. Sets the return value accordingly.

       -X Compiles  the filer syntax and dumps the filter engine table to std‐
	  out.	This is for debugging purpose only.

       -V Print nfdump version and exit.

       -h Print help text on stdout with all options and exit.

RETURN VALUE
       Returns
	   0   No error.
	   255 Initialization failed.
	   254 Error in filter syntax.
	   250 Internal error.

OUTPUT FORMATS
       The output format raw  prints  each  flow  record  on  multiple	lines,
       including  all  information  available  in the record. This is the most
       detailed view on a flow.

       Other output formats print each flow on a single line. Predefined  out‐
       put  formats  are line, long and extended The output format line is the
       default output format when no  format  is  specified.   It  limits  the
       imformation  to	the  connection	 details as well as number of packets,
       bytes and flows.

       The output format long is identical to the format  line,	 and  includes
       additional information such as TCP flags and Type of Service.

       The  output  format  extended  is  identical  to	 the  format long, and
       includes additional computed information such as pps, bps and bpp.

       Fields:

	  Date flow start: Start time flow first seen. ISO 8601 format includ‐
	  ing miliseconds.

	  Duration: Duration of the flow in seconds and miliseconds.  If flows
	  are aggregated, duration is the time span over the entire periode of
	  time from first seen to last seen.

	  Proto: Protocol used in the connection.

	  Src IP Addr:Port: Source IP address and source port.

	  Dst  IP  Addr:Port: Destination IP address and destination port.  In
	  case of ICMP, port is decodes as type.code.

	  Flags: TCP flags ORed of the connection.

	  Tos: Type of service.

	  Packets: The number of packets in this flow.	If  flows  are	aggre‐
	  gated, the packets are summed up.

	  Bytes:  The  number  of bytes in this flow. If flows are aggregated,
	  the bytes are summed up.

	  pps: The calculated packets per second: number of  packets  /	 dura‐
	  tion.	  If flows are aggregated this results in the average pps dur‐
	  ing this periode of time.

	  bps: The calculated bits per second: 8 * number of bytes / duration.
	  If  flows are aggregated this results in the average bps during this
	  periode of time.

	  Bpp: The calculated bytes per packet: number of bytes	 /  number  of
	  packets.  If	flows  are  aggregated this results in the average bpp
	  during this periode of time.

	  Flows: Number of flows. If flows are listed  only,  this  number  is
	  alwasy  1.  If flows are aggregated, this shows the number of aggre‐
	  gated flows to one record.

       Numbers larger than 1'000'000 (1000*1000), are scaled to 4  digits  and
       one  decimal  digit  including the scaling factor M, G or T for cleaner
       output, e.g. 923.4 M

       To make the output more readable, IPv6 addresses are shrinked  down  to
       16 characters. The seven most and seven least digits connected with two
       dots '..' are displayed in any normal output formats.  To  display  the
       full IPv6 address, use the appropriate long format, which is the format
       name followed by a 6.

       Example: -o line displays an IPv6 address as 2001:23..80:d01e where  as
       the   format  -o	 line6	displays  the  IPv6  address  in  full	length
       2001:234:aabb::211:24ff:fe80:d01e.  The combination of -o  line	-6  is
       equivalent to -o line6.

       The  output  format  fmt:<format>  allows you to define your own output
       format.	A format description format consists of a single line contain‐
       ing arbitrary strings and format specifier as described below

	  %<format> Inserts the predefined format at this position. e.g. %line
	  %ts	    Start Time - first seen
	  %te	    End Time - last seen
	  %tr	    Time the flow was received by the collector
	  %td	    Duration
	  %pr	    Protocol
	  %exp	    Exporter ID
	  %eng	    Engine Type/ID
	  %sa	    Source Address
	  %da	    Destination Address
	  %sap	    Source Address:Port
	  %dap	    Destination Address:Port
	  %sp	    Source Port
	  %dp	    Destination Port
	  %sn	    Source Network, mask applied
	  %dn	    Destination Network, mask applied
	  %nh	    Next-hop IP Address
	  %nhb	    BGP Next-hop IP Address
	  %ra	    Router IP Address
	  %sas	    Source AS
	  %das	    Destination AS
	  %nas	    Next AS
	  %pas	    Previous AS
	  %in	    Input Interface num
	  %out	    Output Interface num
	  %pkt	    Packets - default input
	  %ipkt	    Input Packets
	  %opkt	    Output Packets
	  %byt	    Bytes - default input
	  %ibyt	    Input Bytes
	  %obyt	    Output Bytes
	  %fl	    Flows
	  %flg	    TCP Flags
	  %tos	    Tos - default src
	  %stos	    Src Tos
	  %dtos	    Dst Tos
	  %dir	    Direction: ingress, egress
	  %smk	    Src mask
	  %dmk	    Dst mask
	  %fwd	    Forwarding Status
	  %svln	    Src vlan label
	  %dvln	    Dst vlan label
	  %ismc	    Input Src Mac Addr
	  %odmc	    Output Dst Mac Addr
	  %idmc	    Input Dst Mac Addr
	  %osmc	    Output Src Mac Addr
	  %mpls1    MPLS label 1
	  %mpls2    MPLS label 2
	  %mpls3    MPLS label 3
	  %mpls4    MPLS label 4
	  %mpls5    MPLS label 5
	  %mpls6    MPLS label 6
	  %mpls7    MPLS label 7
	  %mpls8    MPLS label 8
	  %mpls9    MPLS label 9
	  %mpls10   MPLS label 10
	  %mpls	    MPLS labels 1-10
	  %bps	    bps - bits per second
	  %pps	    pps - packets per second
	  %bpp	    bps - Bytes per package

