Monitoring the System

The following topics describe how to monitor the Firepower System:

About System Statistics

You can view system statistics for the Firepower Management Center and 7000 & 8000 Series devices.

The Statistics page lists the current status of general appliance statistics, including disk usage and system processes, Data Correlator statistics (FMC only), and intrusion event information (FMC only).

The Host Statistics Section

The following table describes the host statistics listed on the Statistics page.

Table 1. Host Statistics

Category

Description

Time

The current time on the system.

Uptime

The number of days (if applicable), hours, and minutes since the system was last started.

Memory Usage

The percentage of system memory that is being used.

Load Average

The average number of processes in the CPU queue for the past 1 minute, 5 minutes, and 15 minutes.

Disk Usage

The percentage of the disk that is being used. Click the arrow to view more detailed host statistics.

Processes

A summary of the processes running on the system.

The Disk Usage Section

The Disk Usage section of the Statistics page provides a quick synopsis of disk usage, both by category and by partition status. If you have a malware storage pack installed on a device, you can also check its partition status. You can monitor this page from time to time to ensure that enough disk space is available for system processes and the database.


Tip


You can also use the Disk Usage health monitor on the Firepower Management Center to monitor disk usage and alert on low disk space conditions.


The Processes Section

The Processes section of the Statistics page allows you to see the processes that are currently running on an appliance. It provides general process information and specific information for each running process. You can use the Firepower Management Center’s web interface to view the process status for any managed device.

Note that there are two different types of processes that run on an appliance: daemons and executable files. Daemons always run, and executable files are run when required.

Process Status Fields

When you expand the Processes section of the Statistics page, you can also view the following:

Cpu(s)

Lists the following CPU usage information:

  • user process usage percentage

  • system process usage percentage

  • nice usage percentage (CPU usage of processes that have a negative nice value, indicating a higher priority). Nice values indicate the scheduled priority for system processes and can range between -20 (highest priority) and 19 (lowest priority).

  • idle usage percentage

Mem

Lists the following memory usage information:

  • total number of kilobytes in memory

  • total number of used kilobytes in memory

  • total number of free kilobytes in memory

  • total number of buffered kilobytes in memory

Swap

Lists the following swap usage information:

  • total number of kilobytes in swap

  • total number of used kilobytes in swap

  • total number of free kilobytes in swap

  • total number of cached kilobytes in swap

The following table describes each column that appears in the Processes section.

Table 2. Process List Columns

Column

Description

Pid

The process ID number

Username

The name of the user or group running the process

Pri

The process priority

Nice

The nice value, which is a value that indicates the scheduling priority of a process. Values range between -20 (highest priority) and 19 (lowest priority)

Size

The memory size used by the process (in kilobytes unless the value is followed by m, which indicates megabytes)

Res

The amount of resident paging files in memory (in kilobytes unless the value is followed by m, which indicates megabytes)

State

The process state:

  • D — process is in uninterruptible sleep (usually Input/Output)

  • N — process has a positive nice value

  • R — process is runnable (on queue to run)

  • S — process is in sleep mode

  • T — process is being traced or stopped

  • W — process is paging

  • X — process is dead

  • Z — process is defunct

  • < — process has a negative nice value

Time

The amount of time (in hours:minutes:seconds) that the process has been running

Cpu

The percentage of CPU that the process is using

Command

The executable name of the process

System Daemons

Daemons continually run on an appliance. They ensure that services are available and spawn processes when required. The following table lists daemons that you may see on the Process Status page and provides a brief description of their functionality.


Note


The table below is not an exhaustive list of all processes that may run on an appliance.


