Retina is a network analysis framework that enables operators and researchers to ask complex questions about high-speed (>100gbE) network links. Retina allows users to easily subscribe to subsets of parsed application-layer sessions, reassembled network flows, or raw packets in real-time and to run arbitrary analysis code in a standard Rust-based software environment. Retina optimizes for:
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Expressiveness: Retina supports arbitrarily complex processing of individual packets, reassembled connections, or parsed application-layer sessions using a simple filter and callback interface.
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Performance: Retina is capable of real-time traffic analysis in high volume (100G+) environments, such as ISPs or academic institutions.
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Deployability: Retina is readily deployable on a single multi-core server with commodity 100gbE NICs (e.g., Mellanox ConnectX-5 or Intel E810).
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Security: Retina leverages compile-time memory safety guarantees offered by Rust to safely and efficiently process network traffic.
Retina v0.1.0 supported subscribing to a single, pre-defined datatype. v1.1.0 (2024) introduces significant framework changes that allow a user to specify multiple subscriptions. That is, users can now request multiple callbacks, each associated with a filter and one or more datatypes.
A detailed description of Retina's (v0.1.0) architecture and its performance can be found in our SIGCOMM'22 paper: Retina: Analyzing 100 GbE Traffic on Commodity Hardware.
Documentation for using and developing against Retina can be found here.
Install Rust and DPDK. Detailed instructions can be found in INSTALL.
Add $DPDK_PATH/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu
to your LD_LIBRARY_PATH
, where DPDK_PATH
points to the DPDK installation directory.
Fork or clone the main git repository:
git clone git@github.com:stanford-esrg/retina.git
Write your first Retina application (see examples; basic
and basic_file
are good starters).
Writing a Retina application consists of defining one or more subscriptions. A subscription is defined by (1) writing a filter to describe what subset of network traffic you're interested in, (2) choosing data types to subscribe to, and (3) defining a callback function that takes in a subscribable data type and performs operations on the filtered, delivered data.
Build all examples in release mode:
cargo build --release
Run basic
in release mode:
sudo env LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$LD_LIBRARY_PATH RUST_LOG=error ./target/release/basic
Build a single application in debug mode:
cargo build --bin my_app
Run in debug mode:
sudo env LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$LD_LIBRARY_PATH RUST_LOG=debug ./target/debug/my_app
View generated code (requires Rust nightly):
cargo expand --manifest-path=examples/my_app/Cargo.toml
Retina v1.1.0 provides two interfaces for Retina programs:
- Specify subscriptions via a config file: this tends to be most useful for applications that wish to subscribe to a large number of IP addresses, strings, etc., and can map these filters to a relatively small number of callbacks.
- Specify subscriptions in code: tag callbacks with a filter, then tag
main
with the number of expected subscriptions.
For more detail, see retina-filtergen.
Contributions welcome! Please run cargo fmt
and cargo clippy
before making a pull request.
A Docker image is available to run Retina without the hassle of installing DPDK and other dependencies. It is, however, not suitable for performance testing as it uses the DPDK PCAP driver and is limited to a single core. The GitHub repository also includes a tutorial and a video to start learning about Retina (v0.1.0).
A CloudLab image is available to reproduce a few of the experiments shown in the paper on the CloudLab public testbed. The repository also includes the scripts and information to reproduce these experiments on your own testbed.
Retina was developed with support from the National Science Foundation under award CNS-2124424, and through gifts from Google, Inc., Cisco Systems, Inc., and Comcast Corporation.