	  NSEL specific formats
	  %nfc	    NSEL connection ID
	  %evt	    NSEL event
	  %xevt	    NSEL extended event
	  %msec	    NSEL event time in msec
	  %iacl	    NSEL ingress ACL
	  %eacl	    NSEL egress ACL
	  %xsa	    NSEL XLATE src IP address
	  %xda	    NSEL XLATE dst IP address
	  %xsp	    NSEL XLATE src port
	  %xdp	    NSEL SLATE dst port
	  %xsap	    Xlate Source Address:Port
	  %xdap	    Xlate Destination Address:Port
	  %uname    NSEL user name

	  NEL/NAT specific formats
	  %nevt	    NAT event - same as %evt
	  %ivrf	    NAT ingress VRF ID
	  %evrf	    NAT egress VRF ID
	  %nsa	    NAT src IP address
	  %nda	    NAT dst IP address
	  %nsp	    NAT src port
	  %ndp	    NAT dst port
	  %pbstart  NAT pool block start
	  %pbend    NAT pool block end
	  %pbstep   NAT pool block step
	  %pbsize   NAT pool block size

	  Nprobe formats
	  %cl	    Client latency
	  %sl	    Server latency
	  %al	    Application latency

       Example: the standard output format long can be created as
	  -o "fmt:%ts %td %pr %sap -> %dap %flg %tos %pkt %byt %fl"

       You  may	 also  define your own output format and have it compiled into
       nfdump.	See nfdump.c section Output Formats for more details.

       The csv output format is intended to be read  by	 another  program  for
       further	processing.  As an example, see the parse_csv.pl Perl program.
       The cvs output format consists of one or more  output  blocks  and  one
       summary	block. Each output block starts with a cvs index line followed
       by the cvs record lines. The index lines describes the order, how  each
       following record is composed.

       Example:
	  Index line:	ts,te,td,sa,da,sp,dp,pr,...
	  Record line:	2004-07-11 10:30:00,2004-07-11 10:30:10,10.010,...

       All records are in ASCII readable form. Numbers are not scaled, so each
       line can easly be parsed.

       Indices used in nfdump 1.6:

	  ts,te,td    time records: t-start, t-end, duration
	  sa,da	      src dst address sp,dp	  src, dst port
	  pr	      protocol PF_INET or PF_INET6
	  flg	      TCP Flags:
			 000001 FIN.
			 000010 SYN
			 000100 RESET
			 001000 PUSH
			 010000 ACK
			 100000 URGENT
			 e.g. 6 => SYN + RESET
	  fwd	      forwarding status
	  stos	      src tos
	  ipkt,ibyt   input packets/bytes
	  opkt,obyt   output packets, bytes
	  in,out      input/output interface SNMP number
	  sas,das     src, dst AS
	  smk,dmk     src, dst mask
	  dtos	      dst tos
	  dir	      direction
	  nh,nhb      nethop IP address, bgp next hop IP
	  svln,dvln   src, dst vlan id
	  ismc,odmc   input src, output dst MAC
	  idmc,osmc   input dst, output src MAC
	  mpls1,mpls2 MPLS label 1-10
	  mpls3,mpls4
	  mpls5,mpls6
	  mpls7,mpls8
	  mpls9,mpls10
	  ra	      router IP
	  eng	      router engine type/id

       See parse_csv.pl for more details.

FILTER
       The filter syntax is similar to the well known  pcap  library  used  by
       tcpdump.	  The filter can be either specified on the command line after
       all options or in a separate file. It can span several lines.  Anything
       after a '#' is treated as a comment and ignored to the end of the line.
       There is virtually no limit in the length of the filter expression. All
       keywords are case independent.

       Any filter consists of one or more expressions expr. Any number of expr
       can be linked together:

       expr and expr, expr or expr, not expr and ( expr ).

