rwsort(1) SiLK Tool Suite rwsort(1)NAMErwsort - Sort SiLK Flow records on one or more fields
SYNOPSISrwsort --fields=KEY [--presorted-input] [--reverse]
[--temp-directory=DIR_PATH] [--sort-buffer-size=SIZE]
[--note-add=TEXT] [--note-file-add=FILE]
[--compression-method=COMP_METHOD] [--print-filenames]
[--output-path=PATH] [--site-config-file=FILENAME]
[--plugin=PLUGIN [--plugin=PLUGIN ...]]
[--python-file=PATH [--python-file=PATH ...]]
[--pmap-file=MAPNAME:PATH [--pmap-file=MAPNAME:PATH ...]]
{[--input-pipe=PATH] | [--xargs]|[--xargs=FILE] | [FILES...]}
rwsort [--pmap-file=MAPNAME:PATH [--pmap-file=MAPNAME:PATH ...]]
[--plugin=PLUGIN ...] [--python-file=PATH ...] --help
rwsort [--pmap-file=MAPNAME:PATH [--pmap-file=MAPNAME:PATH ...]]
[--plugin=PLUGIN ...] [--python-file=PATH ...] --help-fields
rwsort--version
DESCRIPTIONrwsort reads SiLK Flow records, sorts the records by the field(s)
listed in the --fields switch, and writes the records to the
--output-path or to the standard output if it is not connected to a
terminal. The output from rwsort is binary SiLK Flow records; the
output must be passed into another tool for human-readable output.
Sorting records is an expensive operation, and it should only be used
when necessary. The tools that bin flow records (rwcount(1),
rwuniq(1), rwstats(1), etc) do not require sorted data.
rwsort reads SiLK Flow records from the files named on the command line
or from the standard input when no file names are specified and neither
--xargs nor --input-pipe is present. To read the standard input in
addition to the named files, use "-" or "stdin" as a file name. If an
input file name ends in ".gz", the file will be uncompressed as it is
read. When the --xargs switch is provided, rwsort will read the names
of the files to process from the named text file, or from the standard
input if no file name argument is provided to the switch. The input to
--xargs must contain one file name per line. The --input-pipe switch
is deprecated and it is provided for legacy reasons; its use is not
required since rwsort will automatically read form the standard input.
The --input-pipe switch will be removed in the SiLK 4.0 release.
The amount of fast memory used by rwsort will increase until it reaches
a maximum near 2GB. (Use the --sort-buffer-size switch to change this
upper limit on the buffer size.) If more records are read than will
fit into memory, the in-core records are sorted and temporarily stored
on disk as described by the --temp-directory switch. When all records
have been read, the on-disk files are merged and the sorted records
written to the output.
By default, the temporary files are stored in the /tmp directory.
Because these temporary files will be large, it is strongly recommended
that /tmp not be used as the temporary directory. To modify the
temporary directory used by rwsort, provide the --temp-directory
switch, set the SILK_TMPDIR environment variable, or set the TMPDIR
environment variable.
To merge previously sorted SiLK data files into a sorted stream, run
rwsort with the --presorted-input switch. rwsort will merge-sort all
the input files, reducing it's memory requirements considerably. It is
the user's responsibility to ensure that all the input files have been
sorted with the same --fields value (and --reverse if applicable).
rwsort may still require use of a temporary directory while merging the
files (for example, if rwsort does not have enough available file
handles to open all the input files at once).
OPTIONS
Option names may be abbreviated if the abbreviation is unique or is an
exact match for an option. A parameter to an option may be specified
as --arg=param or --arg param, though the first form is required for
options that take optional parameters.
The --fields switch is required. rwsort will fail when it is not
provided.
--fields=KEY
KEY contains the list of flow attributes (a.k.a. fields or columns)
that make up the key by which flows are sorted. The fields are in
listed in order from primary sort key, secondary key, etc. Each
field may be specified once only. KEY is a comma separated list of
field-names, field-integers, and ranges of field-integers; a range
is specified by separating the start and end of the range with a
hyphen (-). Field-names are case insensitive. Example:
--fields=stime,10,1-5
There is no default value for the --fields switch; the switch must
be specified.
