__  __    __   __  _____      _            _          _____ _          _ _ 
 |  \/  |   \ \ / / |  __ \    (_)          | |        / ____| |        | | |
 | \  / |_ __\ V /  | |__) | __ ___   ____ _| |_ ___  | (___ | |__   ___| | |
 | |\/| | '__|> <   |  ___/ '__| \ \ / / _` | __/ _ \  \___ \| '_ \ / _ \ | |
 | |  | | |_ / . \  | |   | |  | |\ V / (_| | ||  __/  ____) | | | |  __/ | |
 |_|  |_|_(_)_/ \_\ |_|   |_|  |_| \_/ \__,_|\__\___| |_____/|_| |_|\___V 2.1
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Command:

www-data@216.73.216.10: ~ $
Demonstrations of tcpconnect, the Linux eBPF/bcc version.


This tool traces the kernel function performing active TCP connections
(eg, via a connect() syscall; accept() are passive connections). Some example
output (IP addresses changed to protect the innocent):

# ./tcpconnect
PID    COMM         IP SADDR            DADDR            DPORT
1479   telnet       4  127.0.0.1        127.0.0.1        23
1469   curl         4  10.201.219.236   54.245.105.25    80
1469   curl         4  10.201.219.236   54.67.101.145    80
1991   telnet       6  ::1              ::1              23
2015   ssh          6  fe80::2000:bff:fe82:3ac fe80::2000:bff:fe82:3ac 22

This output shows four connections, one from a "telnet" process, two from
"curl", and one from "ssh". The output details shows the IP version, source
address, destination address, and destination port. This traces attempted
connections: these may have failed.

The overhead of this tool should be negligible, since it is only tracing the
kernel functions performing connect. It is not tracing every packet and then
filtering.


The -t option prints a timestamp column:

# ./tcpconnect -t
TIME(s)  PID    COMM         IP SADDR            DADDR            DPORT
31.871   2482   local_agent  4  10.103.219.236   10.251.148.38    7001
31.874   2482   local_agent  4  10.103.219.236   10.101.3.132     7001
31.878   2482   local_agent  4  10.103.219.236   10.171.133.98    7101
90.917   2482   local_agent  4  10.103.219.236   10.251.148.38    7001
90.928   2482   local_agent  4  10.103.219.236   10.102.64.230    7001
90.938   2482   local_agent  4  10.103.219.236   10.115.167.169   7101

The output shows some periodic connections (or attempts) from a "local_agent"
process to various other addresses. A few connections occur every minute.

The -d option tracks DNS responses and tries to associate each connection with
the a previous DNS query issued before it.  If a DNS response matching the IP
is found, it will be printed. If no match was found, "No DNS Query" is printed
in this column. Queries for 127.0.0.1 and ::1 are automatically associated with
"localhost". If the time between when the DNS response was received and a
connect call was traced exceeds 100ms, the tool will print the time delta
after the query name.  See below for www.domain.com for an example.

# ./tcpconnect -d
PID    COMM         IP SADDR            DADDR            DPORT QUERY
1543   amazon-ssm-a 4  10.66.75.54      176.32.119.67    443   ec2messages.us-west-1.amazonaws.com
1479   telnet       4  127.0.0.1        127.0.0.1        23    localhost
1469   curl         4  10.201.219.236   54.245.105.25    80    www.domain.com (123.342ms)
1469   curl         4  10.201.219.236   54.67.101.145    80    No DNS Query
1991   telnet       6  ::1              ::1              23    localhost
2015   ssh          6  fe80::2000:bff:fe82:3ac fe80::2000:bff:fe82:3ac 22    anotherhost.org


The -L option prints a LPORT column:

# ./tcpconnect -L
PID    COMM         IP SADDR            LPORT  DADDR            DPORT
3706   nc           4  192.168.122.205  57266  192.168.122.150  5000
3722   ssh          4  192.168.122.205  50966  192.168.122.150  22
3779   ssh          6  fe80::1          52328  fe80::2          22


The -U option prints a UID column:

# ./tcpconnect -U
UID   PID    COMM         IP SADDR            DADDR            DPORT
0     31333  telnet       6  ::1              ::1              23
0     31333  telnet       4  127.0.0.1        127.0.0.1        23
1000  31322  curl         4  127.0.0.1        127.0.0.1        80
1000  31322  curl         6  ::1              ::1              80


The -u option filtering UID:

# ./tcpconnect -Uu 1000
UID   PID    COMM         IP SADDR            DADDR            DPORT
1000  31338  telnet       6  ::1              ::1              23
1000  31338  telnet       4  127.0.0.1        127.0.0.1        23

To spot heavy outbound connections quickly one can use the -c flag. It will
count all active connections per source ip and destination ip/port.

