Network Visualization
One area of interest that I have is network visualization. What I'm referring to is being able to visually see the traffic flows and patterns to determine anomolies or events of interest. We have so much information with our networks today, that it is difficult to process all of it. The trend seems to be getting worse and reverting back to my good ole Army days of "Do more with less". With the economic times we live it, it always seems that security is one area that takes a hit. So, we have to work smarter and network visualization is one area that I think has great potential, but seems to be very under developed.
I haven't explored what's out there in a couple of years. What was out there that I experimented with it were tools such as:
- Time-based Network Traffic Visualizer (TNV)
- NVisionIP
- Spinning Cube of Potential Doom
- VisFlowConnect
- FlowTag
- InetVis
However, these tools had a long ways to go before they could really be effective on a large scale. Some were java based and SLOW (others were just slow) when processing any significant amount of data. However, what they did do, was pretty impressive for being able to visually make sense of a pcap file or your netflow data. They work great for looking at small chunks of traffic and helping immediately see anomolies. If this could just be channeled into a near real-time scenario for monitoring networks, that would be fantastic.
I did some quick google searches and didn't turn up any thing new in this arena. If anyone has any experience with network visualization or knows of any tools or work being done, please let us know.
Comments
Juanma Merino
Feb 14th 2011
1 decade ago
iftop
pktstat
James
Feb 14th 2011
1 decade ago
http://sguil.sourceforge.net/
Sguil (pronounced sgweel) is built by network security analysts for network security analysts. Sguil's main component is an intuitive GUI that provides access to realtime events, session data, and raw packet captures. Sguil facilitates the practice of Network Security Monitoring and event driven analysis. The Sguil client is written in tcl/tk and can be run on any operating system that supports tcl/tk (including Linux, *BSD, Solaris, MacOS, and Win32).
GeekSikh
Feb 14th 2011
1 decade ago
This is a very powerful solution when used in conjuction with GigaStor (from the same company).
They have a demo for download at http://www.netinst.com/downloads/observer_form.html
Marcelo Caiado
Feb 14th 2011
1 decade ago
http://www.cacetech.com/products/cace_pilot.html
Steve
Feb 14th 2011
1 decade ago
Hal
Feb 14th 2011
1 decade ago
Henry
Feb 14th 2011
1 decade ago
We have used it over a decade.
Jeff
Feb 14th 2011
1 decade ago
One nice thing about this is I can use the same tools for making (and viewing) dashboards for WAN connectivity, LAN router/switch connectivity in each office, or even SAN Fabrics.
Of course it doesn't show you what the traffic is or what ports/protocols are in use, but it's a start.
bbice
Feb 14th 2011
1 decade ago
He has a book, and a blog at http://raffy.ch/blog/
Also see http://secviz.org/
BJ
BJ
Feb 14th 2011
1 decade ago