The complete list of built-in fields that the SiLK tool suite
supports follows, though note that not all fields are present in
all SiLK file formats; when a field is not present, its value is 0.
sIP,1
source IP address
dIP,2
destination IP address
sPort,3
source port for TCP and UDP, or equivalent
dPort,4
destination port for TCP and UDP, or equivalent. See note at
"iType".
protocol,5
IP protocol
packets,pkts,6
packet count
bytes,7
byte count
flags,8
bit-wise OR of TCP flags over all packets
sTime,9,sTime+msec,22
starting time of flow (milliseconds resolution)
duration,10,dur+msec,24
duration of flow (milliseconds resolution)
eTime,11,eTime+msec,23
end time of flow (milliseconds resolution)
sensor,12
name or ID of sensor where flow was collected
class,20,type,21
integer value of the class/type pair assigned to the flow by
rwflowpack(8)
iType
the ICMP type value for ICMP or ICMPv6 flows and zero for non-
ICMP flows. Internally, SiLK stores the ICMP type and code in
the "dPort" field, so there is no need have both "dPort" and
"iType" or "iCode" in the sort key. This field was introduced
in SiLK 3.8.1.
iCode
the ICMP code value for ICMP or ICMPv6 flows and zero for non-
ICMP flows. See note at "iType".
icmpTypeCode,25
equivalent to "iType","iCode". This field may not be mixed
with "iType" or "iCode", and this field is deprecated as of
SiLK 3.8.1. Prior to SiLK 3.8.1, specifying the "icmpTypeCode"
field was equivalent to specifying the "dPort" field.
Many SiLK file formats do not store the following fields and their
values will always be 0; they are listed here for completeness:
in,13
router SNMP input interface or vlanId if packing tools were
configured to capture it (see sensor.conf(5))
out,14
router SNMP output interface or postVlanId
nhIP,15
router next hop IP
SiLK can store flows generated by enhanced collection software that
provides more information than NetFlow v5. These flows may support
some or all of these additional fields; for flows without this
additional information, the field's value is always 0.
initialFlags,26
TCP flags on first packet in the flow
sessionFlags,27
bit-wise OR of TCP flags over all packets except the first in
the flow
attributes,28
flow attributes set by the flow generator:
"S" all the packets in this flow record are exactly the same
size
"F" flow generator saw additional packets in this flow
following a packet with a FIN flag (excluding ACK packets)
"T" flow generator prematurely created a record for a long-
running connection due to a timeout. (When the flow
generator yaf(1) is run with the --silk switch, it will
prematurely create a flow and mark it with "T" if the byte
count of the flow cannot be stored in a 32-bit value.)
"C" flow generator created this flow as a continuation of long-
running connection, where the previous flow for this
connection met a timeout (or a byte threshold in the case
of yaf).
Consider a long-running ssh session that exceeds the flow
generator's active timeout. (This is the active timeout since
the flow generator creates a flow for a connection that still
has activity). The flow generator will create multiple flow
records for this ssh session, each spanning some portion of the
total session. The first flow record will be marked with a "T"
indicating that it hit the timeout. The second through next-
to-last records will be marked with "TC" indicating that this
flow both timed out and is a continuation of a flow that timed
out. The final flow will be marked with a "C", indicating that
it was created as a continuation of an active flow.
application,29
guess as to the content of the flow. Some software that
generates flow records from packet data, such as yaf, will
inspect the contents of the packets that make up a flow and use
traffic signatures to label the content of the flow. SiLK
calls this label the application; yaf refers to it as the
appLabel. The application is the port number that is
traditionally used for that type of traffic (see the
/etc/services file on most UNIX systems). For example, traffic
that the flow generator recognizes as FTP will have a value of
21, even if that traffic is being routed through the standard
HTTP/web port (80).
