ipmon, ipmon.conf - ipmon configuration file format
The ipmon.conf file is optionally loaded by ipmon when it starts.
Its primary purpose is to direct ipmon to do extra actions when it sees
a specific log entry from the kernel.
A line in the ipmon.conf file is either a comment or a
match line. Each line must have a matching segment and an action
segment. These are to the left and right of the word "do",
respectively. A comment line is any line that starts with a #.
NOTE: This file differs from all other IPFilter
configuration files because it attempts to match every line with every log
record received. It does not stop at the first match or only
use the last match.
For the action segment, a match line can delivery output to
one of three destinations: file, email or command. For
example:
match { type = ipf; } do { save("file:///var/log/ipf-log"); };
match { type = nat; } do { syslog; };
match { type = state; } do { execute("/bin/mail root"); };
and is roughly described like this:
match { match-it ,match-it, ... } do { action, action,
...};
where there can be a list of matching expressions and a list of
actions to perform if all of the matching expressions are matched up with by
the current log entry.
The lines above would save all ipf log entries to
/var/log/ipf-log, send all of the entries for NAT (ipnat related) to syslog
and generate an email to root for each log entry from the state tables.
In the above example, the matching segment was confined to matching on the type
of log entry generated. The full list of fields that can be used here is:
- direction <in|out>
- This option is used to match on log records generated for packets going in
or out.
- dstip <address/mask>
- This option is used to match against the destination address associated
with the packet being logged. A "/mask" must be given and given
in CIDR notation (/0-/32) so to specify host 192.2.2.1, 192.2.2.1/32 must
be given.
- dstport <portnumber>
- This option is used to match against the destination port in log entries.
A number must be given, symbolic names (such as those from /etc/services)
are not recognised by the parser.
- every <second|# seconds|packet|# packets>
- This option is used to regulate how often an ipmon.conf entry is
actioned in response to an otherwise matching log record from the
kernel.
- group <name|number>
- interface <interface-name>
- This option is used to match against the network interface name associated
with the action causing the logging to happen. In general this will be the
network interface where the packet is seen by IPFilter.
- logtag <number>
- This option is used to match against tags set by ipf rules in
ipf.conf. These tags are set with "set-tag(log=100)"
appended to filter rules.
- nattag <string>
- This option is used to match against tags set by NAT rules in
ipnat.conf.
- protocol <name|number>
- This option is used to match against the IP protocol field in the packet
being logged.
- result <pass|block|nomatch|log>
- This option is used to match against the result of packet matching in the
kernel. If a packet is logged, using a log rule in ipf.conf
then it will match "log" here. The "nomatch" option is
for use with matching log records generated for all packets as the
default.
- rule <number>
- This option is used to match against the number of the rule causing
the record to be generated. The number of a rule can be observed
using "ipfstat -ion".
- srcip <address/mask>
- This option is used to match against the source address associated with
the packet being logged. A "/mask" must be given and given in
CIDR notation (/0-/32) so to specify host 192.2.2.1, 192.2.2.1/32 must be
given.
- srcport <portnumber>
- This option is used to match against the source port in log entries. A
number must be given, symbolic names (such as those from /etc/services)
are not recognised by the parser.
- type <ipf|nat|state>
- The format for files accepted by ipmon is described by the following
grammar: NOTE: At present, only IPv4 matching is available for
source/destination address matching.
The list of actions supported is as follows:
- save("file://<filename>")
- save("raw://<filename>") Write out the log record to the
filename given. This file will be closed and reopened on receipt of a
SIGHUP. If the raw target is used, binary log data, as read from
the kernel, is written out rather than a text log record. The filename
should be an absolute target, including the root directory. Thus, saving
to /var/log/ipmon.log would be, as an example,
save("file:///var/log/ipmon.log").
- syslog("<facility>.<priority>")
- syslog("<facility>.")
syslog(".<priority>") To log a text record via syslog, the
syslog action word is used. The facility used by default is
determined at first by the default compiled into ipmon (usually
LOG_LOCAL0), which can be changed via the command line (-L
<facility>) or in an ipf.conf rule using the level
option with logging. If the facility is specified here, it takes
precedence over all other settings. The same applies to the syslog
priority. By default, ipmon will determine a priority for the packet,
depending on whether or not it has been blocked, passed, etc. It is
possible to force the complete facility/priority value for each log entry
or to choose to replace only one of them.
- execute("<command string>")
- The execute action runs the specified command each time the log
entry matches and feeds the log entry, as text, to the command being
executed. The command string given is executed using /bin/sh.
- nothing
- Literally, do nothing. Use this if you want to be verbose in your config
file about doing nothing for a particular log record.
It is possible to configure ipmon to use externally supplied modules to
save log entries with. These are added to ipmon using the
load_action configuration line. The syntax of this line is:
load_action <name> <path>;
- name
- is a short name for the action. It does not need to correspond to the name
of the library file, but inside the library file, the functions
<name>destroy , <name>parse and
<name>store must be present.
- path
- specifies the path in the filesystem to the shared object that contains
the implementation of the new action. After the new action has been
declared using load_action it can then be used in any do
statement.
Some further examples are:
#
# log everything to syslog local4, regardless
#
match { ; } do { syslog("local4."); };
#
# keep a local copy of things packets to/from port 80
#
match { srcport = 80; } do { save("file:///var/log/web"); };
match { dstport = 80; } do { save("file:///var/log/web"); };
#
load_action local "/usr/lib/libmyaction.so";
match { dstip 127.0.0.1; } do { local("local options"); };
#
All entries of the rules present in the file are compared for matches - there is
no first or last rule match.
/dev/ipl
/dev/ipf
/dev/ipnat
/dev/ipstate
/etc/ipmon.conf