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Malcolm

CSI-SIEM using Malcolm is a powerful network traffic analysis tool suite designed with the following goals in mind:

  • Easy to use – Malcolm accepts network traffic data in the form of full packet capture (PCAP) files and Zeek (formerly Bro) logs. These artifacts can be uploaded via a simple browser-based interface or captured live and forwarded to Malcolm using lightweight forwarders. In either case, the data is automatically normalized, enriched, and correlated for analysis.
  • Powerful traffic analysis – Visibility into network communications is provided through two intuitive interfaces: Kibana, a flexible data visualization plugin with dozens of prebuilt dashboards providing an at-a-glance overview of network protocols; and Moloch, a powerful tool for finding and identifying the network sessions comprising suspected security incidents.
  • Streamlined deployment – Malcolm operates as a cluster of Docker containers, isolated sandboxes which each serve a dedicated function of the system. This Docker-based deployment model, combined with a few simple scripts for setup and run-time management, makes Malcolm suitable to be deployed quickly across a variety of platforms and use cases, whether it be for long-term deployment on a Linux server in a security operations center (SOC) or for incident response on a Macbook for an individual engagement.
  • Secure communications – All communications with Malcolm, both from the user interface and from remote log forwarders, are secured with industry standard encryption protocols.
  • Permissive license – Malcolm is comprised of several widely used open source tools, making it an attractive alternative to security solutions requiring paid licenses.
  • Expanding control systems visibility – While Malcolm is great for general-purpose network traffic analysis, its creators see a particular need in the community for tools providing insight into protocols used in industrial control systems (ICS) environments. Ongoing Malcolm development will aim to provide additional parsers for common ICS protocols.

Although all of the open source tools which make up Malcolm are already available and in general use, Malcolm provides a framework of interconnectivity which makes it greater than the sum of its parts. And while there are many other network traffic analysis solutions out there, ranging from complete Linux distributions like Security Onion to licensed products like Splunk Enterprise Security, the creators of Malcolm feel its easy deployment and robust combination of tools fill a void in the network security space that will make network traffic analysis accessible to many in both the public and private sectors as well as individual enthusiasts.

In short, Malcolm provides an easily deployable network analysis tool suite for full packet capture artifacts (PCAP files) and Zeek logs. While Internet access is required to build it, it is not required at runtime.

Table of Contents

Quick start

Getting Malcolm

For a TL;DR example of downloading, configuring, and running Malcolm on a Linux platform, see Installation example using Ubuntu 18.04 LTS.

Source code

The files required to build and run Malcolm are available on the Information Warfare Center Git Hub. Malcolm's source code is released under the terms of a permissive open source software license (see see License.txt for the terms of its release).

Building Malcolm from scratch

The build.sh script can build Malcolm's Docker images from scratch. See Building from source for more information.

Pull Malcolm's Docker images

Malcolm's Docker images are periodically built and hosted on Docker Hub. If you already have Docker and Docker Compose, these prebuilt images can be pulled by navigating into the Malcolm directory (containing the docker-compose.yml file) and running docker-compose pull like this:

$ docker-compose pull
Pulling curator         ... done
Pulling elastalert      ... done
Pulling elasticsearch   ... done
Pulling file-monitor    ... done
Pulling filebeat        ... done
Pulling freq            ... done
Pulling htadmin         ... done
Pulling kibana          ... done
Pulling logstash        ... done
Pulling moloch          ... done
Pulling name-map-ui     ... done
Pulling nginx-proxy     ... done
Pulling pcap-capture    ... done
Pulling pcap-monitor    ... done
Pulling upload          ... done
Pulling zeek            ... done

You can then observe that the images have been retrieved by running docker images:

$ docker images
REPOSITORY                                          TAG                 IMAGE ID            CREATED             SIZE
malcolmnetsec/curator                               2.1.0               xxxxxxxxxxxx        20 hours ago        246MB
malcolmnetsec/elastalert                            2.1.0               xxxxxxxxxxxx        20 hours ago        408MB
malcolmnetsec/filebeat-oss                          2.1.0               xxxxxxxxxxxx        20 hours ago        474MB
malcolmnetsec/file-monitor                          2.1.0               xxxxxxxxxxxx        20 hours ago        386MB
malcolmnetsec/file-upload                           2.1.0               xxxxxxxxxxxx        20 hours ago        199MB
malcolmnetsec/freq                                  2.1.0               xxxxxxxxxxxx        20 hours ago        390MB
malcolmnetsec/htadmin                               2.1.0               xxxxxxxxxxxx        20 hours ago        180MB
malcolmnetsec/kibana-oss                            2.1.0               xxxxxxxxxxxx        20 hours ago        1.07GB
malcolmnetsec/logstash-oss                          2.1.0               xxxxxxxxxxxx        20 hours ago        1.05GB
malcolmnetsec/moloch                                2.1.0               xxxxxxxxxxxx        20 hours ago        667MB
malcolmnetsec/name-map-ui                           2.1.0               xxxxxxxxxxxx        20 hours ago        134MB
malcolmnetsec/nginx-proxy                           2.1.0               xxxxxxxxxxxx        20 hours ago        118MB
malcolmnetsec/pcap-capture                          2.1.0               xxxxxxxxxxxx        20 hours ago        111MB
malcolmnetsec/pcap-monitor                          2.1.0               xxxxxxxxxxxx        20 hours ago        156MB
malcolmnetsec/zeek                                  2.1.0               xxxxxxxxxxxx        20 hours ago        442MB
docker.elastic.co/elasticsearch/elasticsearch-oss   7.6.2               xxxxxxxxxxxx        20 hours ago        693MB

