In this page you find:
In the logs and reports section of the Endian Hotspot Appliance there are different possibilities to look at and to analyse the log files.
The sub-menu on the left-hand side of the screen contains the following items:
Dashboard - the main reporting module
Traffic monitoring - the ntopng graphic interface gives a real time overview of the network traffic using charts.
Live Logs - get quick, live view of the latest log entries as they are being generated
Summary - get daily summaries of all logs
System - system logs (/var/log/messages
) filtered by source
and date
Service - logs from OpenVPN and antivirus
Firewall - logs from iptables rules
Proxy - logs from the HTTP and SMTP proxies as well as the web filter
Settings - customise all the log options
Trusted Timestamping - securely time stamp the log files to verify they have not been altered.
In a nutshell, there are two modalities to access the log from the GUI: Live and “by-service”: In the live mode the log files are visualised as soon as they are created, while in the “by-service” mode only the logs produced by one daemon or service are displayed.
The reporting GUI module has the purpose to graphically show the occurrence of various types of event on the system.
In a nutshell, the reporting module shows events happened on the Endian Hotspot Appliance using different widgets and graphs. All events occurring on the system and the information concerning them recorded by the syslog daemon are parsed and used to populate a sqlite3 database. According to the options and to the filters applied in the GUI, this database is queried to gather the available data and display them to the user.
This page is divided into multiple tabs: Summary, System, Web, Mail, Intrusion attempts, Viruses, and Connections. Except for the first tab, which shows an overview of all events, each of them is dedicated to one service running on the Endian Hotspot Appliance.
All the tabs in this module share the same design: Below the tabs, on the left-hand side there are a date selector and a Print button on the right-hand side. Then, a line chart at with an horizontal slider right below, atop one informative box (Summary Grid) containing on the left-hand side one or more tables, depending on the tab and the data shown and a pie-chart on the right-hand side.
At least the table displaying the syslog messages related to the events shown is always present.
More in detail, here is a description of all the widget present in the reporting module.
At the top left-hand side of the GUI there is an hyperlink that shows the interval within which occurred those events that have been considered for the charts. By clicking on it, a small panel gives access to other choices of intervals. There are two types of choices, the first one concerns events that took place in the last … days, namely events from the last day, week month, quarter, or year; the second one selects all the events occurred in one of the last 12 months. Upon selecting a new time span, the other widgets are also updated. There is also the possibility to not change the interval shown, by clicking on Cancel.
A click on this button shows a print preview of the current page.
Line Chart and Time Slider
The line chart shows the event happened on the Endian Hotspot Appliance during the selected time span in a two dimensional graph, in which the x-axis shows the time interval and the y-axis shows the number of occurrences. A coloured line connects events of the same type.
Hint
Different types of event are denoted with different colours.
The time slider is located underneath the chart and allows, within the selected time span, a more fine-grained view of the events, depicted here as histograms. Indeed, the two grey handles on the left and right limits of the slider can be clicked and dragged to reduce the time span shown in the line chart. When reduced, the slider can also be moved by clicking in its middle and dragging it to the left or the right.
Summary Grid
The summary grid has a twofold purpose: On the one side to show the number of occurrences of the various types of events that took place on the Endian Hotspot Appliance in the selected period, on the other side to filter the type of events shown in the line chart. Its content depends on the tabs it is located in and is not present in the Mail, Intrusion attempts, and Viruses tabs, in which is replaced by tables which group different details about the events.
Pie Chart
The pie chart diagram shows graphically the number of event that took place in the selected time span. When in the Summary tab, each slice can be clicked, to open the tab corresponding to the type of event and show a more detailed representation.
Syslog table
A table that shows the syslog messages extracted from the log files and related to the events shown in the charts. When the table carries lot of messages, these are divided into many pages and can be browsed using the buttons and number at its left bottom. At the right bottom there is an icon that allows to refresh the table’s content.
