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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
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tcptrack(1)						      General Commands Manual						       tcptrack(1)

NAME
tcptrack - Monitor TCP connections on the network SYNOPSIS
tcptrack [ -dfhvp ] [ -r seconds ] -i interface [ filter expression ] DESCRIPTION
tcptrack displays the status of TCP connections that it sees on a given network interface. tcptrack monitors their state and displays information such as state, source/destination addresses and bandwidth usage in a sorted, updated list very much like the top(1) command. The filter expression is a standard pcap filter expression (identical to the expressions used by tcpdump(8)) which can be used to filter down the characteristics of TCP connections that tcptrack will see. See tcpdump(8) for more information about the syntax of this expres- sion. OPTIONS
-d Only track connections that were started after tcptrack was started. Do not try to detect existing connections. -f Enable fast average recalculation. TCPTrack will calculate the average speeds of connections by using a running average. TCPTrack will use more memory and CPU time, but averages will seem closer to real time and will be updated more than once per second and may be more accurate under heavy load. The number of times per second that averages will be recalculated in fast mode is a compile-time setting that defaults to 10 times per second. -h Display command line help -i [interface] Sniff packets from the specified network interface. -T [pcap file] Read packets from the specified file instead of sniffing from the network. Useful for testing. -p Do not put the interface being sniffed into promiscuous mode. -r [seconds] Wait this many seconds before removing a closed connection from the display. Defaults to 2 seconds. See also the pause interactive command (below). -v Display tcptrack version INTERACTIVE COMMANDS
The following keys may be pressed while tcptrack is running to change runtime options: p - Pause/unpause display. No new connections will be added to the display, and all currently displayed connections will remain in the dis- play. q - Quit tcptrack. s - Cycle through the sorting options: unsorted, sorted by rate, sorted by total bytes. The options for pausing and toggling sorting are useful if you're watching a very busy network and want to look at the display without con- nections jumping around (due to sorting and new connections being added) and disappearing (due to being closed for a certain time). When paused (via the p command) no new connections will be displayed, however tcptrack will still monitor and track all connections it sees as usual. This option affects the display only, not internals. When you unpause, the display will be updated with all current information that tcptrack has been gathering all along. EXAMPLES
tcptrack requires only one parameter to run: the -i flag followed by an interface name that you want tcptrack to monitor. This is the most basic way to run tcptrack: # tcptrack -i eth0 tcptrack can also take a pcap filter expression as an argument. The format of this filter expression is the same as that of tcpdump(8) and other libpcap-based sniffers. The following example will only show connections from host 10.45.165.2: # tcptrack -i eth0 src or dst 10.45.165.2 The next example will only show web traffic (ie, traffic on port 80): # tcptrack -i eth0 port 80 SEE ALSO
tcpdump(8), pcap(3), http://www.rhythm.cx/~steve/devel/tcptrack BUGS
When picking up a connection that was already running before tcptrack was started, there is no way tcptrack can know for sure which end of the connection is the client (ie, which peer started the connection) and which is the server (ie, which peer was listening). tcptrack makes a crude guess at which is which by looking at the port numbers; whichever end has the lower port number is considered the server side. This isn't always accurate of course, but future versions may have better heuristics to figure out which end is which. Currently the interface is not very flexible. Display timing settings (such as the refresh interval) can only be changed by editing the source code (defs.h in particular). See the TODO file included with the source distribution for further bugs. tcptrack(1)
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