Table 3. System Daemons

Daemon

Description

crond

Manages the execution of scheduled commands (cron jobs)

dhclient

Manages dynamic host IP addressing

fpcollect

Manages the collection of client and server fingerprints

httpd

Manages the HTTP (Apache web server) process

httpsd

Manages the HTTPS (Apache web server with SSL) service, and checks for working SSL and valid certificate authentication; runs in the background to provide secure web access to the appliance

keventd

Manages Linux kernel event notification messages

klogd

Manages the interception and logging of Linux kernel messages

kswapd

Manages Linux kernel swap memory

kupdated

Manages the Linux kernel update process, which performs disk synchronization

mysqld

Manages database processes

ntpd

Manages the Network Time Protocol (NTP) process

pm

Manages all Firepower System processes, starts required processes, restarts any process that fails unexpectedly

reportd

Manages reports

safe_mysqld

Manages safe mode operation of the database; restarts the database daemon if an error occurs and logs runtime information to a file

SFDataCorrelator

Manages data transmission

sfestreamer
(FMC only)

Manages connections to third-party client applications that use the Event Streamer

sfmgr

Provides the RPC service for remotely managing and configuring an appliance using an sftunnel connection to the appliance

SFRemediateD
(FMC only)

Manages remediation responses

sftimeserviced
(FMC only)

Forwards time synchronization messages to managed devices

sfmbservice

Provides access to the sfmb message broker process running on a remote appliance, using an sftunnel connection to the appliance. Currently used only by health monitoring to send health events and alerts from a managed device to a Firepower Management Center.

sftroughd

Listens for connections on incoming sockets and then invokes the correct executable (typically the Cisco message broker, sfmb) to handle the request

sftunnel

Provides the secure communication channel for all processes requiring communication with a remote appliance

sshd

Manages the Secure Shell (SSH) process; runs in the background to provide SSH access to the appliance

syslogd

Manages the system logging (syslog) process

Executables and System Utilities

There are a number of executables on the system that run when executed by other processes or through user action. The following table describes the executables that you may see on the Process Status page.

Table 4. System Executables and Utilities

Executable

Description

awk

Utility that executes programs written in the awk programming language

bash

GNU Bourne-Again Shell

cat

Utility that reads files and writes content to standard output

chown

Utility that changes user and group file permissions

chsh

Utility that changes the default login shell

SFDataCorrelator
(FMC only)

Analyzes binary files created by the system to generate events, connection data, and network maps

cp

Utility that copies files

df

Utility that lists the amount of free space on the appliance

echo

Utility that writes content to standard output

egrep

Utility that searches files and folders for specified input; supports extended set of regular expressions not supported in standard grep

find

Utility that recursively searches directories for specified input

grep

Utility that searches files and directories for specified input

halt

Utility that stops the server

httpsdctl

Handles secure Apache Web processes

hwclock

Utility that allows access to the hardware clock

ifconfig

Indicates the network configuration executable. Ensures that the MAC address stays constant

iptables

Handles access restriction based on changes made to the Access Configuration page.

iptables-restore

Handles iptables file restoration

iptables-save

Handles saved changes to the iptables

kill

Utility that can be used to end a session and process

killall

Utility that can be used to end all sessions and processes

ksh

Public domain version of the Korn shell

logger

Utility that provides a way to access the syslog daemon from the command line

md5sum

Utility that prints checksums and block counts for specified files

mv

Utility that moves (renames) files

myisamchk

Indicates database table checking and repairing

mysql

Indicates a database process; multiple instances may appear

openssl

Indicates authentication certificate creation

perl

Indicates a perl process

ps

Utility that writes process information to standard output

sed

Utility used to edit one or more text files

sfheartbeat

Identifies a heartbeat broadcast, indicating that the appliance is active; heartbeat used to maintain contact between a device and Firepower Management Center

sfmb

Indicates a message broker process; handles communication between Firepower Management Centers and device.

sh

Public domain version of the Korn shell

shutdown

Utility that shuts down the appliance

sleep

Utility that suspends a process for a specified number of seconds

smtpclient

Mail client that handles email transmission when email event notification functionality is enabled

snmptrap

Forwards SNMP trap data to the SNMP trap server specified when SNMP notification functionality is enabled

snort

Indicates that Snort is running

ssh

Indicates a Secure Shell (SSH) connection to the appliance

sudo

Indicates a sudo process, which allows users other than admin to run executables

top

Utility that displays information about the top CPU processes

Note

 

The CPU usage output of this utility is a split up of different types of usages of the CPU core. You must add both user and system processes usage to know the actual total CPU usage.