You must run auth_setup prior to running docker-compose pull. You should also ensure your system configuration and docker-compose.yml settings are tuned by running ./scripts/install.py or ./scripts/install.py --configure (see System configuration and tuning).

Import from pre-packaged tarballs

Once built, the malcolm_appliance_packager.sh script can be used to create pre-packaged Malcolm tarballs for import on another machine. See Pre-Packaged Installation Files for more information.

Starting and stopping Malcolm

Use the scripts in the scripts/ directory to start and stop Malcolm, view debug logs of a currently running instance, wipe the database and restore Malcolm to a fresh state, etc.

User interface

A few minutes after starting Malcolm (probably 5 to 10 minutes for Logstash to be completely up, depending on the system), the following services will be accessible:

Overview

Malcolm Network Diagram

Malcolm processes network traffic data in the form of packet capture (PCAP) files or Zeek logs. A sensor (packet capture appliance) monitors network traffic mirrored to it over a SPAN port on a network switch or router, or using a network TAP device. Zeek logs and Moloch sessions are generated containing important session metadata from the traffic observed, which are then securely forwarded to a Malcolm instance. Full PCAP files are optionally stored locally on the sensor device for examination later.

Malcolm parses the network session data and enriches it with additional lookups and mappings including GeoIP mapping, hardware manufacturer lookups from organizationally unique identifiers (OUI) in MAC addresses, assigning names to network segments and hosts based on user-defined IP address and MAC mappings, performing TLS fingerprinting, and many others.

The enriched data is stored in an Elasticsearch document store in a format suitable for analysis through two intuitive interfaces: Kibana, a flexible data visualization plugin with dozens of prebuilt dashboards providing an at-a-glance overview of network protocols; and Moloch, a powerful tool for finding and identifying the network sessions comprising suspected security incidents. These tools can be accessed through a web browser from analyst workstations or for display in a security operations center (SOC). Logs can also optionally be forwarded on to another instance of Malcolm.

For smaller networks, use at home by network security enthusiasts, or in the field for incident response engagements, Malcolm can also easily be deployed locally on an ordinary consumer workstation or laptop. Malcolm can process local artifacts such as locally-generated Zeek logs, locally-captured PCAP files, and PCAP files collected offline without the use of a dedicated sensor appliance.

Components

Malcolm leverages the following excellent open source tools, among others.

  • Moloch - for PCAP file processing, browsing, searching, analysis, and carving/exporting; Moloch itself consists of two parts:
    • moloch-capture - a tool for traffic capture, as well as offline PCAP parsing and metadata insertion into Elasticsearch
    • viewer - a browser-based interface for data visualization
  • Elasticsearch - a search and analytics engine for indexing and querying network traffic session metadata
  • Logstash and Filebeat - for ingesting and parsing Zeek Log Files and ingesting them into Elasticsearch in a format that Moloch understands and is able to understand in the same way it natively understands PCAP data
  • Kibana - for creating additional ad-hoc visualizations and dashboards beyond that which is provided by Moloch Viewer
  • Zeek - a network analysis framework and IDS
  • ClamAV - an antivirus engine for scanning files extracted by Zeek
  • CyberChef - a "swiss-army knife" data conversion tool
  • jQuery File Upload - for uploading PCAP files and Zeek logs for processing
  • List.js - for the host and subnet name mapping interface
  • Docker and Docker Compose - for simple, reproducible deployment of the Malcolm appliance across environments and to coordinate communication between its various components
  • Nginx - for HTTPS and reverse proxying Malcolm components
  • nginx-auth-ldap - an LDAP authentication module for nginx
  • ElastAlert - an alerting framework for Elasticsearch. Specifically, the BitSensor fork of ElastAlert, its Docker configuration and its corresponding Kibana plugin are used.
  • freq - a tool for calculating entropy of strings
  • These third party Zeek plugins:
  • GeoLite2 - Malcolm includes GeoLite2 data created by MaxMind
    • CSI-Linux's Scripts CSI-Scripts Scripts to detect Tor traffic, DNS Tunneling, crypto mining, data exfiltration, rdp, http-attacks, http-pass, http-stalling, ssh-attacks, dns-zone-transfers, basic-authentication-notification, and creditcardcaptures.

