dnshistory - processes various log file formats doing dns IP Address
lookups. Store these pairs in a database for later retrieval.
dnshistory [OPTION]... [--file=FILE]
dnshistory is Copyright © 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007 Stephen McInerney
dnshistory currently processes Apache CLF and Combined logs, Squid
access logs, FTP xferlog files and iptables based logs. The log format is
auto-detected.
dnshistory has five modes of operation:
- Do Lookups. The default mode. Given a web log file, dnshistory will
perform DNS reverse lookups on each unique IP Address and store the
results in a history database.
- Do Translations. Given a raw web log file, dnshistory will make use
of a previously created history database and send to STDOUT the
same web log but with addresses replaced by the Fully Qualified Domain
Name as previously looked up.
- Do Recombining. Given two web log files, one raw and one previously
translated (eg. by using dnstran): Create a history database from the
values in these separate log files.
- Do Dump. Dump a given history database to STDOUT.
- Do Import. Import a previously dumped history database from a given
file.
- Show History. Given one or more IP Addresses on the command line, show the
history of those addresses.
The lookups make use of threads for maximum speed, and use the
standard resolution libraries on a system. Thus hosts files, NIS, LDAP and
other name resolution methods should work transparently.
It is strongly recommended that for massive lookups a DNS
server is "nearby". Preferably not a forwarding server.
dnshistory can read .gz files. STDIN is
assumed to not be gz encoded.
- -L --dolookups
- The default mode. Given a log file, either via STDIN or via '-f',
do the lookups and store the results.
- -T --dotranslate
- Given a log file, either via STDIN or via '-f', lookup each IP
Address from the history database; replace the IP Address with the FQDN
and send the newly updated log line to STDOUT.
- -R --dorecombine=FILE
- Given a previously translated file (eg. via dnstran) via this option for
the names, do the lookups for a file given via STDIN or '-f' and
store the results. This file can be gz encoded.
- The date/time of each stored entry is taken as being the actual time for
the lookup stored in the recombine log file. This is probably incorrect,
but "Good Enough".
- -D --dodump
- Dump the history database to STDOUT.
- -I --doimport=FILE
- Given a previously dumped database, import that into a new database. Will
fail and exit if the chosen database already exists.
- -S --showhistory
- Given one or more IP Addresses show their history. Address are the last
item(s) on the command line. Addresses with no as yet discovered FQDN will
display 'NONAME'. The Date/Time displayed is formatted as
YYYY-MM-DD:hh:mm:ss, vs the 'seconds since epoch' for
"--dodump"
- --logtype=LOGTYPE
- By default dnshistory will attempt to autodetect what type of
logfile is being processed. By using this option, the autodetection is
overridden. The choices are: auto, clf or www, squid, ftp or
iptables.
- -c --cache=SIZE
- Set the size of the memory cache to use. Value is in Mb. Default is
20Mb.
- -d --database=FILE
- Change the default database file to use to store stateful data.
- -f --file=FILE
- Web Log File to process. This file can be gz encoded.
Will use STDIN if not set
- -h --help
- Help screen. Very brief.
- -l --maxlookups=NUMBER
- The maximum number of lookups to attempt. The default is 1. This has not
shown to be at all useful in testing...
- -m --maxthreads=NUMBER
- How many name lookup threads to spawn off. The default is 100. Setting
this too high can do evil things to bandwidth and the CPU usage of any
queried DNS server(s).
If doing lots of DNS queries, setting this too high can have a
very negative impact on the ability to successfully resolve
anything.
- -t --timeout=VALUE
- The time in seconds before a stored DNS value is deemed "old".
The default is 7 days.
- -v --verbose
- Verboseness of a run. More v's will increase the level of verbosity, up to
a maximum of 5. All of the higher levels are only of value for debugging
purposes.
- -V --version
- Display the version information and exit
- -w --wait
- Delay time between query retries within a single run
At verbose level 1 (-v) some success/failure counters will be displayed. As well
as any problematic log lines to STDERR.
At verbose level 2 (-vv) lines that may not match up (eg. Due to dnstran
modifying referrers or URL's) will be sent to STDERR.
A typical run, using a database in /tmp/ (/tmp/c.db), and a log file in the
current directory (test.log). First, do the lookups:
dnshistory -d /tmp/c.db -f test.log
Then the translation run for input into, for example, a web log
analyser:
dnshistory -T -d /tmp/c.db -f test.log | webalizer ....
Do three attempts on failed queries, with a 2 second delay between
retries:
dnshistory -l 3 -w 2 -d /tmp/c.db -f test.log
Lookup and Display the history of three IP Addresses:
127.0.0.1,192.168.1.254,10.10.10.10
dnshistory -S -d /tmp/c.db 127.0.0.1 192.168.1.254 10.10.10.10
Import a previously dumped database via dnsdb.dump
dnshistory -I dnsdb.dump -d /tmp/d.db
/usr/local/var/dnshistory/dnshistory.db
The default history database file.
- •
- Ignores IP Addresses located in the URL and Referrer fields.
Stephen McInerney <spm@stedee.id.au>