The following fields provide a way to label the IPs or ports on a
record. These fields require external files to provide the mapping
from the IP or port to the label:
sType,16
categorize the source IP address as "non-routable", "internal",
or "external" and sort based on the category. Uses the mapping
file specified by the SILK_ADDRESS_TYPES environment variable,
or the address_types.pmap mapping file, as described in
addrtype(3).
dType,17
as sType for the destination IP address
scc,18
the country code of the source IP address. Uses the mapping
file specified by the SILK_COUNTRY_CODES environment variable,
or the country_codes.pmap mapping file, as described in
ccfilter(3).
dcc,19
as scc for the destination IP
src-MAPNAME
value determined by passing the source IP or the
protocol/source-port to the user-defined mapping defined in the
prefix map associated with MAPNAME. See the description of the
--pmap-file switch below and the pmapfilter(3) manual page.
dst-MAPNAME
as src-MAPNAME for the destination IP or
protocol/destination-port.
sval
dval
These are deprecated field names created by pmapfilter that
correspond to src-MAPNAME and dst-MAPNAME, respectively. These
fields are available when a prefix map is used that is not
associated with a MAPNAME.
Finally, the list of built-in fields may be augmented by the run-
time loading of PySiLK code or plug-ins written in C (also called
shared object files or dynamic libraries), as described by the
--python-file and --plugin switches.
--presorted-input
Instruct rwsort to merge-sort the input files; that is, rwsort
assumes the input files have been previously sorted using the same
values for the --fields and --reverse switches as was given for
this invocation. This switch can greatly reduce rwsort's memory
requirements as a large buffer is not required for sorting the
records. If the input files were created with rwsort, you can run
rwfileinfo(1) on the files to see the rwsort invocation that
created them.
--reverse
Cause rwsort to reverse the sort order, causing larger values to
occur in the output before smaller values. Normally smaller values
appear before larger values.
--plugin=PLUGIN
Augment the list of fields by using run-time loading of the plug-in
(shared object) whose path is PLUGIN. The switch may be repeated
to load multiple plug-ins. The creation of plug-ins is described
in the silk-plugin(3) manual page. When PLUGIN does not contain a
slash ("/"), rwsort will attempt to find a file named PLUGIN in the
directories listed in the "FILES" section. If rwsort finds the
file, it uses that path. If PLUGIN contains a slash or if rwsort
does not find the file, rwsort relies on your operating system's
dlopen(3) call to find the file. When the SILK_PLUGIN_DEBUG
environment variable is non-empty, rwsort prints status messages to
the standard error as it attempts to find and open each of its
plug-ins.
--temp-directory=DIR_PATH
Specify the name of the directory in which to store data files
temporarily when more records have been read that will fit into
RAM. This switch overrides the directory specified in the
SILK_TMPDIR environment variable, which overrides the directory
specified in the TMPDIR variable, which overrides the default,
/tmp.
--sort-buffer-size=SIZE
Set the maximum size of the buffer used for sorting the records, in
bytes. A larger buffer means fewer temporary files need to be
created, reducing the I/O wait times. When this switch is not
specified, the default maximum for this buffer is near 2GB. The
SIZE may be given as an ordinary integer, or as a real number
followed by a suffix "K", "M" or "G", which represents the
numerical value multiplied by 1,024 (kilo), 1,048,576 (mega), and
1,073,741,824 (giga), respectively. For example, 1.5K represents
1,536 bytes, or one and one-half kilobytes. (This value does not
represent the absolute maximum amount of RAM that rwsort will
allocate, since additional buffers will be allocated for reading
the input and writing the output.) The sort buffer is not used
when the --presorted-input switch is specified.
--note-add=TEXT
Add the specified TEXT to the header of the output file as an
annotation. This switch may be repeated to add multiple
annotations to a file. To view the annotations, use the
rwfileinfo(1) tool.
--note-file-add=FILENAME
Open FILENAME and add the contents of that file to the header of
the output file as an annotation. This switch may be repeated to
add multiple annotations. Currently the application makes no
effort to ensure that FILENAME contains text; be careful that you
do not attempt to add a SiLK data file as an annotation.
--compression-method=COMP_METHOD
Specify how to compress the output. When this switch is not given,
output to the standard output or to named pipes is not compressed,
and output to files is compressed using the default chosen when
SiLK was compiled. The valid values for COMP_METHOD are determined
by which external libraries were found when SiLK was compiled. To
see the available compression methods and the default method, use
the --help or --version switch. SiLK can support the following
COMP_METHOD values when the required libraries are available.
none
Do not compress the output using an external library.
zlib
Use the zlib(3) library for compressing the output, and always
compress the output regardless of the destination. Using zlib
produces the smallest output files at the cost of speed.
lzo1x
Use the lzo1x algorithm from the LZO real time compression
library for compression, and always compress the output
regardless of the destination. This compression provides good
compression with less memory and CPU overhead.
best
Use lzo1x if available, otherwise use zlib. Only compress the
output when writing to a file.