The Summary tab gives an overview of all categories of events recorded on the Endian Hotspot Appliance. The summary grid allows to filter the following types of events:
System. The number of Log ins and other events connected with system administration tasks (e.g., uplinks change of status, start and stop of logging, and so on) .
Web. The number of pages blocked by the content filter.
Mail. The number of spam e-mail received.
Viruses. The number of viruses found.
Each category can be shown separately, with more information and a higher level of details in the other tabs of the page, see further on.
The System tab displays all events that are related to the system efficiency and to system administration. These are all the events shown:
Login. The number of logins, both successful and not.
Status. The changes in the state of the Endian Hotspot Appliance.
Disk. The events involving disk I/O.
Support. Number of accesses and operations donw by the Support Team.
Upgrade. Events involving upgrade of system or of packages.
Uplink. The times the uplink(s) went online or offline.
A click on the small icon on the left-hand side of each event category shows details about the events that are part of that category and updates the pie chart.
The Web tab displays the number of pages that have been accessed or blocked by the URL filter engine. The summary grid is composed by two tabs: Access report and Filter report.
This tab shows the domains that have been accessed, grouped into three tables showing respectively the Source IP Address recorded by the HTTP Proxy, the Domain accessed, and the Users who requested the web page, with the total count for every item.
Note
The Access report tab is not present in all appliances.
This tab shows to which domains the access has been blocked. In the first table, the following categories are shown.
General Use.
Parental Control.
Productivity.
Security.
When the checkboxes on the left-hand side of the Blocked category are not ticked, items in that category are not displayed. A click on the icon on the left of the checkbox will expand the category and show all its sub-categories, that can be selected or not, to draw more detailed diagrams.
The other tables at the bottom show the counts of each the blocked objects: The Source IP Addresses and the Domain.
The Mail tab displays all e-mails blocked as spam.
There is no summary grid in this tab, but three tables displaying counts for:
From. The sender(s) of spam e-mails.
To. The recipient(s) of spam e-mails.
Source IP Address. The IP address from where spam e-mail have been sent.
The Viruses tab displays all viruses intercepted by the anti-virus engine (See Menubar ‣ Services ‣ Antivirus Engine).
The tables at the bottom show counts of the following information:
Virus Name. The name of the virus found.
Source IP Address. The IP address where the virus originally was located.
Destination IP Address. The IP Address to which the virus was propagated.
The Connections tab displays the average number of connections started by the users of the Endian Hotspot Appliance, grouped into:
Local connections. Accesses via SSH or console.
Hotspot users. Users accessing the Hotspot.
OpenVPN users. Clients connected using OpenVPN.
The GUI of traffic monitoring, which is provided by the ntopng application, is organised into four tabs: Dashboard, Flows, Hosts, and Interfaces. Moreover, there is also a search box to quickly display information about a given host.
In the footer of each tab, a couple of information are shown: Besides a copyright notice and a link to the ntop home page, there is a chart showing the network traffic over the last 20 seconds, updated in real time, and some numerical data about the current bandwidth used, the number of hosts and flows and the Endian Hotspot Appliance‘s uptime.
ntop in a nutshell
The ntopng software is the successor of the ntop network traffic analyser, which adds a more intuitive interface and more graphical representations of the traffic that flows through the Endian Hotspot Appliance.
The management interface of ntopng provides now more usability and can be accessed easily accessed from any browser, and therefore has been integrated more tightly with the Endian Hotspot Appliance interface than in previous versions.
In few words, the abilities of ntopng can be summarised as follows:
Real time monitoring of every network interface of the Endian Hotspot Appliance.
Web-accessible management interface.
Less resource needed compared to ntop.
Integration of nDPI (Application firewall).
Traffic analysis according to different parameters (protocol, source/destination).
Export of reports in JSON format
Storage of traffic statistics on disk.
See also
The ntopng home page and its github repository, where to report bugs and have a look at the source code..
