This application is a NetFlow/IPFIX/sFlow collector in Go.
It gathers network information (IP, interfaces, routers) from different flow protocols, serializes it in a protobuf format and sends the messages to Kafka using Sarama's library.
The diversity of devices and the amount of network samples at Cloudflare required its own pipeline. We focused on building tools that could be easily monitored and maintained. The main goal is to have full visibility of a network while allowing other teams to develop on it.
In order to enable load-balancing and optimizations, the GoFlow library has a decoder
which converts
the payload of a flow packet into a Go structure.
The producer
functions (one per protocol) then converts those structures into a protobuf (pb/flow.pb
)
which contains the fields a network engineer is interested in.
The flow packets usually contains multiples samples
This acts as an abstraction of a sample.
The transport
provides different way of processing the protobuf. Either sending it via Kafka or
print it on the console.
Finally, utils
provide functions that are directly used by the CLI utils.
GoFlow is a wrapper of all the functions and chains thems into producing bytes into Kafka.
There is also one CLI tool per protocol.
You can build your own collector using this base and replace parts:
- Use different transport (eg: RabbitMQ instead of Kafka)
- Convert to another format (eg: Cap'n Proto, Avro, instead of protobuf)
- Decode different samples (eg: not only IP networks, add MPLS)
- Different metrics system (eg: use expvar instead of Prometheus)
The sampling protocols can be very different:
sFlow is a stateless protocol which sends the full header of a packet with router information (interfaces, destination AS) while NetFlow/IPFIX rely on templates that contain fields (eg: source IPv6).
The sampling rate in NetFlow/IPFIX is provided by Option Data Sets. This is why it can take a few minutes for the packets to be decoded until all the templates are received (Option Template and Data Template).
Both of these protocols bundle multiple samples (Data Set in NetFlow/IPFIX and Flow Sample in sFlow) in one packet.
The advantages of using an abstract network flow format, such as protobuf, is it enables summing over the protocols (eg: per ASN or per port, rather than per (ASN, router) and (port, router)).
Collection:
- NetFlow v5
- IPFIX/NetFlow v9
- Handles sampling rate provided by the Option Data Set
- sFlow v5: RAW, IPv4, IPv6, Ethernet samples, Gateway data, router data, switch data
Production:
- Convert to protobuf
- Sends to Kafka producer
- Prints to the console
Monitoring:
- Prometheus metrics
- Time to decode
- Samples rates
- Payload information
- NetFlow Templates
Download the latest release and just run the following command:
./goflow -h
Enable or disable a protocol using -nf=false
or -sflow=false
.
Define the port and addresses of the protocols using -nf.addr
, -nf.port
for NetFlow and -sflow.addr
, -slow.port
for sFlow.
Set the brokers or the Kafka brokers SRV record using: -kafka.brokers 127.0.0.1:9092,[::1]:9092
or -kafka.srv
.
Disable Kafka sending -kafka=false
.
You can hash the protobuf by key when you send it to Kafka.
You can collect NetFlow/IPFIX, NetFlow v5 and sFlow using the same collector or use the single-protocol collectors.
You can define the number of workers per protocol using -workers
.
We also provide a all-in-one Docker container. To run it in debug mode without sending into Kafka:
$ sudo docker run --net=host -ti cloudflare/goflow:latest -kafka=false
To get an example of pipeline, check out flow-pipeline
The samples flowing into Kafka are processed and special fields are inserted using other databases:
- User plan
- Country
- ASN and BGP information
The extended protobuf has the same base of the one in this repo. The compatibility with other software is preserved when adding new fields (thus the fields will be lost if re-serialized).
Once the updated flows are back into Kafka, they are consumed by database inserters (Clickhouse, Amazon Redshift, Google BigTable...) to allow for static analysis. Other teams access the network data just like any other log (SQL query).
If you want to develop applications, build pb/flow.proto
into the language you want:
Example in Go:
PROTOCPATH=$HOME/go/bin/ make proto
Example in Java:
export SRC_DIR="path/to/goflow-pb"
export DST_DIR="path/to/java/app/src/main/java"
protoc -I=$SRC_DIR --java_out=$DST_DIR $SRC_DIR/flow.proto
The fields are listed in the following table.
