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Traffic accounting with iptables

Revision as of 07:56, 14 June 2006 by Vass (talk | contribs) (Initial edition of article)
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Suppose you need to know how much traffic VPS eats. It can be easily done using iptables.

Contents

Situation description

Lets consider the very simple situation: one VPS with one IP address on Hardware Node (HN) with only one interface. To be more exact assume that VPS id is 200, ip address of the HN is 192.168.0.56, interface name is eth0, ip address of VPS is 192.168.0.117. And you wish to know how much bytes 200th VPS eats. One more assumption that ther is no iptables rules on HN now. All these assumption are only for clarity!

Solution

Almost any trafic that goes to and from vps can be catched from FORWARD chain of iptables module in VE0, thus we add such rules:

# iptables -A FORWARD -s 192.168.0.117
# iptables -A FORWARD -d 192.168.0.117

It means, that all traffic forwarded to ip 192.168.0.117 and from ip 192.168.0.117 will be accounted. To obtain current traffic usage of VPS you can give the command:

# iptables -nv -L FORWARD
Chain FORWARD (policy ACCEPT 243 packets, 28089 bytes)
 pkts bytes target     prot opt in     out     source               destination
    8   832            all  --  *      *       192.168.0.117        0.0.0.0/0
   15  1052            all  --  *      *       0.0.0.0/0            192.168.0.117

"Bytes" column is the column we need. It's worth to say, that restarting VPS doesn't affect accounting, it remains right. But if you restart your node all rules and consequently statistics are droped. So it's recomended to run some cron job that dumps statistic on hard drive and also add init script that creates iptables rules on HN start.

As is easy to see, it's not per VPS statistic, but rather per IP statistic. Thus you must be carefull then changing IPs of VPSs, otherwise you'll get mess of results.

Saing "almost any trafic", I mean, that traffic between VE and and VE0 isn't accounted by rules above. Don't know can it be useful for anybody, but to account such traffic these rules pass:

iptables -I INPUT 1 -i venet0 -d 192.168.0.117
iptables -I OUTPUT 1 -o venet0 -s 192.168.0.117

To observe results:

[root@dhcp0-56 traffic_accounting]# iptables -nv -L INPUT
Chain INPUT (policy ACCEPT 542 packets, 63745 bytes)
 pkts bytes target     prot opt in     out     source               destination
   35  4533            all  --  venet0 *       0.0.0.0/0            192.168.0.117
[root@dhcp0-56 traffic_accounting]# iptables -nv -L OUTPUT
Chain OUTPUT (policy ACCEPT 247 packets, 27847 bytes)
 pkts bytes target     prot opt in     out     source               destination
   48  4724            all  --  *      venet0  192.168.0.117        0.0.0.0/0

If you need to zero counters this command works:

# iptables -Z

The disadvantage is that doing this way you zero all counters in all rules. If it's undesrable for you, you can just replace the rule with the same rule:

[root@dhcp0-56 traffic_accounting]# iptables -nv -L FORWARD
Chain FORWARD (policy ACCEPT 101 packets, 10715 bytes)
 pkts bytes target     prot opt in     out     source               destination
   44  5151            all  --  *      *       192.168.0.117        0.0.0.0/0
   57  5564            all  --  *      *       0.0.0.0/0            192.168.0.117
[root@dhcp0-56 traffic_accounting]# iptables -R FORWARD 1 -s 192.168.0.117
[root@dhcp0-56 traffic_accounting]# iptables -nv -L FORWARD
Chain FORWARD (policy ACCEPT 101 packets, 10715 bytes)
 pkts bytes target     prot opt in     out     source               destination
    0     0            all  --  *      *       192.168.0.117        0.0.0.0/0
   57  5564            all  --  *      *       0.0.0.0/0            192.168.0.117

More complicated cases

Well, now, when we know how to work in the easiest case, we'll try to understand what to do in more complicated situations.

  • More than one VPS on the node

Just add the rules like above for each VPS's IP.

  • More than one IP per VPS.

For each IP add the rules like above. When counting the complete traffic of VPS you have to summarize over all IPs that this VPS owns.

  • More interfaces on the HN.

Nothing to do! :)

Scripting

As you see this way can be time-consuming in case of big amount of VPSs. So if anybody has scripts that automate all the process - you are welcome!