The dashboard shows all connections that interest the Endian Hotspot Appliance, that is, all established Flows in which the Endian Hotspot Appliance is involved.
The page is divided into several diagrams, with the first one -a so-called Sankey diagram showing all flows moving on the Endian Hotspot Appliance, updated in real time. The horizontal flows show the traffic between two hosts, while the vertical width of each flows is proportional to the bandwidth used by that flows, i.e., to the amount of data flowing. The connections -and therefore the direction of the data sent- are shown left to right: Hosts on the left hand-side of the diagram send data to hosts on the right-hand side and are identified by either their IP address or hostname. A click on one host leads to the Overview page in the Hosts tab, which shows several information about that host.
Below the Sankey diagram, four informative-only pie charts show in percentage the items that that generate the most traffic, divided into: Total by host (top left); application protocols (top right), ASNs (bottom left), and live flow senders (bottom right).
The active flows tab contains a big table with a number of information about the active flows:
Info. A click on the icon opens a new page in which more detailed information about that flow is shown.
Application. The application causing the flow. nDPI is used to recognise the application, therefore it might be necessary to wait for a couple of packets to see the correct application displayed: In this case, the (Too Early) message appears instead of the application name.
L4 Proto The network protocol used by the flow, which is usually TCP or UDP.
Client. The hostname and port used by the flow on the client side. Clicking on either the hostname or port, more information will be shown in a new page about the network traffic flowing that host or port.
Server. The hostname and port used by the flow on the server side. Like for the Client above, more information is shown when clicking on the hostname or port.
Hint
By clicking on the hostname or port, the table shows detailed information about it, opening a sub-tab in the Hosts tab.
Duration. The length of the connection.
Breakdown. The percentage of traffic generated by the client and by the server.
Throughput. The amount of data currently flowing between the client and server.
Total Bytes. The total data exchanged since the connection was first established.
At the bottom of the table, on the left-hand side it is shown the total number of rows shown , while on the right-hand side it is possible to browse the various pages in which the table is split, when the number of rows is higher that the pagination.
A click on the Info button in the first table’s column will give detailed information about that particular flow. Besides those already described above, these additional data are displayed.
First Seen. The timestamp when the connection was established, along with the time passed since.
Last Seen. The timestamp in which the connection was last active and the time passed since that moment.
Client to Server Traffic. The number of packets and bytes sent from the client to the server.
Server to Client Traffic. The number of packets and bytes sent from the server to the client.
TCP Flags. The TCP states of the current flow.
It is possible to go back to the list of flows by clicking on the Flows hyperlink on the left, right above the table.
The Hosts tab allows to view several details about the involved parties of a flow: Host, port, application, flows and their duration, data exchanged, and so on.
Two representation are available: Host List and Top Hosts (Local)
The Host List representation shows information about all the hosts involved in some flow with the Endian Hotspot Appliance and the following data about them:
IP Address. The IP address or MAC Address of the host. The latter is shown if the DHCP lease for that host has expired.
Location. Whether the host is in the local or in a remote network.
Symbolic Name. If available, it is the hostname of the host.
Seen Since. The timestamp of the first established connection.
ASN. The Autonomous System Numbers, that is, the number of aoutonomous systems connected.
Breakdown. The trade-off between sent and received traffic.
Throughput. The amount of data currently flowing between the client and the server.
Traffic The amount of data exchanged by the host.
A click on the IP address opens an overview of the host, showing several information about it, besides those listed above:
MAC Address. The local MAC address of the local network interface through which traffic is flowing.
Last Seen. The timestamp in which the connection was last active and the time passed since that moment.
Sent vs Received Traffic Breakdown. The traffic generated or received by the host.
Traffic Sent. The number of packets and bytes sent from the client to the server.
Traffic Received. The number of packets and bytes sent from the server to the client.
JSON. Download information about the host in JSON format.
Activity map. How many flows have seen the host involved at a given timestamp. Each square shows a minute and the darker the colour, the more flows have taken place in that minute.
