flow trace without commit

On SRX, there is now a handy feature introduced in 12.1X46-D10. You can enable flow trace without going into configuration on the operational mode. I believe this will make troubleshooting easier as it saves time if you need to try different flow filters. Here is how you can enable a sample ICMP flow trace for a specific IP address e.g 192.168.1.10

Create your filters named incoming-filter,outgoing-filter to catch the traffic

>monitor security flow filter incoming-filter protocol icmp destination-prefix 192.168.1.10
>monitor security flow filter outgoing-filter protocol icmp source-prefix 192.168.1.10

Give a file name to save the flow trace

>monitor security flow file flow-trace.log 

File will be saved under /var/log folder, you can also set size option if you like

Check the filters

> show monitor security flow   
Monitor security flow session status: Inactive
Monitor security flow trace file: /var/log/flow-trace.log
Monitor security flow filters: 2
  Name: incoming-filter
    Status: Inactive
    Source: 0.0.0.0/0 (port 0~65535)
    Destination: 192.168.1.10/32 (port 0~65535)
    Protocol: icmp
    Logical system: root-logical-system
    Interface: None
  Name: outgoing-filter
    Status: Inactive
    Source: 192.168.1.10/32 (port 0~65535)
    Destination: 0.0.0.0/0 (port 0~65535)
    Protocol: icmp
    Logical system: root-logical-system
    Interface: None

Yes we have created the filters but they are not active as you can see on the Status field.

Until you start monitoring nothing is being traced. Start the trace:

>monitor security flow start 

We can see that now filters are active

> show monitor security flow 
Monitor security flow session status: Active
Monitor security flow trace file: /var/log/flow-trace.log
Monitor security flow filters: 2
  Name: incoming-filter
    Status: Active
    Source: 0.0.0.0/0 (port 0~65535)
    Destination: 192.168.1.10/32 (port 0~65535)
    Protocol: icmp
    Logical system: root-logical-system
    Interface: None
  Name: outgoing-filter
    Status: Active
    Source: 192.168.1.10/32 (port 0~65535)
    Destination: 0.0.0.0/0 (port 0~65535)
    Protocol: icmp
    Logical system: root-logical-system
    Interface: None

Generate the traffic and check the log file

> show log flow-trace.log                                                                                                     
Jul 10 20:48:10 20:48:09.965641:CID-0:RT:<192.168.1.1/1->192.168.1.10/29284;1> matched filter incoming-filter:
 
Jul 10 20:48:10 20:48:09.965941:CID-0:RT:packet [84] ipid = 38310, @0x4bd2c4d2
 
Jul 10 20:48:10 20:48:09.965964:CID-0:RT:---- flow_process_pkt: (thd 1): flow_ctxt type 15, common flag 0x0, mbuf 0x4bd2c280, rtbl_idx = 0
 
Jul 10 20:48:10 20:48:09.970789:CID-0:RT: flow process pak fast ifl 72 in_ifp ge-0/0/1.0
 
Jul 10 20:48:10 20:48:09.970793:CID-0:RT:  ge-0/0/1.0:192.168.1.1->192.168.1.10, icmp, (8/0)
 
Jul 10 20:48:10 20:48:09.970801:CID-0:RT: find flow: table 0x58735f30, hash 9701(0xffff), sa 192.168.1.1, da 192.168.1.10, sp 1, dp 29284, proto 1, tok 6
 
Jul 10 20:48:10 20:48:09.971211:CID-0:RT:  no session found, start first path. in_tunnel - 0x0, from_cp_flag - 0

Yes we have caught the traffic

Now it is time to stop the monitoring and clearing the filters

> monitor security flow stop 
>clear monitor security flow filter incoming-filter 
>clear monitor security flow filter outgoing-filter

All done!

About: rtoodtoo

Worked for more than 10 years as a Network/Support Engineer and also interested in Python, Linux, Security and SD-WAN // JNCIE-SEC #223 / RHCE / PCNSE


4 thoughts on “flow trace without commit”

  1. Thanks a lot for the clear article, it’s surprising how hard it is to find a simple and efficient tutorial for enabling debug !

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