# ./tcpconnect.py -c
Tracing connect ... Hit Ctrl-C to end
^C
LADDR                 RADDR                      RPORT             CONNECTS
192.168.10.50         172.217.21.194             443               70
192.168.10.50         172.213.11.195             443               34
192.168.10.50         172.212.22.194             443               21
[...]


The --cgroupmap option filters based on a cgroup set. It is meant to be used
with an externally created map.

# ./tcpconnect --cgroupmap /sys/fs/bpf/test01

For more details, see docs/special_filtering.md


USAGE message:

# ./tcpconnect -h

usage: tcpconnect.py [-h] [-t] [-p PID] [-P PORT] [-4 | -6] [-L] [-U] [-u UID]
                     [-c] [--cgroupmap CGROUPMAP] [--mntnsmap MNTNSMAP] [-d]

Trace TCP connects

optional arguments:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  -t, --timestamp       include timestamp on output
  -p PID, --pid PID     trace this PID only
  -P PORT, --port PORT  comma-separated list of destination ports to trace.
  -4, --ipv4            trace IPv4 family only
  -6, --ipv6            trace IPv6 family only
  -L, --lport           include LPORT on output
  -U, --print-uid       include UID on output
  -u UID, --uid UID     trace this UID only
  -c, --count           count connects per src ip and dest ip/port
  --cgroupmap CGROUPMAP
                        trace cgroups in this BPF map only
  --mntnsmap MNTNSMAP   trace mount namespaces in this BPF map only
  -d, --dns             include likely DNS query associated with each connect

examples:
    ./tcpconnect           # trace all TCP connect()s
    ./tcpconnect -t        # include timestamps
    ./tcpconnect -d        # include DNS queries associated with connects
    ./tcpconnect -p 181    # only trace PID 181
    ./tcpconnect -P 80     # only trace port 80
    ./tcpconnect -P 80,81  # only trace port 80 and 81
    ./tcpconnect -4        # only trace IPv4 family
    ./tcpconnect -6        # only trace IPv6 family
    ./tcpconnect -U        # include UID
    ./tcpconnect -u 1000   # only trace UID 1000
    ./tcpconnect -c        # count connects per src ip and dest ip/port
    ./tcpconnect -L        # include LPORT while printing outputs
    ./tcpconnect --cgroupmap mappath  # only trace cgroups in this BPF map
    ./tcpconnect --mntnsmap mappath   # only trace mount namespaces in the map