From here it is also possible to open additional informative tabs about that host. Each tabs contains one or more pie charts (except for the Contacts and Historical tabs) above a textual summary of the data displayed.
Traffic. The network protocols used by the host. (TCP, UDP and ICMP being the most common).
Packets. The length in number of packets of each flow.
Protocols. The application protocol used by the host.
Flows. The table with all the network flows from the hosts.
Talkers. The Sankey diagram of the connections, very similar to the one shown in the Dashboard, which however shows only the most active flows.
Contacts. This tab is slight different from the others. It shows on top an interaction maps and on the bottom a list of connection that have the host as client or receiver.
traffic flown form and to the host in a given timespan (up to one year), that can be selected above the graph.
The Top Hosts (Local) representation shows a real-time graphic of the hosts that have or have had an active connections to the host within the last 30 minutes.
The ntopng software installed on Endian Hotspot Appliance can show and analyse traffic for one network interface at a time.
By clicking on the Interfaces tab, it is possible to see the currently active network interface, among the available ones, and to switch to one of the other.
See also
The online ntopng guide, available at https://www.ntop.org/guides/ntopng/, contains more detailed information about the graphic interface.
When entering in the Live Logs section, a box is shown, containing the list of all the log files available for real time viewing. Any number of logs to see can be chosen by ticking the corresponding checkboxes and displayed in a new window upon clicking on the Show selected logs button.
IT is also possible to watch all the log files at once, by ticking the Select all bottom checkbox and click on the Show selected logs button.
Single log files can be viewed by simply clicking on the Show this log only link on the right-hand side of the list.
The window that opens contains two boxes, Settings at the top and Live logs at the bottom.
Warning
The list of log entries can become nearly unreadable if many logs are showed at once, due to the possible high number of log entries produced, for example by the firewall, VPN, or proxy log, which can generate multiple log entries per second, especially in case of heavy traffic. In this cases, the logs to be displayed can be configured in the Settings box.
This box allows to modify the settings of the log viewer, including which of the log files to show, their colour and options to highlight or find specific keywords.
On the right-hand side of the box appears the list of the logs that are currently displayed, and the colour with which they are highlighted, while on the left-hand side some additional control elements are shown, that help limit the output:
Only the log entries that contain the expression in this field are shown.
Like the filter above, but applied to the output of the first filter. In other words, only log entries containing both expressions are shown in the log.
Clicking on this button will prevent new log entries from appearing on the live log. However, after clicking the button once more, all new entries will appear at once, quickly scrolling the old ones.
All the log entries that contain this expression will be highlighted in the chosen colour. The difference with the filtering option is that all the content is still displayed and the log entries containing the expression will be highlighted with a coloured background.
A click on the coloured square gives the choice to select the colour that will be used for highlighting.
This option is only available if the Sort in reverse chronological order option in the Menubar ‣ Logs ‣ Settings section is turned off. This causes all the new entries to be shown at the bottom of the page: If this option is enabled, the list is scrolled upwards to show the latest entries at the bottom of the page, otherwise only the older entries are show and the scrollbar on the right should be used to see the new ones.
To show more log or remove them from display, click on the Show more link right below the list of the log files on the top right corner. The box will be replaced by the services whose log files can be shown, from which to select those that should appear by ticking their respective checkboxes.
To change the colour of a log file, click on the colour palette -between the checkbox and the service name- of that log type and then choose a new colour. To close the list of logs and show the settings again, click on Close either below the services or below the list of the displayed log files.
The logs chosen for viewing are shown in this box, which consists of a table divided in three columns.
This column contains the log name, that is, the daemon or service producing the log entry.
The time stamp (date and time) of the event that has been recorded.
The actual message generated by the service or daemon and recorded in the log files.
Finally, there is also the chance to increase or decrease the window size by clicking on the Increase height or Decrease height buttons, respectively, which are situated on the top right heading of the box.
