awk script to find time difference between HTTP PUT and HTTP DELETE requests in access.log
Hi,
I'm trying to write a script to determine the time gap between HTTP PUT and HTTP DELETE requests in the HTTP Servers access log.
Normally client will do HTTP PUT to push content e.g. file_1.txt and 21 seconds later it will do HTTP DELETE, but sometimes the time varies causing some issues on the server side.
The format of the log is as below:
So from above I'd need to first find the time stamp e.g. when file_30.txt was pushed in, then find the HTTP DELETE for the file_30.txt and then determine the time difference. (file_30.txt just and example as this would need to be done to every file pushed in)
So it would be the 2 following lines
2016-07-06 11:09:04 [127.0.0.2] [PUT Revive Adserver HTTP/1.1] [201]
2016-07-06 11:09:25 [127.0.0.2] [DELETE Revive Adserver HTTP/1.1] [404]
So time difference would be: 11:09:25 - 11:09:04 = 21seconds
And output would be something like:
File: file_30.txt, difference: 21sec
I'm trying to use awk script to do this but I'm not very familiar with it so I've just started with the following(which might be totally stupid) so if anyone would have ideas on how to go about writing the script to achieve my goal it would be great:
On a sparc solaris 8 host running sunone webserver 6 I would like to limit the http requests that can be used when port 80 is accessed. We currently have http/1.0 enabled.
For example I would like to remove the http request DELETE.
Regards,
BLP (1 Reply)
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LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
smb-nat
NAT(1) General Commands Manual NAT(1)NAME
smb-nat - NetBIOS Auditing Tool
SYNOPSIS
smb-nat [-o <output>] [-u <userlist>] [-p <passlist>] <address>
DESCRIPTION
smb-nat is a tool written to perform various security checks on systems offering the NetBIOS file sharing service. smb-nat will attempt to
retrieve all information availible from the remote server, and attempt to access any services provided by the server.
OPTIONS -o Specify the output file. All results from the scan will be written to the specified file, in addition to standard output.
-u Specify the file to read usernames from. Usernames will be read from the specified file when attempting to guess the password on
the remote server. Usernames should appear one per line in the specified file. A sample username file can be found at
/usr/share/smb-nat/userlist.txt.
-p Specify the file to read passwords from. Passwords will be read from the specified file when attempting to guess the password on
the remote server. Passwords should appear one per line in the specified file. A sample password file can be found at
/usr/share/smb-nat/passlist.txt.
<address>
Addresses should be specified in comma deliminated format, with no spaces. Valid address specifications include:
hostname - "hostname" is added
127.0.0.1-127.0.0.3, adds addresses 127.0.0.1 through 127.0.0.3
127.0.0.1-3, adds addresses 127.0.0.1 through 127.0.0.3
127.0.0.1-3,7,10-20, adds addresses 127.0.0.1 through 127.0.0.3, 127.0.0.7, 127.0.0.10 through 127.0.0.20.
hostname,127.0.0.1-3, adds "hostname" and 127.0.0.1 through 127.0.0.1
All combinations of hostnames and address ranges as specified above are valid.
If no userlist or password list files are specified on the command line, a small set of defaults are used. This list includes the follow-
ing:
Usernames
"ADMINISTRATOR", "GUEST", "BACKUP", "ROOT", "ADMIN", "USER", "DEMO", "TEST", "SYSTEM", "OPERATOR", "OPER", "LOCAL"
Passwords
"ADMINISTRATOR", "GUEST", "ROOT", "ADMIN", "PASSWORD", "TEMP", "SHARE", "WRITE", "FULL", "BOTH", "READ", "FILES", "DEMO", "TEST",
"ACCESS", "USER", "BACKUP", "SYSTEM", "SERVER", "LOCAL"
The password guessing routines are written in such a way that all passwords are tried for all usernames. Keep this in mind when using
larger lists of passwords and usernames, as the time required increases exponentially with the size of these lists.
SUPPORTED PLATFORMS
This version of smb-nat has been tested against Windows NT 4.0 and various versions of the Samba server written by Andrew Tridgell.
This version of smb-nat has been tested and compiled on the following operating systems: Solaris 2.5, Linux 2.0, FreeBSD 2.1.5, OpenBSD
2.0, BSDI 2.1, Windows NT 4.0, Windows 95
FILES
smb-nat, /usr/share/smb-nat/userlist.txt, /usr/share/smb-nat/passlist.txt
NAT(1)