rwcount(1) SiLK Tool Suite rwcount(1)NAMErwcount - Print traffic summary across time
SYNOPSISrwcount [--bin-size=SIZE] [--load-scheme=LOADSCHEME]
[--start-time=START_TIME] [--end-time=END_TIME]
[--skip-zeroes] [--bin-slots] [--epoch-slots]
[--timestamp-format=FORMAT] [--no-titles]
[--no-columns] [--column-separator=CHAR]
[--no-final-delimiter] [{--delimited | --delimited=CHAR}]
[--print-filenames] [--copy-input=PATH] [--output-path=PATH]
[--pager=PAGER_PROG] [--site-config-file=FILENAME]
[{--legacy-timestamps | --legacy-timestamps={1,0}}]
{[--xargs] | [--xargs=FILENAME] | [FILE [FILE ...]]}
rwcount--help
rwcount--version
DESCRIPTIONrwcount summarizes SiLK flow records across time. It counts the
records in the input stream, and groups their byte and packet totals
into time bins. rwcount produces textual output with one row for each
bin.
rwcount reads SiLK Flow records from the files named on the command
line or from the standard input when no file names are specified and
--xargs is not 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, rwcount 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.
rwcount splits each flow record into bins whose size is determined by
the argument to the --bin-size switch. When that switch is not
provided, rwcount uses 30-second bins by default.
By default, the first row of data rwcount prints is the bin containing
the starting time of the earliest record that appears in the input.
rwcount then prints a row for every bin until it reaches the bin
containing the most recent ending time. Rows whose counts are zero are
printed unless the --skip-zero switch is specified.
The --start-time and --end-time switches tell rwcount to use a specific
time for the first row and the final row. The --start-time switch
always sets the time stamp on the first bin to the specified time.
With the --end-time switch, rwcount computes a maximum end-time by
setting any unspecified hour, minute, second, and millisecond field to
its maximum value, and the final bin is that which contains the maximum
end-time.
When --start-time and --end-time are both specified, rwcount reserves
the memory for the bins before it begins processing the records. If
the memory cannot be allocated, rwcount exits. If this happens, try
reducing the time span or increasing the bin-size.
Load Scheme
A router or other flow generator summarizes the traffic it sees into
records. In addition to the five-tuple (source port and address,
destination port and address, and protocol), the record has its start
time, end time, total byte count, and total packet count. There is no
way to know how the bytes and packets were distributed during the
duration of the record: their distribution could be front-loaded, back-
loaded, uniform, et cetera.
When the start and end times of a individual flow record put that
record into a single bin, rwcount can simply add that record's volume
(byte and packet counts) to the bin.
When the duration of a flow record causes it to span multiple bins,
rwcount must to told how to allocate the volume among the bins. The
--load-scheme switch determines this, and it has supports the following
allocation schemes:
time-proportional
Divides the total volume of the flow by the duration of the flow,
and multiplies the quotient by the time spent in the bin. Thus,
the volume the flow contributes to a bin is proportional to the
time the flow spent in the bin. This models a flow where the
volume/second ratio is uniform.
bin-uniform
Divides the volume of the flow by the number of bins the flow
spans, and adds the quotient to each of the bins. In this scheme,
the volume/bin ratio is uniform.
start-spike
Adds the total volume for the flow into the bin containing the
start time of the flow. This models a flow that is front-loaded to
the point where the entire volume is a single spike occurring in
the initial millisecond of flow.
middle-spike
Determines the time at the midpoint of the flow, and adds the
entire volume for the flow into the bin containing that time.
end-spike
Adds the total volume for the flow into the bin containing the end
time of the flow. This models a flow that is back-loaded to the
point where the entire volume is a single spike occurring in final
millisecond of the flow.
maximum-volume
Adds the entire volume for the flow into every bin that contains
any part of the flow. In theory, the distribution of the bytes in
the record could be a spike that occurs at any point during the
flow's duration. This scheme allows one to determine, in
aggregate, the maximum possible volume that could have occurred
during this bin. In this scheme, the "Records" column gives the
number of records that were active during the bin.
minimum-volume
Acts as though the volume for the flow occurred in some other bin.
