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flowtools

Module to install flow-tools and manage flow-capture

11,038 downloads

10,005 latest version

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Version information

  • 0.0.5 (latest)
  • 0.0.3
  • 0.0.2
  • 0.0.1
released Oct 11th 2014
This version is compatible with:
  • Puppet Enterprise 3.x
  • Puppet >=2.7.20 <4.0.0
  • , , ,

Start using this module

  • r10k or Code Manager
  • Bolt
  • Manual installation
  • Direct download

Add this module to your Puppetfile:

mod 'nextrevision-flowtools', '0.0.5'
Learn more about managing modules with a Puppetfile

Add this module to your Bolt project:

bolt module add nextrevision-flowtools
Learn more about using this module with an existing project

Manually install this module globally with Puppet module tool:

puppet module install nextrevision-flowtools --version 0.0.5

Direct download is not typically how you would use a Puppet module to manage your infrastructure, but you may want to download the module in order to inspect the code.

Download

Documentation

nextrevision/flowtools — version 0.0.5 Oct 11th 2014

#puppet-flowtools

Build Status

####Table of Contents

  1. Overview
  2. Module Description
  3. Setup - The basics of getting started with puppet-flowtools
  4. Usage - Configuration options and additional functionality
  5. Reference - An under-the-hood peek at what the module is doing and how
  6. Limitations - OS compatibility, etc.
  7. Development - Guide for contributing to the module

##Overview

This module is responsible for installing flow-tools, configuring flow-capture, and running flow-capture on specified interfaces and ports for specified devices.

##Module Description

This module is responsible for installing flow-tools on the system. Once flow-tools has been successfully installed, the module will generate an empty config file (default: /etc/flow-tools/flow-capture). The service is then started/enabled if specified (default: true), and will begin receiving flow data and writing it to a directory (default: /var/flow).

The module has a device type which configures flow-capture to listen on an interface/port for a device. If using flow-capture, this is required for the module to function properly, otherwise flow-capture will fail to start due to the emtpy config file.

This module can be used to only install flow-tools, with the use of the capture parameter described below.

##Setup

###What flowtools affects

  • /etc/init.d/flow-capture
  • /etc/flow-tools/flow-capture.conf
  • /usr/local/flow-tools/ (RedHat family systems only)

###Setup Requirements

This module is dependent on puppetlabs/concat and puppetlabs/stdlib. As for puppetlabs/concat, you must have pluginsync set to true on systems you wish to use with this module.

###Beginning with puppet-flowtools

To get started, simply include the flow-tools class and define a capture device:

include flowtools
flowtools::device { 'device1':
  ip_address => '192.168.1.1',
  port       => '9996'
}

This will create and entry in flow-capture.conf to listen on all interfaces on UDP port 9996 for flow data sent from 192.168.1.1.

##Usage

The basic usage of the module is listed above, and different examples will be explored below.

Passing custom options to flow-capture

include flowtools
flowtools::device { 'device1':
  ip_address => '192.168.1.1',
  port       => '9996',
  options    => '-V 5'
}

Specify a custom capture directory

class { 'flowtools':
  flow_dir => '/data/flows'
}
flowtools::device { 'device1':
  ip_address => '192.168.1.1',
  port       => '9996'
}

Listening for all devices sending flow data to port 9996

include flowtools
flowtools::device { 'all':
  ip_address => '0.0.0.0',
  port       => '9996'
}

Listening on a specific interface with custom options

include flowtools
flowtools::device { 'device1':
  ip_address => '192.168.1.1',
  port       => '9996',
  listen     => '192.168.1.33'
  options    => '-V 5'
}

Just install flow-tools, don't start flow-capture

class { 'flowtools':
  capture => false,
}

Using Hiera data with flow-tools

---
flowtools:
  capture: true
  flow_dir: '/mnt/flows'
  devices:
    router1:
      ip_address: '10.1.1.1'
      port: '9997'
    router2:
      ip_address: '10.2.1.1'
      port: '9998'

##Reference Classes:

  • flowtools

Types:

  • flowtools::device

Flow-Tools project:

##Limitations

This module only supports Debian and RedHat family operating systems. For Debian family systems, flow-tools must be availlable via apt. For RedHat systems, flow-tools is installed via a RPM of the latest version due to flow-tools not being available in the Epel, RPMForge or standard repos. This module has been tested on pristine versions of:

  • RHEL/CentOS 6.4
  • Ubuntu 10.04
  • Ubuntu 12.04
  • Debian 6
  • Debian 7

##Development

Feel free to make any additions to the module and issue a pull request. If you have a more elegant solution to some of the ways I've gone about things here, I'm certainly eager to hear about/implement them.