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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Grep starting from a specific position Post 302537388 by Lord Spectre on Friday 8th of July 2011 03:46:47 AM
Old 07-08-2011
Thanks for fast reply itkamaraj,
I already know the simple command cut, but how can I implement it in the tcpdump command?

As already told, the output will be shown @ the screen in real time, so I need to "cut" the output in real time! Smilie

EDIT: Got it!
Code:
tcpdump -l -i bond1 -s 1514 -nntttt -A src or dst 192.168.1.5 and port 10000 | cut -c25- | grep "51/"

But I cannot show the CR between the output lines!
I tried the following without success (no output shown):
Code:
tcpdump -l -i bond1 -s 1514 -nntttt -A src or dst 192.168.1.5 and port 10000 | cut -c25- | grep "51/" | nawk '{printf("%s\n\n",$0)}'

or
Code:
tcpdump -l -i bond1 -s 1514 -nntttt -A src or dst 192.168.1.5 and  port 10000 | cut -c25- | nawk  '{printf("%s\n\n",$0)}' | grep "51/"


Last edited by Lord Spectre; 07-08-2011 at 04:56 AM..
 

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nstreams(1)							   Users Manuals						       nstreams(1)

NAME
network streams - a tcpdump output analyzer SYNOPSIS
nstreams [ -v ] [ -c nstreams-services ] [ -n nstreams-networks_file ] [ -N [ -i ] [ -I ]] [ -r ] [ -O output [ -D iface ] [ -Y ]] [ -u ] [ -U ] [ -B ] [ -f tcpdump_file ] [ -l <iface> ] [ tcpdump output ] DESCRIPTION
nstreams is a utility designed to identify the IP streams that are occuring on a network from a non-user friendly tcpdump output of several megabytes. This is especially useful when you plan to install a firewall but if you do not know the nstreams that the network users are generating (http, real audio, and more...). nstreams can read the tcpdump output directly from stdin, or from a file. It can even generate the con- figuration file of your firewall, using the -O option. OPTIONS
-c <nstreams-services-file> The path to an alternate nstreams service file. This file is used to identify each protocol. See the services file section later in this manual page. -n <nstreams-networks-file> The path to an alternate nstreams network file. This file is used to identify which hosts belong to which network. See the networks file section later in this manual page. -f <tcpdump output file> The path to the file to read data from. This file must have been generated using 'tcpdump -w filename'. -l <iface> Listen directly on interface <iface>. This avoids the use of tcpdump. -N print the networks names instead of the hosts IP addresses. The intra-network traffic will not be shown. Use this option twice to show the networks IP address instead of their names. -i Also show the intra-network traffic (must be used with -N) -I Only show the intra-network traffic (must be used with -N) -r be redundant. That is, the same streams will be printed each time they appear in the dump. -v print version number and exit. -O <type> output type. You can use this option to generate your firewall startup script. Do nstreams -h to see the supported output types. -D <iface> interface to apply to output onto. Must be used with -O. -Y The firewall rules that will be generated will deny all packets coming from the outside trying to establish connections to the inside. If you system is not serving anything, then it's safe to turn on this option. -u Do not print the unknown streams -U Only print the unknown streams -B Show broadcasts and networks USAGE
Let tcpdump(1) run some time on your network (like one week), and save its output in a file, by doing : tcpdump -l -n > output or tcpdump -w filename Then, feed nstreams with this output file, and it will turn it into a easily-readable file which will help you to write efficient firewall filters. You may also do : tcpdump -l -n | nstreams or nstreams -f filename (if you used tcpdump -w) THE SERVICES FILE
The service file contains the description of each protocol, as well as their name. Its syntax is : protocol_name:server_port(s)/{udp,tcp}:client_ports(s) or : protocol_name:type(s)/icmp:code(s) Whereas : protocol_name is the name of the protocol described. This name may contain any character, including space, except ':'. server_port(s) is the range of ports used by the server. Usually, you will want to define one server port only, but you may enter any range you want. ip_protocol is the IP protocol that this protocol is lying onto. Acceptable values are tcp and udp client_port(s) is the range of ports that the client may use. You can set this to any or, for more accurate results, to ports ranges, like '1-1024,2048-4096'. The rules are : 'first match, first taken'. SERVICE FILE EXAMPLE
Using this syntax, you would declare the ssh protocol by : ssh-unix:22/tcp:1000-1023 Because the Unix version of the ssh client uses a privileged port to connect onto the ssh server which listens on port 22. THE NETWORKS FILE
The networks file is used to define sets and subsets of hosts (also known as networks). This avoids redundancy in the output file. The syn- tax format for this file is : network name:ip/mask Whereas the network name is whatever you want, the IP is the ip of the network, and the mask is the CIDR netmask of the network. The rule is 'first match, first taken'. NETWORKS FILE EXAMPLE
admin:192.168.19.0/29 whole_subnet:192.168.0.0/16 internet:0.0.0.0/0 LIMITS
o nstreams can only parse the output of 'tcpdump -n' o Even though the output of nstreams is easier to read than the one of tcpdump, it is still not easily readable. Use sort(1) on the nstream output to get a more readable file. o This program could have been written in perl FILES
/etc/nstreams-services /etc/nstreams-networks SEE ALSO
tcpdump(1) AUTHORS
Concept : Herve Schauer Consultants - http://www.hsc.fr Coding : Renaud Deraison <deraison@cvs.nessus.org> BUG REPORTS
Please send all your bug reports with the detail of your configuration to Renaud Deraison <deraison@cvs.nessus.org> nstreams July 1999 nstreams(1)
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