Supported Protocols

Malcolm uses Zeek and Moloch to analyze network traffic. These tools provide varying degrees of visibility into traffic transmitted over the following network protocols:

Traffic Wiki Organization/Specification Moloch Zeek
Internet layer 🔗 🔗
Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) 🔗 🔗
Building Automation and Control (BACnet) 🔗 🔗
Distributed Computing Environment / Remote Procedure Calls (DCE/RPC) 🔗 🔗
Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) 🔗 🔗
Distributed Network Protocol 3 (DNP3) 🔗 🔗
Domain Name System (DNS) 🔗 🔗
EtherNet/IP / Common Industrial Protocol (CIP) 🔗 🔗 🔗
FTP (File Transfer Protocol) 🔗 🔗
Google Quick UDP Internet Connections (gQUIC) 🔗 🔗
Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) 🔗 🔗
Internet Relay Chat (IRC) 🔗 🔗
Kerberos 🔗 🔗
Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) 🔗 🔗
Modbus 🔗 🔗
MQ Telemetry Transport (MQTT) 🔗 🔗
MySQL 🔗 🔗
NT Lan Manager (NTLM) 🔗 🔗
Network Time Protocol (NTP) 🔗 🔗
Oracle 🔗 🔗
PostgreSQL 🔗 🔗
Process Field Net (PROFINET) 🔗 🔗
Remote Authentication Dial-In User Service (RADIUS) 🔗 🔗
Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) 🔗 🔗
Remote Framebuffer (RFB) 🔗 🔗
S7comm / Connection Oriented Transport Protocol (COTP) 🔗 🔗 🔗 🔗
Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) 🔗 🔗
Server Message Block (SMB) / Common Internet File System (CIFS) 🔗 🔗
Simple Mail Transfer Protocol 🔗 🔗
Simple Network Management Protocol 🔗 🔗
SOCKS 🔗 🔗
Secure Shell (SSH) 🔗 🔗
Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) / Transport Layer Security (TLS) 🔗 🔗
Syslog 🔗 🔗
Tabular Data Stream 🔗 🔗 🔗
Telnet / remote shell (rsh) / remote login (rlogin) 🔗🔗 🔗🔗
various tunnel protocols (e.g., GTP, GRE, Teredo, AYIYA, IP-in-IP, etc.) 🔗

Additionally, Zeek is able to detect and, where possible, log the type, vendor and version of various other software protocols.

As part of its network traffic analysis, Zeek can extract and analyze files transferred across the protocols it understands. In addition to generating logs for transferred files, deeper analysis is done into the following file types:

See automatic file extraction and scanning for additional features related to file scanning.

See Zeek log integration for more information on how Malcolm integrates Moloch sessions and Zeek logs for analysis.

Development

Checking out the Malcolm source code results in the following subdirectories in your malcolm/ working copy:

  • curator - code and configuration for the curator container which define rules for closing and/or deleting old Elasticsearch indices
  • Dockerfiles - a directory containing build instructions for Malcolm's docker images
  • docs - a directory containing instructions and documentation
  • elastalert - code and configuration for the elastalert container which provides an alerting framework for Elasticsearch
  • elasticsearch - an initially empty directory where the Elasticsearch database instance will reside
  • elasticsearch-backup - an initially empty directory for storing Elasticsearch index snapshots
  • filebeat - code and configuration for the filebeat container which ingests Zeek logs and forwards them to the logstash container
  • file-monitor - code and configuration for the file-monitor container which can scan files extracted by Zeek
  • file-upload - code and configuration for the upload container which serves a web browser-based upload form for uploading PCAP files and Zeek logs, and which serves an SFTP share as an alternate method for upload
  • freq-server - code and configuration for the freq container used for calculating entropy of strings
  • htadmin - configuration for the htadmin user account management container
  • kibana - code and configuration for the kibana container for creating additional ad-hoc visualizations and dashboards beyond that which is provided by Moloch Viewer
  • logstash - code and configuration for the logstash container which parses Zeek logs and forwards them to the elasticsearch container
  • malcolm-iso - code and configuration for building an installer ISO for a minimal Debian-based Linux installation for running Malcolm
  • moloch - code and configuration for the moloch container which processes PCAP files using moloch-capture and which serves the Viewer application
  • moloch-logs - an initially empty directory to which the moloch container will write some debug log files
  • moloch-raw - an initially empty directory to which the moloch container will write captured PCAP files; as Moloch as employed by Malcolm is currently used for processing previously-captured PCAP files, this directory is currently unused
  • name-map-ui - code and configuration for the name-map-ui container which provides the host and subnet name mapping interface
  • nginx - configuration for the nginx reverse proxy container
  • pcap - an initially empty directory for PCAP files to be uploaded, processed, and stored
  • pcap-capture - code and configuration for the pcap-capture container which can capture network traffic
  • pcap-monitor - code and configuration for the pcap-monitor container which watches for new or uploaded PCAP files notifies the other services to process them
  • scripts - control scripts for starting, stopping, restarting, etc. Malcolm
  • sensor-iso - code and configuration for building a Hedgehog Linux ISO
  • shared - miscellaneous code used by various Malcolm components
  • zeek - code and configuration for the zeek container which handles PCAP processing using Zeek
  • zeek-logs - an initially empty directory for Zeek logs to be uploaded, processed, and stored