It is possible that a record that spans multiple bins did not
contribute any volume to the current bin. This scheme allows one
to determine, in aggregate, the minimum possible volume that may
have occurred during this bin. The "Records" column in this
scheme, as in the "maximum-volume" scheme, gives the number of flow
records that were active during the bin.
Be aware that the "spike" load-schemes allocate the entire flow to a
single bin. This can create the impression that there is more traffic
occurring during a particular time window that the physical network
supports.
The "maximum-volume" and "minimum-volume" schemes are used to compute
the maximum and minimum volumes that could have been transferred during
any one bin. "maximum-volume" intentionally over-counts the flow
volume and "minimum-volume" intentionally under-counts.
To see the effect of the various load-schemes, suppose rwcount is using
60-second bins and the input contains two records. The first record
begins at 12:03:50, ends at 12:06:20, and contains 12,600 bytes (60
bytes/second for 210 seconds). This record may contribute to bins at
12:03, 12:04, 12:05, and 12:06. The second record begins at 12:04:05
and lasts 15 seconds; this record's volume always contributes its 200
bytes to the 12:04 bin. The --load-scheme option splits the byte-
counts of the records as follows:
BIN 12:03:00 12:04:00 12:05:00 12:06:00
time-proportional 600 3800 3600 1200
bin-uniform 3150 3350 3150 3150
start-spike 12600 200 0 0
middle-spike 0 200 12600 0
end-spike 0 200 0 12600
maximum-volume 12600 12800 12600 12600
minimum-volume 0 200 0 0
For the record that spans multiple bins: the "time-proportional" scheme
assumes 60 bytes/second, the "bin-uniform" scheme divides the volume
evenly by the four bins, the "middle-spike" scheme assumes all the
volume occurs at 12:05:05, the "maximum-volume" scheme adds the volume
to every bin, and the "minimum-volume" scheme ignores the record.
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.
--bin-size=SIZE
Denote the size of each time bin, in seconds; defaults to 30
seconds. rwcount supports millisecond size bins; SIZE may be a
floating point value equal to or greater than than 0.001.
--load-scheme=LOADSCHEME
Specify how a flow record that spans multiple bins allocates its
bytes and packets among the bins. The default scheme is
"time-proportional", which assumes the volume/second ratio of the
flow record is constant. See the "Load Scheme" section for
additional information on the load-scheme choices. The LOADSCHEME
may be one of the following names or numbers; names may be
abbreviated to the shortest prefix that is unique.
time-proportional,4
Allocate the volume in proportion to the amount of time the
flow spent in the bin.
bin-uniform,0
Allocate the volume evenly across the bins that contain any
part of the flow's duration.
start-spike,1
Allocate the entire volume to the bin containing the start time
of the flow.
middle-spike,3
Allocate the entire volume to the bin containing the time at
the midpoint of the flow.
end-spike,2
Allocate the entire volume to the bin containing the end time
of the flow.
maximum-volume,5
Allocate the entire volume to all of the bins containing any
part of the flow.
minimum-volume,6
Allocate the flow's volume to a bin only if the flow is
completely contained within the bin; otherwise ignore the flow.
--start-time=START_TIME
Set the time of the first bin to START_TIME. When this switch is
not given, the first bin is one that holds the starting time of the
earliest record. The START_TIME may be specified in a format of
"yyyy/mm/dd[:HH[:MM[:SS[.sss]]]]" (or "T" may be used in place of
":" to separate the day and hour). The time must be specified to
at least day precision, and unspecified hour, minute, second, and
millisecond values are set to zero. Whether the date strings
represent times in UTC or the local timezone depend on how SiLK was
compiled, which can be determined from the "Timezone support"
setting in the output from rwcount--version. Alternatively, the
time may be specified as seconds since the UNIX epoch, and an
unspecified milliseconds value is set to 0.
--end-time=END_TIME
Set the time of the final bin to END_TIME. When this switch is not
given, the final bin is one that holds the ending time of the
latest record. The format of END_TIME is the same as that for
START_TIME. Unspecified hour, minute, second, and millisecond
values are set to 23, 59, 59, and 999 respectively. When END_TIME
is specified as seconds since the UNIX epoch, an unspecified
milliseconds value is set to 999. When both --start-time and
--end-time are used, the END_TIME is adjusted so that the final bin
represents a complete interval.