--print-filenames
Print to the standard error the names of input files as they are
opened.
--output-path=PATH
Write the sorted SiLK Flow records to the file at PATH. This
switch must not name an existing regular file. When the standard
output is not a terminal and this switch is not provided or its
argument is "stdout", the sorted records are written to the
standard output.
--site-config-file=FILENAME
Read the SiLK site configuration from the named file FILENAME.
When this switch is not provided, rwsort searches for the site
configuration file in the locations specified in the "FILES"
section.
--input-pipe=PATH
Read the SiLK Flow records to be sorted from the named pipe at
PATH. If PATH is "stdin" or "-", records are read from the
standard input. Use of this switch is not required, since rwsort
will automatically read data from the standard input when no file
names are specified on the command line. This switch is deprecated
and will be removed in the SiLK 4.0 release.
--xargs
--xargs=FILENAME
Causes rwsort to read file names from FILENAME or from the standard
input if FILENAME is not provided. The input should have one file
name per line. rwsort will open each file in turn and read records
from it, as if the files had been listed on the command line.
--help
Print the available options and exit. Specifying switches that add
new fields or additional switches before --help will allow the
output to include descriptions of those fields or switches.
--help-fields
Print the description and alias(es) of each field and exit.
Specifying switches that add new fields before --help-fields will
allow the output to include descriptions of those fields.
--version
Print the version number and information about how SiLK was
configured, then exit the application.
--pmap-file=MAPNAME:PATH
--pmap-file=PATH
Instruct rwsort to load the mapping file located at PATH and create
the src-MAPNAME and dst-MAPNAME fields. When MAPNAME is provided
explicitly, it will be used to refer to the fields specific to that
prefix map. If MAPNAME is not provided, rwsort will check the
prefix map file to see if a map-name was specified when the file
was created. If no map-name is available, rwsort creates the
fields sval and dval. Multiple --pmap-file switches are supported
as long as each uses a unique value for map-name. The --pmap-file
switch(es) must precede the --fields switch. For more information,
see pmapfilter(3).
--python-file=PATH
When the SiLK Python plug-in is used, rwsort reads the Python code
from the file PATH to define additional fields that can be used as
part of the sort key. This file should call register_field() for
each field it wishes to define. For details and examples, see the
silkpython(3) and pysilk(3) manual pages.
LIMITATIONS
When the temporary files and the final output are stored on the same
file volume, rwsort will require approximately twice as much free disk
space as the size of data to be sorted.
When the temporary files and the final output are on different volumes,
rwsort will require between 1 and 1.5 times as much free space on the
temporary volume as the size of the data to be sorted.
EXAMPLES
In the following examples, the dollar sign ("$") represents the shell
prompt. The text after the dollar sign represents the command line.
To sort the records in infile.rw based primarily on destination port
and secondarily on source IP and write the binary output to outfile.rw,
run:
$ rwsort --fields=dport,sip --output-path=outfile.rw infile.rw
The silkpython(3) manual page provides examples that use PySiLK to
create arbitrary fields to use as part of the key for rwsort.
ENVIRONMENT
SILK_TMPDIR
When set and --temp-directory is not specified, rwsort writes the
temporary files it creates to this directory. SILK_TMPDIR
overrides the value of TMPDIR.
TMPDIR
When set and SILK_TMPDIR is not set, rwsort writes the temporary
files it creates to this directory.
PYTHONPATH
This environment variable is used by Python to locate modules.
When --python-file is specified, rwsort must load the Python files
that comprise the PySiLK package, such as silk/__init__.py. If
this silk/ directory is located outside Python's normal search path
(for example, in the SiLK installation tree), it may be necessary
to set or modify the PYTHONPATH environment variable to include the
parent directory of silk/ so that Python can find the PySiLK
module.
SILK_PYTHON_TRACEBACK
When set, Python plug-ins will output traceback information on
Python errors to the standard error.