       Expr can be one of the following filter primitives:

       include
	   @include <file>
	   include the content of <file> into filter.

       ip version
	   inet	 or ipv4 for IPv4
	   inet6 or ipv6 for IPv6

       protocol
	   proto <protocol>
	   proto <number>
	   where <protocol> is known protocol such as tcp, udp,	 icmp,	icmp6,
	   gre, esp, ah, etc. or a valid protocol number: 6, 17 etc.

       IP address
	   [src|dst] ip <ipaddr>
	   [src|dst] host <ipaddr>
	   with	 <ipaddr> as any valid IPv4, IPv6 address, or a full qualified
	   hostname.  In case of a hostname, the IP address is	looked	up  in
	   DNS.	  If  more than a single IP address is found, all IP addresses
	   are chained together. (ip1 or ip2 or ip3 ... )

	   To check if an IP address is in a known IP list, use
	   [src|dst] ip in [ <iplist> ]
	   [src|dst] host in [ <iplist> ]
	   <iplist> is a space or comma separated list of individual  <ipaddr>
	   or  full  qualified	hostnames, which are looked up in DNS. If more
	   than a single IP address is found, all IP addresses	are  put  into
	   the list.

       [src|dst]
	   IP  addresses,  networks, ports, AS number etc. can be specifically
	   selected by using a direction qualifier, such as src or dst.	  They
	   can	also  be used in combination with and and or.  such as src and
	   dst ip ...

       network
	   [src|dst] net a.b.c.d m.n.r.s
	   Select the IPv4 network a.b.c.d with netmask m.n.r.s.

	   [src|dst] net <net>/<num>
	   with <net> as a valid IPv4 or IPv6 network and <num>	 as  maskbits.
	   The	number of mask bits must match the appropriate address familiy
	   in IPv4 or IPv6. Networks may be abreviated such  as	 172.16/16  if
	   they are unambiguous.

       Port
	   [src|dst] port [comp] <num>
	   with <num> as any valid port number.	 If comp is omitted,
	    '=' is assumed. comp is explained more detailed below.
	   [src|dst] port in [ <portlist> ]
	   A  port  can be compared against a know list, where <portlist> is a
	   space separated list of individual port numbers.

       ICMP
	   icmp-type <num>
	   icmp-code <num>
	   with <num> as a valid icmp type/code.  This	automatically  implies
	   proto icmp.

       Router ID
	   engine-type <num>
	   engine-id <num>
	   sysid <num>
	   with <num> as a valid router engine type/id or exporter ID(0..255).

       Interface
	   [in|out] if <num>
	   Select input or output or either interface ID, with num as the SNMP
	   interface number.
	   Example: in if 3

       AS numbers
	   [src|dst|prev|next] as [comp] <num>
	   Selects source, dstination, previous, next or any  AS  number  with
	   <num>  as  any  valid  as number. 32bit AS numbers are suported. If
	   comp is omitted, '=' is assumed. comp is  explained	more  detailed
	   below.

	   [src|dst|prev|next] as in [ <ASlist> ]
	   An AS number can be compared against a know list, where <ASlist> is
	   a space or comma separated list of individual AS numbers.

       Prefix mask bits
	   [src|dst] mask <bits>
	   with <bits> as any valid prefix mask bit value.

       Vlan labels
	   [src|dst] vlan <num>
	   with <num> as any valid vlan label.

       Flags
	   flags <tcpflags>
	   with <tcpflags> as a combination of:
	      A	   ACK.
	      S	   SYN.
	      F	   FIN.
	      R	   Reset.
	      P	   Push.
	      U	   Urgent.
	      X	   All flags on.
       The ordering of the flags is not	 relevant.  Flags  not	mentioned  are
       treated	as  don't care.	 In order to get those flows with only the SYN
       flag set, use the syntax 'flags S and not flags AFRPU'.

       Next hop IP
	   next ip <ipaddr>
	   with <ipaddr> as IPv4/IPv6 IP address of next hop router.

       Next-hop router's IP in the BGP domain
	   bgpnext ip <ipaddr>
	   with <ipaddr> as IPv4/IPv6 next-hop router's IP in the BGP  domain.
	   ( v9 #18 )

       Router IP
	   router ip <ipaddr>
	   Filter the flows according the IP address of the exporting router.

       MAC addresses
	   [InOutSrcDst] mac <addr>
	   With	 <addr> any valid MAC address. mac can be more specific speci‐
	   fied by using any combination of a direction specifier  as  defined
	   by CISCO v9.	 in src, in dst, out src, out dst.

       MPLS labels
	   mpls label<n> [comp] <num>
	   With	 <n> as any mpls label number 1..10. Filters exactly specified
	   label<n>.
	   mpls eos [comp] <num>
	   Filters End of Stack label for a given value <num>.
	   mpls exp<n> [comp] <bits>
	   Filters experimental bits of label <n> with <bits> 0..7.