--skip-zeroes
Disable printing of bins with no traffic. By default, all bins are
printed.
--bin-slots
Use the internal bin index as the label for each bin in the output;
the default is to label each bin with the time in a human-readable
format.
--epoch-slots
Use the UNIX epoch time (number of seconds since midnight UTC on
1970-01-01) as the label for each bin in the output; the default is
to label each bin with the time in a human-readable format. This
switch is equivalent to --timestamp-format=epoch. This switch is
deprecated as of SiLK 3.11.0, and it will be removed in the SiLK
4.0 release.
--timestamp-format=FORMAT
Specify the format and/or timezone to use when printing timestamps.
When this switch is not specified, the SILK_TIMESTAMP_FORMAT
environment variable is checked for a default format and/or
timezone. If it is empty or contains invalid values, timestamps
are printed in the default format, and the timezone is UTC unless
SiLK was compiled with local timezone support. FORMAT is a comma-
separated list of a format and/or a timezone. The format is one
of:
default
Print the timestamps as "YYYY/MM/DDThh:mm:ss".
iso Print the timestamps as "YYYY-MM-DD hh:mm:ss".
m/d/y
Print the timestamps as "MM/DD/YYYY hh:mm:ss".
epoch
Print the timestamps as the number of seconds since 00:00:00
UTC on 1970-01-01.
When a timezone is specified, it is used regardless of the default
timezone support compiled into SiLK. The timezone is one of:
utc Use Coordinated Universal Time to print timestamps.
local
Use the TZ environment variable or the local timezone.
--no-titles
Turn off column titles. By default, titles are printed.
--no-columns
Disable fixed-width columnar output.
--column-separator=C
Use specified character between columns and after the final column.
When this switch is not specified, the default of '|' is used.
--no-final-delimiter
Do not print the column separator after the final column. Normally
a delimiter is printed.
--delimited
--delimited=C
Run as if --no-columns --no-final-delimiter --column-sep=C had been
specified. That is, disable fixed-width columnar output; if
character C is provided, it is used as the delimiter between
columns instead of the default '|'.
--print-filenames
Print to the standard error the names of input files as they are
opened.
--copy-input=PATH
Copy all binary input to the specified file or named pipe. PATH
can be "stdout" to print flows to the standard output as long as
the --output-path switch has been used to redirect rwcount's ASCII
output.
--output-path=PATH
Determine where the output of rwcount (ASCII text) is written. If
this option is not given, output is written to the standard output.
--pager=PAGER_PROG
When output is to a terminal, invoke the program PAGER_PROG to view
the output one screen full at a time. This switch overrides the
SILK_PAGER environment variable, which in turn overrides the PAGER
variable. If the value of the pager is determined to be the empty
string, no paging will be performed and all output will be printed
to the terminal.
--site-config-file=FILENAME
Read the SiLK site configuration from the named file FILENAME.
When this switch is not provided, rwcount searches for the site
configuration file in the locations specified in the "FILES"
section.
--legacy-timestamps
--legacy-timestamps=NUM
When NUM is not specified or is 1, this switch is equivalent to
--timestamp-format=m/d/y. Otherwise, the switch has no effect.
This switch is deprecated as of SiLK 3.0.0, and it will be removed
in the SiLK 4.0 release.
--xargs
--xargs=FILENAME
Cause rwcount 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. rwcount 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.
--version
Print the version number and information about how SiLK was
configured, then exit the application.
--start-epoch=START_TIME
Alias the --start-time switch. This switch is deprecated as of
SiLK 3.8.0.
--end-epoch=START_TIME
Alias the --end-time switch. This switch is deprecated as of SiLK
3.8.0.
EXAMPLES
In the following examples, the dollar sign ("$") represents the shell
prompt. The text after the dollar sign represents the command line.
Lines have been wrapped for improved readability, and the back slash
("\") is used to indicate a wrapped line.
