Re: Find out which process consumed Network bandwidth

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]



On Mon, 6 Sept 2021 at 14:24, Anand Buddhdev <anandb@xxxxxxxx>

On 06/09/2021 19:35, Kaushal Shriyan wrote:

Hi Kaushal,

I am running CentOS Linux release 7.9.2009 (Core). Is there a way to find
out which process consumed network bandwidth during a specific time period?

For example, the Nginx process consumed how much network traffic on Sept
01, 2021.
As far as I know, such accounting isn't done in a standard CentOS
system, so there's no way to determine such information about a past event

Kaushal,

While you probably can't recover such information for past events,
going forward, iptables can help you figure this out. Putting an IPtables
rule in the OUTPUT table prior to ACCEPTing the packets can help, e.g.:

    iptables -A OUTPUT -p tcp -m owner --uid-owner nginx -j ACCEPT

because now "iptables -L" will display a count of the packets that matched
each rule and the number of bytes. By comparing with the total packets
and bytes for a given time period, you can work out the share for nginx.
You can also estimate packet and byte counts by IP and port using this
method. You could run an hourly cronjob to log the stats.

See "man iptables-extensions" and "man iptables". I don't know how this
works with firewall-cmd, but I imagine firewalld "just" manages iptables?

Good luck!

_______________________________________________
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx
https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos




[Index of Archives]     [CentOS]     [CentOS Announce]     [CentOS Development]     [CentOS ARM Devel]     [CentOS Docs]     [CentOS Virtualization]     [Carrier Grade Linux]     [Linux Media]     [Asterisk]     [DCCP]     [Netdev]     [Xorg]     [Linux USB]


  Powered by Linux