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Overview

Using a Juniper Networks M-series router, a selection of Physical Interface Cards (PICs)—including the Monitoring Services PIC—and other networking hardware, you can monitor traffic flow and export the monitored traffic. Monitoring traffic allows you to do the following:

The M40e or M160 router used for passive monitoring does not route packets from the monitored interface, nor does it run any routing protocols related to those interfaces; it only passes along intercepted traffic and receives traffic flows. Figure 5 shows a typical topology for the passive monitoring application.


Figure 5: Passive Monitoring Application Topology

Traffic travels normally between Router 1 and Router 2. To redirect IPv4 traffic, you insert an optical splitter on the interface between these two routers. The optical splitter copies and redirects the traffic to the monitoring station, which is an M40e or M160 router. The optical cable connects only the receive port on the monitoring station, never the transmit port. This configuration allows the monitoring station to receive traffic only from the router being monitored but never to transmit it back.

If you are monitoring traffic flow, the Internet Processor II ASIC in the router forwards a copy of the traffic to the Monitoring Services PIC in the monitoring station. If there is more than one Monitoring Services PIC installed, the monitoring station distributes the load of the incoming traffic across the multiple PICs. The Monitoring Services PICs generate flow records in cflowd version 5 format, and the records are then exported to the cflowd collector.

If you are performing lawful interception of packets transiting between the two routers, the Internet Processor II ASIC filters the incoming traffic and forwards it to the Tunnel Services PIC. Filter-based forwarding is then applied to direct the traffic to the packet analyzers.

Optionally, the intercepted traffic or the cflowd records can be encrypted by the ES PIC and then sent to their destination.


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