__  __    __   __  _____      _            _          _____ _          _ _ 
 |  \/  |   \ \ / / |  __ \    (_)          | |        / ____| |        | | |
 | \  / |_ __\ V /  | |__) | __ ___   ____ _| |_ ___  | (___ | |__   ___| | |
 | |\/| | '__|> <   |  ___/ '__| \ \ / / _` | __/ _ \  \___ \| '_ \ / _ \ | |
 | |  | | |_ / . \  | |   | |  | |\ V / (_| | ||  __/  ____) | | | |  __/ | |
 |_|  |_|_(_)_/ \_\ |_|   |_|  |_| \_/ \__,_|\__\___| |_____/|_| |_|\___V 2.1
 if you need WebShell for Seo everyday contact me on Telegram
 Telegram Address : @jackleet
        
        
For_More_Tools: Telegram: @jackleet | Bulk Smtp support mail sender | Business Mail Collector | Mail Bouncer All Mail | Bulk Office Mail Validator | Html Letter private



Upload:

Command:

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


tcpsubnet summarizes throughput by destination subnet.
It works only for IPv4. Eg:

# tcpsubnet
Tracing... Output every 1 secs. Hit Ctrl-C to end
[03/05/18 22:32:47]
127.0.0.1/32               8
[03/05/18 22:32:48]
[03/05/18 22:32:49]
[03/05/18 22:32:50]
[03/05/18 22:32:51]
[03/05/18 22:32:52]
127.0.0.1/32              10
[03/05/18 22:32:53]

This example output shows the number of bytes sent to 127.0.0.1/32 (the
loopback interface). For demo purposes, I set netcat listening on port
8080, connected to it and sent the following payloads.

# nc 127.0.0.1 8080
1111111
111111111

The first line sends 7 digits plus the null character (8 bytes)
The second line sends 9 digits plus the null character (10 bytes)

Notice also, how tcpsubnet prints a header line with the current date
and time formatted in the current locale.

Try it yourself to get a feeling of how tcpsubnet works.

By default, tcpsubnet will categorize traffic in the following subnets:

- 127.0.0.1/32
- 10.0.0.0/8
- 172.16.0.0/12
- 192.168.0.0/16
- 0.0.0.0/0

The last subnet is a catch-all. In other words, anything that doesn't
match the first 4 defaults will be categorized under 0.0.0.0/0
You can change this default behavior by passing a comma separated list
of subnets. Let's say we would like to know how much traffic we
are sending to github.com. We first find out what IPs github.com resolves
to, Eg:

# dig +short github.com
192.30.253.112
192.30.253.113

With this information, we can come up with a reasonable range of IPs
to monitor, Eg:
 
# tcpsubnet.py 192.30.253.110/27,0.0.0.0/0
Tracing... Output every 1 secs. Hit Ctrl-C to end
[03/05/18 22:38:58]
0.0.0.0/0               5780
192.30.253.110/27       2205
[03/05/18 22:38:59]
0.0.0.0/0               2036
192.30.253.110/27       1183
[03/05/18 22:39:00]
[03/05/18 22:39:01]
192.30.253.110/27      12537

If we would like to be more accurate, we can use the two IPs returned
by dig, Eg:

# tcpsubnet 192.30.253.113/32,192.130.253.112/32,0.0.0.0/0
Tracing... Output every 1 secs. Hit Ctrl-C to end
[03/05/18 22:42:56]
0.0.0.0/0               1177
192.30.253.113/32        910
[03/05/18 22:42:57]
0.0.0.0/0              48704
192.30.253.113/32        892
[03/05/18 22:42:58]
192.30.253.113/32        891
0.0.0.0/0                858
[03/05/18 22:42:59]
0.0.0.0/0              11159
192.30.253.113/32        894
[03/05/18 22:43:00]
0.0.0.0/0              60601

NOTE: When used in production, it is expected that you will have full
information about your network topology. In which case you won't need
to approximate subnets nor need to put individual IP addresses like
we just did.

Notice that the order of the subnet matters. Say, we put 0.0.0.0/0 as
the first element of the list and 192.130.253.112/32 as the second, all the
traffic going to 192.130.253.112/32 will have been categorized in
0.0.0.0/0 as 192.130.253.112/32 is contained in 0.0.0.0/0.

The default output unit is bytes. You can change it by using the
-f [--format] flag. tcpsubnet uses the same flags as iperf for the unit
format and adds mM. When using kmKM, the output will be rounded to floor.
Eg:

# tcpsubnet -fK 0.0.0.0/0
[03/05/18 22:44:04]
0.0.0.0/0                  1
[03/05/18 22:44:05]
0.0.0.0/0                  5
[03/05/18 22:44:06]
0.0.0.0/0                 31

Just like the majority of the bcc tools, tcpsubnet supports -i and --ebpf

It also supports -v [--verbose] which gives useful debugging information
on how the subnets are evaluated and the BPF program is constructed.

Last but not least, it supports -J [--json] to print the output in
JSON format. This is handy if you're calling tcpsubnet from another
program (say a nodejs server) and would like to have a structured stdout.
The output in JSON format will also include the date and time.
Eg:

# tcpsubnet -J -fK 192.130.253.110/27,0.0.0.0/0
{"date": "03/05/18", "entries": {"0.0.0.0/0": 2}, "time": "22:46:27"}
{"date": "03/05/18", "entries": {}, "time": "22:46:28"}
{"date": "03/05/18", "entries": {}, "time": "22:46:29"}
{"date": "03/05/18", "entries": {}, "time": "22:46:30"}
{"date": "03/05/18", "entries": {"192.30.253.110/27": 0}, "time": "22:46:31"}
{"date": "03/05/18", "entries": {"192.30.253.110/27": 1}, "time": "22:46:32"}
{"date": "03/05/18", "entries": {"192.30.253.110/27": 18}, "time": "22:46:32"}


USAGE:

# ./tcpsubnet -h
usage: tcpsubnet.py [-h] [-v] [-J] [-f {b,k,m,B,K,M}] [-i INTERVAL] [subnets]

Summarize TCP send and aggregate by subnet

positional arguments:
  subnets               comma separated list of subnets

optional arguments:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  -v, --verbose         output debug statements
  -J, --json            format output in JSON
  -f {b,k,m,B,K,M}, --format {b,k,m,B,K,M}
                        [bkmBKM] format to report: bits, Kbits, Mbits, bytes,
                        KBytes, MBytes (default B)
  -i INTERVAL, --interval INTERVAL
                        output interval, in seconds (default 1)

examples:
    ./tcpsubnet                 # Trace TCP sent to the default subnets:
                                # 127.0.0.1/32,10.0.0.0/8,172.16.0.0/12,
                                # 192.168.0.0/16,0.0.0.0/0
    ./tcpsubnet -f K            # Trace TCP sent to the default subnets
                                # aggregated in KBytes.
    ./tcpsubnet 10.80.0.0/24    # Trace TCP sent to 10.80.0.0/24 only
    ./tcpsubnet -J              # Format the output in JSON.


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