Netconan (network configuration anonymizer) anonymizes text files that contain sensitive network information.
With Netconan, a sensitive input file
$ cat sensitive/cisco.cfg
! This is intentionet's sensitive comment
username admin password 7 122A001901
enable secret 5 $1$wtHI$0rN7R8PKwC30AsCGA77vy.
!
tacacs-server host 1.2.3.4 key pwd1234
ip address 10.10.20.30/24
ip address 2001:2002::9d3b:1
!
route-map sea-to-lax ...
route-map sea-to-atl ...
can be anonymized
$ netconan -i sensitive -o anonymized \
--sensitive-words intentionet,sea,lax,atl \
--anonymize-passwords \
--anonymize-ips
WARNING No salt was provided; using randomly generated "WNo5pX28MJOrqxfv"
INFO Anonymizing cisco.cfg
to produce an output file you can feel comfortable sharing.
$ cat anonymized/cisco.cfg
! This is db1792's sensitive comment
username admin password 7 09424B1D1A0A1913053E012724322D3765
enable secret 5 $1$0000$EhfXcDfB7iiakW6mwMy1i.
!
tacacs-server host 7.227.130.88 key netconanRemoved2
ip address 10.72.218.183/24
ip address cd7e:83e:1eaf:2ada:7535:591e:6d47:a4b8
!
route-map e69ceb-to-880ac2 ...
route-map e69ceb-to-5d37ad ...
Install Netconan using pip
:
$ pip install netconan
Netconan can anonymize many types of sensitive information:
- Sensitive strings like passwords or SNMP community strings (
--anonymize-passwords
,-p
), for many common network vendors. - IPv4 and IPv6 addresses (
--anonymize-ips
,-a
). - User-specified sensitive words (
--sensitive-words
,-w
). Note that any occurrence of a specified sensitive word will be replaced regardless of context, even if it is part of a larger string. - User-specified AS numbers (
--as-numbers
,-n
). Note that any number matching a specified AS number will be anonymized.
Netconan attempts to preserve useful structure. For example,
- Netconan preserves prefixes when anonymizing IPv4 and IPv6 addresses: IP addresses with a common prefix before anonymization will share the same prefix length after anonymization. For more information, see J. Xu et al., On the Design and Performance of Prefix-Preserving IP Traffic Trace Anonymization, ACM SIGCOMM Workshop on Internet Measurement, 2001 [link].
- IPv4 classes and private-use prefixes (see IANA IPv4 assignments) are preserved by default, but can be overriden (with
--preserve-prefixes
e.g.--preserve-prefixes 12.0.0.0/8
will preserve a leading octet12
of IP addresses encountered but anonymize octets after the12
). - Specific addresses can optionally be preserved, e.g.
--preserve-addresses
skips anonymizing the specified network or address e.g.--preserve-addresses 12.0.0.0/8,13.12.11.10
will skip anonymization for any address in the12.0.0.0/8
network and skip anonymizing13.12.11.10
.--preserve-private-addresses
skips anonymizing addresses that fall under private-use blocks.
- AS number blocks are preserved (i.e. an anonymized public AS number will still be in the public AS number range after anonymization).
- Standard password and hash formats (salted md5, Cisco Type 7, Juniper Type 9) are recognized and substituted with format-compliant replacements.
Netconan is deterministic when provided the same user-controllable salt (--salt
, -s
). Files processed using the same salt are compatible (e.g., IP addresses anonymized the same way) whether anonymized together or separately.
For reversible operations (specifically, IP address anonymization), Netconan can produce a de-anonymized file (--undo
, -u
) when provided with the same salt used in anonymization (--salt
, -s
).
Netconan processes the input
file or recursively processes files in the input
directory (skipping files starting with .
) and saves processed files at the specified output
.
For more information about less commonly-used features, see the Netconan help (-h
). For more information on config file syntax, see here.
usage: netconan [-h] [-a] [-c CONFIG] [-d DUMP_IP_MAP] -i INPUT
[-l {DEBUG,INFO,WARNING,ERROR,CRITICAL}] [-n AS_NUMBERS] -o
OUTPUT [-p] [-r RESERVED_WORDS] [-s SALT] [-u]
[-w SENSITIVE_WORDS] [--preserve-prefixes PRESERVE_PREFIXES]
Args that can start with '--' can also be set in a config file (specified via
-c). If an arg is specified in more than one place, then command line values
override config file values which override defaults. Config file syntax
allows: key=value, flag=true, stuff=[a,b,c] (for more details, see here
https://goo.gl/R74nmi).
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-a, --anonymize-ips Anonymize IP addresses
-c CONFIG, --config CONFIG
Netconan configuration file with defaults for these
CLI parameters
-d DUMP_IP_MAP, --dump-ip-map DUMP_IP_MAP
Dump IP address anonymization map to specified file
-i INPUT, --input INPUT
Input file or directory containing files to anonymize
-l {DEBUG,INFO,WARNING,ERROR,CRITICAL}, --log-level {DEBUG,INFO,WARNING,ERROR,CRITICAL}
Determines what level of logs to display
-n AS_NUMBERS, --as-numbers AS_NUMBERS
List of comma separated AS numbers to anonymize
-o OUTPUT, --output OUTPUT
Output file or directory where anonymized files are
placed
-p, --anonymize-passwords
Anonymize password and snmp community lines
-r RESERVED_WORDS, --reserved-words RESERVED_WORDS
List of comma separated words that should not be
anonymized
-s SALT, --salt SALT Salt for IP and sensitive keyword anonymization
-u, --undo Undo reversible anonymization (must specify salt)
-w SENSITIVE_WORDS, --sensitive-words SENSITIVE_WORDS
List of comma separated keywords to anonymize
--preserve-prefixes PRESERVE_PREFIXES
List of comma separated IP prefixes to preserve.
Specified prefixes are preserved, but the host bits
within those prefixes are still anonymized. To
preserve prefixes and host bits in specified blocks,
use --preserve-addresses instead
--preserve-addresses PRESERVE_ADDRESSES
List of comma separated IP addresses or networks to
preserve. Prefixes and host bits within those networks
are preserved. To preserve just prefixes and anonymize
host bits, use --preserve-prefixes
--preserve-private-addresses
Preserve private-use IP addresses. Prefixes and host
bits within the private-use IP networks are preserved.
To preserve specific addresses or networks, use
--preserve-addresses instead. To preserve just
prefixes and anonymize host bits, use --preserve-
prefixes