Filemanager

Name Type Size Permission Actions
lib Folder 0755
argdist_example.txt File 22.49 KB 0644
bashreadline_example.txt File 882 B 0644
bindsnoop_example.txt File 4.42 KB 0644
biolatency_example.txt File 23.46 KB 0644
biolatpcts_example.txt File 2.97 KB 0644
biopattern_example.txt File 1.37 KB 0644
biosnoop_example.txt File 3.47 KB 0644
biotop_example.txt File 9.11 KB 0644
bitesize_example.txt File 4.98 KB 0644
bpflist_example.txt File 2.13 KB 0644
btrfsdist_example.txt File 9.32 KB 0644
btrfsslower_example.txt File 6.65 KB 0644
cachestat_example.txt File 3.92 KB 0644
cachetop_example.txt File 3.83 KB 0644
capable_example.txt File 6.5 KB 0644
cobjnew_example.txt File 2.97 KB 0644
compactsnoop_example.txt File 9.92 KB 0644
cpudist_example.txt File 16.48 KB 0644
cpuunclaimed_example.txt File 15.2 KB 0644
criticalstat_example.txt File 4.81 KB 0644
cthreads_example.txt File 2.08 KB 0644
dbslower_example.txt File 3.89 KB 0644
dbstat_example.txt File 6.5 KB 0644
dcsnoop_example.txt File 4.27 KB 0644
dcstat_example.txt File 3.26 KB 0644
deadlock_example.txt File 16.25 KB 0644
dirtop_example.txt File 4.98 KB 0644
drsnoop_example.txt File 5 KB 0644
execsnoop_example.txt File 6.64 KB 0644
exitsnoop_example.txt File 6.22 KB 0644
ext4dist_example.txt File 8.78 KB 0644
ext4slower_example.txt File 11.07 KB 0644
filegone_example.txt File 743 B 0644
filelife_example.txt File 2.04 KB 0644
fileslower_example.txt File 5.58 KB 0644
filetop_example.txt File 6.8 KB 0644
funccount_example.txt File 13.29 KB 0644
funcinterval_example.txt File 15.28 KB 0644
funclatency_example.txt File 20.98 KB 0644
funcslower_example.txt File 6.63 KB 0644
gethostlatency_example.txt File 1.29 KB 0644
hardirqs_example.txt File 37.05 KB 0644
inject_example.txt File 6.67 KB 0644
javacalls_example.txt File 3.91 KB 0644
javaflow_example.txt File 5.88 KB 0644
javagc_example.txt File 3.78 KB 0644
javaobjnew_example.txt File 2.97 KB 0644
javastat_example.txt File 2.98 KB 0644
javathreads_example.txt File 2.08 KB 0644
killsnoop_example.txt File 1.31 KB 0644
klockstat_example.txt File 8.34 KB 0644
kvmexit_example.txt File 11.63 KB 0644
llcstat_example.txt File 3.24 KB 0644
mdflush_example.txt File 1.74 KB 0644
memleak_example.txt File 10.02 KB 0644
mountsnoop_example.txt File 1.45 KB 0644
mysqld_qslower_example.txt File 2.3 KB 0644
netqtop_example.txt File 12.2 KB 0644
nfsdist_example.txt File 8.31 KB 0644
nfsslower_example.txt File 7.68 KB 0644
nodegc_example.txt File 3.78 KB 0644
nodestat_example.txt File 2.98 KB 0644
offcputime_example.txt File 19.2 KB 0644
offwaketime_example.txt File 37.36 KB 0644
oomkill_example.txt File 1.88 KB 0644
opensnoop_example.txt File 10.33 KB 0644
perlcalls_example.txt File 3.91 KB 0644
perlflow_example.txt File 5.88 KB 0644
perlstat_example.txt File 2.98 KB 0644
phpcalls_example.txt File 3.91 KB 0644
phpflow_example.txt File 5.88 KB 0644
phpstat_example.txt File 2.98 KB 0644
pidpersec_example.txt File 677 B 0644
ppchcalls_example.txt File 6.93 KB 0644
profile_example.txt File 31.08 KB 0644
pythoncalls_example.txt File 3.91 KB 0644
pythonflow_example.txt File 5.88 KB 0644
pythongc_example.txt File 3.78 KB 0644
pythonstat_example.txt File 2.98 KB 0644
rdmaucma_example.txt File 1.94 KB 0644
readahead_example.txt File 3.17 KB 0644
reset-trace_example.txt File 9.15 KB 0644
rubycalls_example.txt File 3.91 KB 0644
rubyflow_example.txt File 5.88 KB 0644
rubygc_example.txt File 3.78 KB 0644
rubyobjnew_example.txt File 2.97 KB 0644
rubystat_example.txt File 2.98 KB 0644
runqlat_example.txt File 31.3 KB 0644
runqlen_example.txt File 11.85 KB 0644
runqslower_example.txt File 2.13 KB 0644
shmsnoop_example.txt File 2.73 KB 0644
slabratetop_example.txt File 5.22 KB 0644
sofdsnoop_example.txt File 3.14 KB 0644
softirqs_example.txt File 11.02 KB 0644
solisten_example.txt File 2.3 KB 0644
sslsniff_example.txt File 6.74 KB 0644
stackcount_example.txt File 21.45 KB 0644
statsnoop_example.txt File 3.02 KB 0644
swapin.txt File 2.57 KB 0644
swapin_example.txt File 1.39 KB 0644
syncsnoop_example.txt File 387 B 0644
syscount_example.txt File 6.27 KB 0644
tclcalls_example.txt File 3.91 KB 0644
tclflow_example.txt File 5.88 KB 0644
tclobjnew_example.txt File 2.97 KB 0644
tclstat_example.txt File 2.98 KB 0644
tcpaccept_example.txt File 2.76 KB 0644
tcpcong_example.txt File 33.31 KB 0644
tcpconnect_example.txt File 6.27 KB 0644
tcpconnlat_example.txt File 2.55 KB 0644
tcpdrop_example.txt File 1.95 KB 0644
tcplife_example.txt File 6.83 KB 0644
tcpretrans_example.txt File 3.85 KB 0644
tcprtt_example.txt File 9.83 KB 0644
tcpstates_example.txt File 2.84 KB 0644
tcpsubnet_example.txt File 5.37 KB 0644
tcpsynbl_example.txt File 1.15 KB 0644
tcptop_example.txt File 5.75 KB 0644
tcptracer_example.txt File 1.98 KB 0644
threadsnoop_example.txt File 1.07 KB 0644
tplist_example.txt File 4.4 KB 0644
trace_example.txt File 21.62 KB 0644
ttysnoop_example.txt File 3.24 KB 0644
vfscount_example.txt File 2.17 KB 0644
vfsstat_example.txt File 1.66 KB 0644
virtiostat_example.txt File 2.62 KB 0644
wakeuptime_example.txt File 33.25 KB 0644
xfsdist_example.txt File 6.77 KB 0644
xfsslower_example.txt File 6.91 KB 0644
zfsdist_example.txt File 9.52 KB 0644
zfsslower_example.txt File 7.37 KB 0644
Filemanager