The sub-menu entries System, Service, Firewall, and Proxy show log files for different services and daemons, grouped by similar characteristics. These sub-menu entries have also a common structure of their pages, organised in two boxes: Settings at the top, that contains the following options, and Log at the bottom that contains the actual messages of the log file.
Moreover, they feature several common controls, to search within the log, with the System menu item that has one additional option.that are described here.
Only the lines that contain the entered expression are shown.
Directly show log entries from this date.
Note
Log files are rotated daily around midnight. If at that time the Endian Hotspot Appliance is powered off, no rotation takes place and all the entries in the log file will be considered as today’s entries, even if they were generated the previous day(s).
Directly show log entries from this page in the result set. The number of entries shown per page can be modified on the Menubar ‣ Logs ‣ Settings page.
After changing any of the settings above, a click on this button refreshes the page content.
When clicking on this button the log entries are exported to a text file.
When clicking on this link, the current log is signed. This button is only available if Trusted Timestamping is enabled.
These two buttons are present in the Log box and show up whenever the number of entries grows too much and are divided into two or more parts. They allow to browse older or newer entries of the search results by clicking on them.
Note
A message at the top of the page informs if on a given date there are no logs available: This can happen either if the daemon or service were not running, or if they did not produce any message.
In the remainder of this section, all the services and their peculiar settings are presented.
This page presents summaries for the logs produced by the Endian Hotspot Appliance, separated by days. Unlike the other parts of the log section, it has its own settings to control the level of details shown. The following control elements are available in the first box at the top of the page.
Select from this drop-down menu the month in which the log messages were generated.
The second drop-down menu allows to pick the day in which the log messages were generated.
Browse the history, moving to the previous or next day. The content of the page will be automatically refreshed.
Immediately refresh the content of the page when the month/day combination has been changed.
When clicking on this button, a text version of the summary is shown and can be saved on a local filesystem.
Below the Settings box, a variable number of boxes appears, depending on the running services that have log entries. The Disk Space box should at least be visible, showing the available disk space on the chosen date, while other boxes that can show up include Firewall, DHCP Server, and SSHD.
Note that the summaries are not available for the current day, as they are generated nightly from the log files generated the day before.
In this section appears the log viewer for the system log file,
/var/log/messages
and will contain all the entries since the
last time it was rotated.
The Settings box, besides the Common Actions, one more option is available:
Choose from the drop-down menu which logs should be displayed, either All or only those related to a given service or daemon. Among others, they include kernel messages, SSH access, NTP, and DHCP
Following the choice of the section, click on the Update button to refresh the logs displayed in the Log box at the bottom of the page, in which the Older and Newer buttons allow to browse the pages.
In this section appear the log entries for some important services provided by the Endian Hotspot Appliance, each in its own tab: OpenVPN, and the ClamAV anti-virus. Only the Common Actions are available.
The firewall log viewer contains the messages that record the firewall’s activities. Only the common actions are available.
Each line in the table is a connection recorded by the firewall, together with a number of information:
The timestamp at which the message was generated.
The chain through which the packet has passed, including the policy applied to the packet.
The interface through which the packet has passed.
The protocol of the packet.
The IP address and port from which the packet has arrived.
The MAC address of the source interface.
The IP address and port to which the packet has arrived.
The proxy log viewer shows the logs for the four daemons that use the proxy. Each of them has its own tab: squid (HTTP), icap (Content filter), sarg (HTTP report), and smtpd (SMTP, email proxy).
In addition to the Common Actions, the log viewer for the HTTP proxy allow these values to be specified:
Show only the log entries containing the selected source IP address, chosen from a drop-down menu.
Note
The IP addresses available in the drop-down menu depend on those recorded in the log files. The ALL value is the default.
A regular expression that filters out all the log entries that contain it.
Tick this checkbox to enable the ignore filter.
A click on this button will restore the default search parameters.
The log entries shown are those produced by the squid software.
This tab contains the same settings as the previous HTTP tab and shows log entries of the content filter engine.
