This is a CLI utility for displaying current network utilization by process, connection and remote IP/hostname
bandwhich
sniffs a given network interface and records IP packet size, cross referencing it with the /proc
filesystem on linux or lsof
on macOS. It is responsive to the terminal window size, displaying less info if there is no room for it. It will also attempt to resolve ips to their host name in the background using reverse DNS on a best effort basis.
pacman -S bandwhich
bandwhich
is available in nixpkgs
, and can be installed, for example, with nix-env
:
nix-env -iA nixpkgs.bandwhich
xbps-install -S bandwhich
bandwhich
is available in COPR, and can be installed via DNF:
sudo dnf copr enable atim/bandwhich -y && sudo dnf install bandwhich
brew install bandwhich
If you're on linux, you could also get the generic binary from the releases.
bandwhich
can be installed using the Rust package manager, cargo. If it's not in your distro repositories or the available version is too old, you can install it via rustup. You can find additional installation instructions here.
The minimum supported Rust version is 1.39.0.
cargo install bandwhich
This installs bandwhich
to ~/.cargo/bin/bandwhich
but you need root priviliges to run bandwhich
. To fix that, there are a few options:
- Give the executable elevated permissions:
sudo setcap cap_sys_ptrace,cap_dac_read_search,cap_net_raw,cap_net_admin+ep $(which bandwhich)
- Run
sudo ~/.cargo/bin/bandwhich
instead of justbandwhich
- Create a symlink:
sudo ln -s ~/.cargo/bin/bandwhich /usr/local/bin/
(or another path on root's PATH) - Set root's PATH to match your own:
sudo env "PATH=$PATH" bandwhich
- Tell sudo to use your user's environment variables:
sudo -E bandwhich
- Pass the desired target directory to cargo:
sudo cargo install bandwhich --root /usr/local/bin/
To install bandwhich
on OpenWRT, you'll need to compile a binary that would fit its processor architecture. This might mean you would have to cross compile if, for example, you're working on an x86_64
and the OpenWRT is installed on an arm7
.
Here is an example of cross compiling in this situation:
- Check the processor architecture of your router by using
uname -m
- Clone the bandwhich repository
git clone https://github.com/imsnif/bandwhich
- Install
cross
usingcargo install cross
- build the
bandwhich
package usingcross build --target armv7-unknown-linux-musleabihf
- Copy the binary files from
target/armv7-unknown-linux-musleabihf/debug/bandwhich
to the router usingscp
by runningscp bandwhich [email protected]:~/
(here, 192.168.1.1 would be the IP address of your router). - Finally enter the router using ssh and run the binary directly with
./bandwhich
Unfortunately, windows is not supported at the moment - if you'd like to contribute a windows port, it would be very much welcome.
USAGE:
bandwhich [FLAGS] [OPTIONS]
FLAGS:
-a, --addresses Show remote addresses table only
-c, --connections Show connections table only
-h, --help Prints help information
-n, --no-resolve Do not attempt to resolve IPs to their hostnames
-p, --processes Show processes table only
-r, --raw Machine friendlier output
-s, --show-dns Show DNS queries
-t, --total-utilization Show total (cumulative) usages
-V, --version Prints version information
OPTIONS:
-i, --interface <interface> The network interface to listen on, eg. eth0
Note that since bandwhich
sniffs network packets, it requires root privileges - so you might want to use it with (for example) sudo
.
On Linux, you can give the bandwhich
binary a permanent capability to use the required privileges, so that you don't need to use sudo bandwhich
anymore:
sudo setcap cap_sys_ptrace,cap_dac_read_search,cap_net_raw,cap_net_admin+ep `which bandwhich`
cap_sys_ptrace,cap_dac_read_search
gives bandwhich
capability to list /proc/<pid>/fd/
and resolve symlinks in that directory. It needs this capability to determine which opened port belongs to which process. cap_net_raw,cap_net_admin
gives bandwhich
capability to capture packets on your system.
bandwhich
also supports an easier-to-parse mode that can be piped or redirected to a file. For example, try:
bandwhich --raw | grep firefox
Contributions of any kind are very welcome. If you'd like a new feature (or found a bug), please open an issue or a PR.
To set up your development environment:
- Clone the project
cargo run
, or if you prefercargo run -- -i <network interface name>
(you can often find out the name withifconfig
oriwconfig
). You might need root privileges to run this application, so be sure to use (for example) sudo.
To run tests: cargo test
Note that at the moment the tests do not test the os layer (anything in the os
folder).
If you are stuck, unsure about how to approach an issue or would like some guidance, you are welcome to contact: [email protected]
MIT