       Packets
	   packets [comp] <num> [scale]
	   To filter for netflow records with a specific packet count.
	   Example: packets > 1k

       Bytes
	   bytes [comp] <num> [scale]
	   To filter for netflow records with a specific byte count.
	   Example: bytes 46 filters all empty IPv4 packets

       Aggregated flows
	   flows [comp] <num> [scale]
	   To filter for netflow records with a specific number of  aggregated
	   flows.

       Type of Service (TOS)
	   [SourceDestination] tos <num>
	   With <num> 0..255. For compatibility with nfump 1.5.x: tos <num> is
	   equivalent with src tos <num>

       Packets per second: Calculated value.
	   pps [comp] num [scale]
	   To filter for flows with specific packets per second.

       Duration: Calculated value
	   duration [comp] num
	   To filter for flows with specific duration in miliseconds.

       Bits per second: Calculated value.
	   bps [comp] num [scale]
	   To filter for flows with specific bytes per second.

       Bytes per packet: Calculated value.
	   bpp [comp] num [scale]
	   To filter for flows with specific bytes per packet.

       scale scaling factor. Maybe k m g. Factor is 1000

       comp The following comparators are supported:
	   =, ==, >, <, EQ, LT, GT .  If comp is omitted, '=' is assumed.

       NSEL/ASA specific filters:

       NSEL/ASA Event
	   asa event <ignore|create|term|delete|deny>
	   asa event [comp] <number>
	   select NSEL/ASA event by name or number. If given as number it  can
	   be compared with a number

       NSEL/ASA denied reason
	   asa event denied <ingress|egress|interface|nosyn>
	   Select a NSEL/ASA denied event by type

       NSEL/ASA extended events
	   asa xevent [comp] <num>
	   Select  an  extended	 NSELL ASA event by number, or optionally com‐
	   pared by a number.

       X-late IP addresses and ports
	   [src|dst] xip <ip>
	   Select the translated IP address

	   [src|dst] xnet <net>/<num>
	   with <net> as a valid translated IPv4 or IPv6 network and <num>  as
	   maskbits.   The  number  of	mask  bits  must match the appropriate
	   address familiy in IPv4 or IPv6. Networks may be abreviated such as
	   172.16/16 if they are unambiguous.

	   [src|dst] xport <port>
	   Select the translated port

       NSEL/ASA ingress/egress
	   ingress <ACL|ACE|XACE> [comp] number
	   Select/compare an ingress ACL

	   egress ACL [comp] <number>
	   Select/compare an egress ACL

       NEL specific NAT filters:

       NAT Event
	   nat event <add|delete>
	   nat event [comp] <number>
	   select  NEL	NAT event by name or number. If given as number it can
	   be compared with a number

       NEL NAT ip addresses and ports
	   [src|dst] nip <ip>
	   Select the NAT IP address

	   [src|dst] nport <port>
	   Select the NAT port

       NEL NAT vrf
	   ingress vrf <num> Select the vrf

EXAMPLES
       nfdump -r /and/dir/nfcapd.201107110845 -c 100 'proto tcp and (  src  ip
       172.16.17.18  or	 dst  ip  172.16.17.19	)' Dumps the first 100 netflow
       records which match the given filter:

       nfdump -r /and/dir/nfcapd.201107110845 -B Map matching  flows  as  bin-
       directional single flow.

       nfdump	 -R   /and/dir/nfcapd.201107110845:nfcapd.200407110945	 'host
       192.168.1.2' Dumps all netflow records of host 192.168.1.2 from July 11
       08:45 - 09:45

       nfdump  -M /to/and/dir1:dir2 -R nfcapd.200407110845:nfcapd.200407110945
       -s record -n 20 Generates the Top 20 statistics	from  08:45  to	 09:45
       from 3 sources

       nfdump -r /and/dir/nfcapd.201107110845 -s record -n 20 -o extended Gen‐
       erates the Top 20 statistics, extended output format

       nfdump -r /and/dir/nfcapd.201107110845 -s record -n 20 'in if 5 and bps
       >  10k'	Generates the Top 20 statistics from flows comming from inter‐
       face 5

       nfdump -r /and/dir/nfcapd.201107110845 'inet6 and proto tcp and	(  src
       port > 1024 and dst port 80 ) Dumps all port 80 IPv6 connections to any
       web server.

NOTES
       Generating the statistics for data files of a  few  hundred  MB	is  no
       problem. However be careful if you want to create statistics of several
       GB of data. This may consume a lot of memory and can take a while. Flow
       anonymization has moved into nfanon.

SEE ALSO
       nfcapd(1), nfanon(1), nfprofile(1), nfreplay(1)

BUGS
       There  is  still the famous last bug. Please report them - all the last
       bugs - back to me.

				  2009-09-09			     nfdump(1)
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