The HTTP report tab has only one option:
Tick the checkbox to enable the proxy analysis report generator and clicking on the Save button.
Once the report generator is activated, periodic reports are generated and accessible by clicking on the Daily report, Weekly report, and Monthly report links.
Only the Common Actions are available in the tab of the postfix daemon. The log entries shown are those from the log files generated by the postfix daemon.
This page contains global configuration options for the Endian Hotspot Appliance‘s logging facilities, organised into four boxes: Log viewing options, Log summaries, Remote logging, and Firewall logging.
The pagination value, i.e., how many lines are displayed per log-page.
If this checkbox is ticked, then the newest log entries will be displayed first.
How long should the log summaries be stored on disk before deletion.
The detail level for the log summary: the higher the level, the more log entries are saved and showed. The drop-down menu allows three levels of detail: Low, Medium, and High.
Ticking this box allows to enable remote logging. The next option allows to enter the hostname of the syslog server.
The hostname of the remote server, to which the logs will be sent.
Note
The remote server must support the latest IETF syslog protocol standards.
Select from the drop-down menu if the communication to the remote syslog server should use UDP or TCP.
If this option is enabled the firewall will log packets with a bad constellation TCP flag (e.g., all flags are set).
With this option enabled, all new TCP connections without SYN flag will be logged.
To log all the accepted outgoing connections this checkbox must be ticked.
All the refused packets will be logged by the firewall, if this option is enabled.
Growing Logging Files and Disk Space Management
The log files on the Endian Hotspot Appliance are stored on a dedicated
partition, under the /var/log/
(today’s log files) and
/var/log/archives
directories. Every night files are
rotated -compressed and moved to the /var/log/archives
directory. During the rotation, if the the partition is about to
run out of space, the older log files are deleted, to make room for
the new ones.
However, when the partition runs out of space during the day, for example because log is active for many services and there is a high volume of traffic, no log file will be recorded anymore. This might render the system unstable and may lead to the impossibilities to start new services or even refuse connections.
In case the log archives are important and the partition is always full, it is suggested to regularly copy the log archives from the Endian Hotspot Appliance to a safe place where to store them and remove them from the Endian Hotspot Appliance. As an alternative, the setup of a remote syslog server is a viable alternative.
See also
More information about the logging policies can be found in this article
Some guidelines to free space on a Endian Hotspot Appliance can be found here.
Trusted timestamping is a process that log files (but in general any document) undergo in order to track and certify their origin and compliance to the original. In other words, trusted timestamping allows to certify and verify that a log file has not been modified in any way by anyone, not even the original author. In the case of log files, trusted timestamping proves useful for example, to verify the accesses to the system or the connections from the VPN users, even in cases of independent audits.
Trusted timestamping is not enabled by default, but its activation only requires a click on the grey switch. When it turns green, some configuration options will show up.
The URL of the timestamp server (also called TSA) is mandatory, since it will be this server that signs the log files.
Note
A valid URL of a valid TSA is needed to be able to use trusted timestamping. Several Companies can supply this kind of service.
If the timestamp server requires to authenticate, tick the box below the HTTP authentication label.
The username used to authenticate on the timestamp server.
The password used to authenticate on the timestamp server.
To ease and to make the communication with the server more secure, the server’s public key can be imported. the certificate file can be searched on the local computer by clicking on the Browse… button, and then uploaded to the Endian Hotspot Appliance by clicking on the Upload button. After the certificate has been stored, next to the Public key of the timestamping server label, a Download link will appear, that can be clicked to retrieve the certificate, for example if it should be installed on another Endian Hotspot Appliance.
After clicking on the Save button, the settings are stored and, on the next day, a new button will appear in the Logs section, on the right-hand side of the Settings box:
When clicked it will show a message in a yellow callout to inform about the status of the log.
See also
The official OpenSSL timestamping documentation and RFC 3161, the original definition of the Time Stamp Protocol.
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