You can find information on how they are populated from the original source:
- For sFlow
- For NetFlow v5
- For NetFlow v9
- For IPFIX
Field | Description | NetFlow v5 | sFlow | NetFlow v9 | IPFIX |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Type | Type of flow message | NETFLOW_V5 | SFLOW_5 | NETFLOW_V9 | IPFIX |
TimeReceived | Timestamp of when the message was received | Included | Included | Included | Included |
SequenceNum | Sequence number of the flow packet | Included | Included | Included | Included |
SamplingRate | Sampling rate of the flow | Included | Included | Included | Included |
FlowDirection | Direction of the flow | DIRECTION (61) | flowDirection (61) | ||
SamplerAddress | Address of the device that generated the packet | IP source of packet | Agent IP | IP source of packet | IP source of packet |
TimeFlowStart | Time the flow started | System uptime and first | =TimeReceived | System uptime and FIRST_SWITCHED (22) | flowStartXXX (150, 152, 154, 156) |
TimeFlowEnd | Time the flow ended | System uptime and last | =TimeReceived | System uptime and LAST_SWITCHED (23) | flowEndXXX (151, 153, 155, 157) |
Bytes | Number of bytes in flow | dOctets | Length of sample | IN_BYTES (1) OUT_BYTES (23) | octetDeltaCount (1) postOctetDeltaCount (23) |
Packets | Number of packets in flow | dPkts | =1 | IN_PKTS (2) OUT_PKTS (24) | packetDeltaCount (1) postPacketDeltaCount (24) |
SrcAddr | Source address (IP) | srcaddr (IPv4 only) | Included | Included | IPV4_SRC_ADDR (8) IPV6_SRC_ADDR (27) |
DstAddr | Destination address (IP) | dstaddr (IPv4 only) | Included | Included | IPV4_DST_ADDR (12) IPV6_DST_ADDR (28) |
Etype | Ethernet type (0x86dd for IPv6...) | IPv4 | Included | Included | Included |
Proto | Protocol (UDP, TCP, ICMP...) | prot | Included | PROTOCOL (4) | protocolIdentifier (4) |
SrcPort | Source port (when UDP/TCP/SCTP) | srcport | Included | L4_SRC_PORT (7) | sourceTransportPort (7) |
DstPort | Destination port (when UDP/TCP/SCTP) | dstport | Included | L4_DST_PORT (11) | destinationTransportPort (11) |
InIf | Input interface | input | Included | INPUT_SNMP (10) | ingressInterface (10) |
OutIf | Output interface | output | Included | OUTPUT_SNMP (14) | egressInterface (14) |
SrcMac | Source mac address | Included | IN_SRC_MAC (56) | sourceMacAddress (56) | |
DstMac | Destination mac address | Included | OUT_DST_MAC (57) | postDestinationMacAddress (57) | |
SrcVlan | Source VLAN ID | From ExtendedSwitch | SRC_VLAN (59) | vlanId (58) | |
DstVlan | Destination VLAN ID | From ExtendedSwitch | DST_VLAN (59) | postVlanId (59) | |
VlanId | 802.11q VLAN ID | Included | SRC_VLAN (59) | postVlanId (59) | |
IngressVrfID | VRF ID | ingressVRFID (234) | |||
EgressVrfID | VRF ID | egressVRFID (235) | |||
IPTos | IP Type of Service | tos | Included | SRC_TOS (5) | ipClassOfService (5) |
ForwardingStatus | Forwarding status | FORWARDING_STATUS (89) | forwardingStatus (89) | ||
IPTTL | IP Time to Live | Included | IPTTL (52) | minimumTTL (52 | |
TCPFlags | TCP flags | tcp_flags | Included | TCP_FLAGS (6) | tcpControlBits (6) |
IcmpType | ICMP Type | Included | ICMP_TYPE (32) | icmpTypeXXX (176, 178) icmpTypeCodeXXX (32, 139) | |
IcmpCode | ICMP Code | Included | ICMP_TYPE (32) | icmpCodeXXX (177, 179) icmpTypeCodeXXX (32, 139) | |
IPv6FlowLabel | IPv6 Flow Label | Included | IPV6_FLOW_LABEL (31) | flowLabelIPv6 (31) | |
FragmentId | IP Fragment ID | Included | IPV4_IDENT (54) | fragmentIdentification (54) | |
FragmentOffset | IP Fragment Offset | Included | FRAGMENT_OFFSET (88) | fragmentOffset (88) and fragmentFlags (197) | |
BiFlowDirection | BiFlow Identification | biflowDirection (239) | |||
SrcAS | Source AS number | src_as | From ExtendedGateway | SRC_AS (16) | bgpSourceAsNumber (16) |
DstAS | Destination AS number | dst_as | From ExtendedGateway | DST_AS (17) | bgpDestinationAsNumber (17) |
NextHop | Nexthop address | nexthop | From ExtendedGateway | IPV4_NEXT_HOP (15) BGP_IPV4_NEXT_HOP (18) IPV6_NEXT_HOP (62) BGP_IPV6_NEXT_HOP (63) | ipNextHopIPv4Address (15) bgpNextHopIPv4Address (18) ipNextHopIPv6Address (62) bgpNextHopIPv6Address (63) |
NextHopAS | Nexthop AS number | From ExtendedGateway | |||
SrcNet | Source address mask | src_mask | From ExtendedRouter | SRC_MASK (9) IPV6_SRC_MASK (29) | sourceIPv4PrefixLength (9) sourceIPv6PrefixLength (29) |
DstNet | Destination address mask | dst_mask | From ExtendedRouter | DST_MASK (13) IPV6_DST_MASK (30) | destinationIPv4PrefixLength (13) destinationIPv6PrefixLength (30) |
HasEncap | Indicates if has GRE encapsulation | Included | |||
xxxEncap fields | Same as field but inside GRE | Included | |||
HasMPLS | Indicates the presence of MPLS header | Included | |||
MPLSCount | Count of MPLS layers | Included | |||
MPLSxTTL | TTL of the MPLS label | Included | |||
MPLSxLabel | MPLS label | Included |
If you are implementing flow processors to add more data to the protobuf, we suggest you use field IDs ≥ 1000.
The pipeline at Cloudflare is connecting collectors with flow processors that will add more information: with IP address, add country, ASN, etc.
For aggregation, we are using Materialized tables in Clickhouse. Dictionaries help correlating flows with country and ASNs. A few collectors can treat hundred of thousands of samples.
We also experimented successfully flow aggregation with Flink using a
Keyed Session Window:
this sums the Bytes x SamplingRate
and Packets x SamplingRate
received during a 5 minutes window while allowing 2 more minutes
in the case where some flows were delayed before closing the session.
The BGP information provided by routers can be unreliable (if the router does not have a BGP full-table or it is a static route). You can use Maxmind prefix to ASN in order to solve this issue.
Licensed under the BSD 3 License.