Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers To determine the firewalls/interfaces from and to an AIX server Post 303045128 by rbatte1 on Thursday 12th of March 2020 10:26:50 AM
Old 03-12-2020
It's not a super clear question, but you might consider:-
  • If it's user login, these would be recorded in the system logs - look in /etc/syslog.conf or /etc/rsyslog.conf for the files you write to.
  • If it's FTP or SFTP users, see above.
  • If you are looking for other services that report their activity such as a web-server on port 80, then again look in the relevant logs
If you want to see connections from anything connected when you look, you will get lots of output from something like netstat -na | grep ESTABLISHED however this does not show UDP connections and is only a report of connections at that instant.
If you want to see ALL connections whenever they are made, then you are probably looking at tcpdump, however that can generate vast amounts of traffic. It may be sensible to have a look at the output from netstat -na|grep LISTEN and decide which of the ports listed you want to watch traffic from. Tools such as Wireshark (formerly Ethereal) can help with interpreting the data recorded. If you fire up tcpdump, write it to a file and look at one port at a time to keep the data collected to a manageable size.

When moving to a new server, will it have a new DNS record and a new IP address? Depending how things connect, then you might be able to just create/alter CNAME records in the DNS to re-route the traffic.

Sorry that this might not help much, but it's a little difficult to exactly understand your need.



I hope that this helps,
Robin
This User Gave Thanks to rbatte1 For This Post:
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. AIX

Transferring files from one AIX server to another AIX server in binary mode

Hi, I am a newbie to AIX. We have 2 AIX5.3 servers in our environment, I need to transfer some files in Binary mode from one server to another and some files in ASCII mode from one server to another server. Could you please help me as to how I need to do that? Thanks, Rakesh (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: rakeshc.apps
4 Replies

2. AIX

Determine disk space in AIX

Hi I need to extend a FS in AIX but Im not sure on how to calculate the free space Please advise if my math is correct: -------PP SIZE: 64 megabyte(s) --------TOTAL PPs: 1086 (69504 megabytes) so the total size of volume is 64 * 1086 = 69504 MB (695GB) Free PP is-- FREE... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: hedkandi
4 Replies

3. IP Networking

How to Determine client's DNS server Ip

Is there a way for a server to determine client's DNS ip? I have an application that logs client's IP but in certain cases its desirable to know their DNS too (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: vickylife
1 Replies

4. AIX

network interfaces on vio server

Hi, I would like to know after the installation of vio server. how many logical network interfaces will be created on vio server if I am having two physical interfaces on vio server. I am asking this question because I would like know to on the basis of logical network interfaces creation on... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: manoj.solaris
0 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Determine if variable is the Server component of UNC

Hi all, Using sh/csh, unfortunately shell scripts are not my strong suit. Trying to write a script that gets called from a program for pre-processing. The program passes individual components of a UNC (//server/path1/path2/filename). Thus the unc path of: //server/path1/path2/filename, is... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: Festus Hagen
7 Replies

6. AIX

Udp_sendspace setting in AIX diff interfaces

Hey, would like to set udp_sendspace parameters in diferrent interface ent2 ent3 ent4 , no -p -o udp_sendspace=65536 just set on ent2 and chdev -l ent3 -a udp_sendspace=65536 doesn't work is that possible to set up this parameters by interface? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: prpkrk
1 Replies

7. AIX

AIX with 2 Net Interfaces lose connectivity

hi guys We have a AIX Server with TSM installed. This server has en0 for administration purposes and we have en1 for backup stuff. en0 subnet 10.10.10.x en1 subnet 10.10.20.x The issue we are having is all of a sudden the LPARs we are backing up lose connectivity to the AIX-TSM Server.... (23 Replies)
Discussion started by: karlochacon
23 Replies

8. Red Hat

How to determine share name of Linux server?

Hi, How to determine share name of Linux server ? OS version is RHL 6.5 Regards, Maddy (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: Maddy123
11 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Script to determine server IP

Need help with the script, I am trying to include this script as part of kickstart profile. based of the host's IP address, in this case if the host is IP starting with 10.10.3.* or 10.10.6.*, I will be pushing appropriate routing file from my web server. I validate host IP from nslookup. ... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: bobby320
3 Replies
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)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 10:47 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy