Dualcomm 10/100/1000Base-T Gigabit Ethernet Network TAP

As I only have only a unmanaged switch Netgear FS116 at home, I don’t have a SPAN port to do network sniffing on the home LAN. In the course of building up a NSM (network security monitoring) setup for my home network, I needed a way to tap the wired LAN. Therefore I looked at network taps, which tend to be extremely expensive for home use. Finally I found some recommendation and bought a Dualcomm 10/100/1000Base-T Gigabit Ethernet Network TAP. It’s not cheap but better quality than a throwing star tap and offers full duplex passive sniffing of network traffic for affordable price. 

Setup is absolutely seamless, as there is no setup, just put the tap between the home router and the switch in order to get all internal traffic coming from outside, LAN cable to the sniffing ethernet interface and that’s it. The little box is powered by USB, so just put the USB cable to a monitor’s USB and that worked fine enough. 

Currently there are two options, either I use my RPI 3B LAN interface as sniffing interface and the RPI’s WLAN as management interface. Or I can also attach it to a old laptop, that I use as a monitoring collection station with SELKS distribution on it. I use SELKS instead of Security Onion (SO), because the laptop is just too old and SO freezes on this hardware. SELKS also has ELK stack and suricata installed and runs decently. Not optimal performance, but for testing it works. Also here WLAN is the management interface as the laptop also only has one wired LAN interface. And sniffing interfaces are not managed and don’t get an IP, as they are input only.

Long-term it could be interesting to replace the unmanaged switch with a managed switch so that one can move the tap to any other place  and use the SPAN port of the managed switch for e.g. the RPI. With the new RPI 4 model B one gets true gigabit LAN and that should be able to handle all traffic that the switch provides without any problems in such a home setup.

The packet-foo blog contains the probably best article series on network package capture and analysis including network taps, that you can find.