To count all web traffic on Feb 12, 2009, into 1 hour bins:
$ rwfilter --pass=stdout --start-date=2009/02/12:00 \
--end-date=2009/02/12:23 --proto=6 --aport=80 \
| rwcount --bin-size=3600
Date| Records| Bytes| Packets|
2009/02/12T00:00:00| 1490.49| 578270918.16| 463951.55|
2009/02/12T01:00:00| 1459.33| 596455716.52| 457487.80|
2009/02/12T02:00:00| 1529.06| 562602842.44| 451456.41|
2009/02/12T03:00:00| 1503.89| 562683116.38| 455554.81|
2009/02/12T04:00:00| 1561.89| 590554569.78| 489273.81|
....
To bin the records according to their start times, use the
--load-scheme switch:
$ rwfilter ... --pass=stdout \
| rwcount --bin-size=3600 --load-scheme=1
Date| Records| Bytes| Packets|
2009/02/12T00:00:00| 1494.00| 580350969.00| 464952.00|
2009/02/12T01:00:00| 1462.00| 596145212.00| 457871.00|
2009/02/12T02:00:00| 1526.00| 561629416.00| 451088.00|
2009/02/12T03:00:00| 1502.00| 563500618.00| 455262.00|
2009/02/12T04:00:00| 1562.00| 589265818.00| 489279.00|
...
To bin the records by their end times:
$ rwfilter ... --pass=stdout \
| rwcount --bin-size=3600 --load-scheme=2
Date| Records| Bytes| Packets|
2009/02/12T00:00:00| 1488.00| 577132372.00| 463393.00|
2009/02/12T01:00:00| 1458.00| 596956697.00| 457376.00|
2009/02/12T02:00:00| 1530.00| 562806395.00| 451551.00|
2009/02/12T03:00:00| 1506.00| 562101791.00| 455671.00|
2009/02/12T04:00:00| 1562.00| 591408602.00| 489371.00|
...
To force the hourly bins to run from 30 minutes past the hour, use the
--start-time switch:
$ rwfilter ... --pass=stdout \
| rwcount --bin-size=3600 --start-time=2002/12/31:23:30
Date| Records| Bytes| Packets|
2009/02/12T00:30:00| 1483.26| 581251364.04| 456554.40|
2009/02/12T01:30:00| 1494.00| 575037453.00| 449280.00|
2009/02/12T02:30:00| 1486.36| 559700466.61| 447700.15|
2009/02/12T03:30:00| 1555.23| 588882400.58| 480724.48|
2009/02/12T04:30:00| 1537.79| 564756248.52| 472003.45|
...
ENVIRONMENT
SILK_TIMESTAMP_FORMAT
This environment variable is used as the value for
--timestamp-format when that switch is not provided. Since SiLK
3.11.0.
SILK_PAGER
When set to a non-empty string, rwcount automatically invokes this
program to display its output a screen at a time. If set to an
empty string, rwcount does not automatically page its output.
PAGER
When set and SILK_PAGER is not set, rwcount automatically invokes
this program to display its output a screen at a time.
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, rwcount 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, rwcount may use this environment
variable. See the "FILES" section for details.
TZ When the argument to the --timestamp-format switch includes "local"
or when a SiLK installation is built to use the local timezone, the
value of the TZ environment variable determines the timezone in
which rwcount displays timestamps. (If both of those are false,
the TZ environment variable is ignored.) If the TZ environment
variable is not set, the machine's default timezone is used.
Setting TZ to the empty string or 0 causes timestamps to be
displayed in UTC. For system information on the TZ variable, see
tzset(3) or environ(7). (To determine if SiLK was built with
support for the local timezone, check the "Timezone support" value
in the output of rwcount --version.) The TZ environment variable
is also used when rwcount parses the timestamp specified in the
--start-time or --end-time switches if SiLK is built with local
timezone support.
FILES
${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.
SEE ALSOrwfilter(1), rwuniq(1), silk(7), tzset(3), environ(7)BUGS
Unlike rwuniq(1), rwcount does not support counting the number of
distinct IPs in a bin. However, using the --bin-time switch on rwuniq
can provide time-based binning similar to what rwcount supports. Note
that rwuniq always bins by the each record's start-time (similar to
rwcount --load-factor=1), and there is no support in rwuniq for
dividing a SiLK record among multiple time bins.
SiLK 3.11.0.1 2016-02-19 rwcount(1)