Spiffy Netflow tools?

Gustavo Santos gustkiller at gmail.com
Mon Mar 19 14:16:41 UTC 2018


+1 for Plixer Scrutinizer

2018-03-17 19:42 GMT-03:00 Michael Krygeris <me at krygerism.com>:

> Disclaimer: Am Plixer engineer.
> If you want to take it for a spin, you can download a fully functional
> OVA/QCOW2 30 day eval from the plixer website. I can also get you access to
> an AWS AMI as well.
> I don’t want to turn this into an Ad. So DM if you need any info/access.
>
> Mike Krygeris
>
> On Tue, Mar 13, 2018 at 11:52 AM Babak Farrokhi <babak at farrokhi.net>
> wrote:
>
> > Plixer is also interesting.
> >
> > nfdump works great with NetFlow but support for IPFIX is somehow limited
> > to basics.
> >
> >
> > --
> > Babak
> >
> >
> > On 13 Mar 2018, at 3:20, Fredrik Korsbäck wrote:
> >
> > > On 2018-03-13 00:24, mike.lyon at gmail.com wrote:
> > >> Howdy!
> > >>
> > >> Checking out various Netflow tools and wanted to see what others are
> > >> using?
> > >>
> > >> Kentik is cool. Are they the only SaaS based flow digester? I don’t
> > >> seem to see any others.
> > >>
> > >> Also curious about on-prem solutions as well.
> > >>
> > >> Thanks!
> > >> Mike
> > >>
> > >
> > > Kentik is probably top of the foodchain right now.
> > >
> > > But they are certainly not alone in the biz. Ontop of my head...
> > >
> > > * Flowmon
> > > * Talaia
> > > * Arbor Peakflow
> > > * Deepfield
> > > * Pmacct + supporting toolkit
> > > * NFsen/Nfdump/AS-stats
> > > * Put kibana/ES infront of any collector
> > > * Solarwinds something something
> > > * Different vendor toolkits
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > > --
> > > hugge
> >
>



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