SILK_COUNTRY_CODES
This environment variable allows the user to specify the country
code mapping file that rwsort uses when computing the scc and dcc
fields. The value may be a complete path or a file relative to the
SILK_PATH. See the "FILES" section for standard locations of this
file.
SILK_ADDRESS_TYPES
This environment variable allows the user to specify the address
type mapping file that rwsort uses when computing the sType and
dType fields. The value may be a complete path or a file relative
to the SILK_PATH. See the "FILES" section for standard locations
of this file.
SILK_CLOBBER
The SiLK tools normally refuse to overwrite existing files.
Setting SILK_CLOBBER to a non-empty value removes this restriction.
SILK_CONFIG_FILE
This environment variable is used as the value for the
--site-config-file when that switch is not provided.
SILK_DATA_ROOTDIR
This environment variable specifies the root directory of data
repository. As described in the "FILES" section, rwsort may use
this environment variable when searching for the SiLK site
configuration file.
SILK_PATH
This environment variable gives the root of the install tree. When
searching for configuration files and plug-ins, rwsort may use this
environment variable. See the "FILES" section for details.
SILK_PLUGIN_DEBUG
When set to 1, rwsort prints status messages to the standard error
as it attempts to find and open each of its plug-ins. In addition,
when an attempt to register a field fails, the application prints a
message specifying the additional function(s) that must be defined
to register the field in the application. Be aware that the output
can be rather verbose.
SILK_TEMPFILE_DEBUG
When set to 1, rwsort prints debugging messages to the standard
error as it creates, re-opens, and removes temporary files.
FILES
${SILK_ADDRESS_TYPES}
${SILK_PATH}/share/silk/address_types.pmap
${SILK_PATH}/share/address_types.pmap
/usr/local/share/silk/address_types.pmap
/usr/local/share/address_types.pmap
Possible locations for the address types mapping file required by
the sType and dType fields.
${SILK_CONFIG_FILE}
${SILK_DATA_ROOTDIR}/silk.conf
/data/silk.conf
${SILK_PATH}/share/silk/silk.conf
${SILK_PATH}/share/silk.conf
/usr/local/share/silk/silk.conf
/usr/local/share/silk.conf
Possible locations for the SiLK site configuration file which are
checked when the --site-config-file switch is not provided.
${SILK_COUNTRY_CODES}
${SILK_PATH}/share/silk/country_codes.pmap
${SILK_PATH}/share/country_codes.pmap
/usr/local/share/silk/country_codes.pmap
/usr/local/share/country_codes.pmap
Possible locations for the country code mapping file required by
the scc and dcc fields.
${SILK_PATH}/lib64/silk/
${SILK_PATH}/lib64/
${SILK_PATH}/lib/silk/
${SILK_PATH}/lib/
/usr/local/lib64/silk/
/usr/local/lib64/
/usr/local/lib/silk/
/usr/local/lib/
Directories that rwsort checks when attempting to load a plug-in.
${SILK_TMPDIR}/
${TMPDIR}/
/tmp/
Directory in which to create temporary files.
SEE ALSOrwcut(1), rwfileinfo(1), rwstats(1), rwuniq(1), addrtype(3),
ccfilter(3), pmapfilter(3), pysilk(3), silkpython(3), silk-plugin(3),
sensor.conf(5), rwflowpack(8), silk(7), yaf(1), dlopen(3), zlib(3)NOTES
If an output path is not specified, rwsort will write to the standard
output unless it is connected to a terminal, in which case an error is
printed and rwsort exits.
If an input pipe or a set of input files are not specified, rwsort will
read records from the standard input unless it is connected to a
terminal, in which case an error is printed and rwsort exits.
Note that rwsort produces binary output. Use rwcut(1) to view the
records.
Do not spend the resources to sort the data if you are going to be
passing it to an aggregation tool like rwtotal or rwaddrcount, which
have their own internal data structures that will ignore the sorted
data.
Both rwuniq(1) and rwstats(1) can take advantage of previously sorted
data, but you must explicitly inform them that the input is sorted by
providing the --presorted-input switch.
SiLK 3.11.0.1 2016-02-19 rwsort(1)