For example, if the output of top command is: %Cpu(s): 76.6 us, 22.1 sy, 0.0 ni, 0.0 id, 0.0 wa, 0.0 hi, 1.3 si, 0.0 st

Here, 76.6% of CPU time are used by user processes, 22.1% of CPU time is used by system(kernel) processes. The total CPU usage is 98.7%.

Thus, the CPU usage reported in this utility appear to be different from the Health Monitor dashboard. In addition, this utility uses a three seconds interval to calculate the CPU usage. Whereas, the management center health monitor uses one-second intervals.

touch

Utility that can be used to change the access and modification times of specified files

vim

Utility used to edit text files

wc

Utility that performs line, word, and byte counts on specified files

The SFDataCorrelator Process Statistics Section

On a Firepower Management Center, you can view statistics about the Data Correlator and network discovery processes for the current day. As the managed devices perform data acquisition, decoding, and analysis, the network discovery process correlates the data with the fingerprint and vulnerability databases, then produces binary files that are processed by the Data Correlator running on the Firepower Management Center. The Data Correlator analyzes the information from the binary files, generates events, and creates network maps.

The statistics that appear for network discovery and the Data Correlator are averages for the current day, using statistics gathered between 12:00 AM and 11:59 PM for each device.

The following table describes the statistics displayed for the Data Correlator process.

Table 5. Data Correlator Process Statistics

Category

Description

Events/Sec

Number of discovery events that the Data Correlator receives and processes per second

Connections/Sec

Number of connections that the Data Correlator receives and processes per second

CPU Usage — User (%)

Average percentage of CPU time spent on user processes for the current day

CPU Usage — System (%)

Average percentage of CPU time spent on system processes for the current day

VmSize (KB)

Average size of memory allocated to the Data Correlator for the current day, in kilobytes

VmRSS (KB)

Average amount of memory used by the Data Correlator for the current day, in kilobytes

The Intrusion Event Information Section

On both the Firepower Management Center and managed devices, you can view summary information about intrusion events on the Statistics page. This information includes the date and time of the last intrusion event, the total number of events that have occurred in the past hour and the past day, and the total number of events in the database.


Note


The information in the Intrusion Event Information section of the Statistics page is based on intrusion events stored on the managed device rather than those sent to the Firepower Management Center. No intrusion event information is listed on this page if the managed device cannot (or is configured not to) store intrusion events locally.


The following table describes the statistics displayed in the Intrusion Event Information section of the Statistics page.

Table 6. Intrusion Event Information

Statistic

Description

Last Alert Was

The date and time that the last event occurred

Total Events Last Hour

The total number of events that occurred in the past hour

Total Events Last Day

The total number of events that occurred in the past twenty-four hours

Total Events in Database

The total number of events in the events database

Viewing System Statistics

On the Firepower Management Center, the web interface displays statistics for the FMC and any devices it manages. On 7000 and 8000 Series devices, the system displays statistics for that device only.

Before you begin

You must be an Admin or Maintenance user and be in the Global domain to view system statistics.

Procedure


Step 1

Choose System > Monitoring > Statistics.

Step 2

(FMC only) Choose a device from the Select Device(s) list, and click Select Devices.

Step 3

View available statistics.

Step 4

In the Disk Usage section, you can:

  • Hover your pointer over a disk usage category in the By Category stacked bar to view (in order):
    • the percentage of available disk space used by that category

    • the actual storage space on the disk

    • the total disk space available for that category

  • Click the down arrow next to By Partition to expand it. If you have a malware storage pack installed, the /var/storage partition usage is displayed.

Step 5

(Optional) Click the arrow next to Processes to view the information described in Process Status Fields.