and the following files of special note:

  • auth.env - the script ./scripts/auth_setup prompts the user for the administrator credentials used by the Malcolm appliance, and auth.env is the environment file where those values are stored
  • cidr-map.txt - specify custom IP address to network segment mapping
  • host-map.txt - specify custom IP and/or MAC address to host mapping
  • net-map.json - an alternative to cidr-map.txt and host-map.txt, mapping hosts and network segments to their names in a JSON-formatted file
  • docker-compose.yml - the configuration file used by docker-compose to build, start, and stop an instance of the Malcolm appliance
  • docker-compose-standalone.yml - similar to docker-compose.yml, only used for the "packaged" installation of Malcolm

Building from source

Building the Malcolm docker images from scratch requires internet access to pull source files for its components. Once internet access is available, execute the following command to build all of the Docker images used by the Malcolm appliance:

$ ./scripts/build.sh

Then, go take a walk or something since it will be a while. When you're done, you can run docker images and see you have fresh images for:

  • malcolmnetsec/curator (based on debian:buster-slim)
  • malcolmnetsec/elastalert (based on bitsensor/elastalert)
  • malcolmnetsec/filebeat-oss (based on docker.elastic.co/beats/filebeat-oss)
  • malcolmnetsec/file-monitor (based on debian:buster-slim)
  • malcolmnetsec/file-upload (based on debian:buster-slim)
  • malcolmnetsec/freq (based on debian:buster-slim)
  • malcolmnetsec/htadmin (based on debian:buster-slim)
  • malcolmnetsec/kibana-oss (based on docker.elastic.co/kibana/kibana-oss)
  • malcolmnetsec/logstash-oss (based on docker.elastic.co/logstash/logstash-oss)
  • malcolmnetsec/name-map-ui (based on alpine:3.11)
  • malcolmnetsec/moloch (based on debian:buster-slim)
  • malcolmnetsec/nginx-proxy (based on alpine:3.11)
  • malcolmnetsec/pcap-capture (based on debian:buster-slim)
  • malcolmnetsec/pcap-monitor (based on debian:buster-slim)
  • malcolmnetsec/pcap-zeek (based on debian:buster-slim)

Additionally, the command will pull from Docker Hub:

  • docker.elastic.co/elasticsearch/elasticsearch-oss

Pre-Packaged installation files

Creating pre-packaged installation files

scripts/malcolm_appliance_packager.sh can be run to package up the configuration files (and, if necessary, the Docker images) which can be copied to a network share or USB drive for distribution to non-networked machines. For example:

$ ./scripts/malcolm_appliance_packager.sh 
You must set a username and password for Malcolm, and self-signed X.509 certificates will be generated
Administrator username: analyst
analyst password: 
analyst password (again): 

(Re)generate self-signed certificates for HTTPS access [Y/n]? 

(Re)generate self-signed certificates for a remote log forwarder [Y/n]? 

Store username/password for forwarding Logstash events to a secondary, external Elasticsearch instance [y/N]? 
Packaged Malcolm to "/home/user/tmp/malcolm_20190513_101117_f0d052c.tar.gz"


Do you need to package docker images also [y/N]? y
This might take a few minutes...

Packaged Malcolm docker images to "/home/user/tmp/malcolm_20190513_101117_f0d052c_images.tar.gz"


To install Malcolm:
  1. Run install.py
  2. Follow the prompts

To start, stop, restart, etc. Malcolm:
  Use the control scripts in the "scripts/" directory:
   - start         (start Malcolm)
   - stop          (stop Malcolm)
   - restart       (restart Malcolm)
   - logs          (monitor Malcolm logs)
   - wipe          (stop Malcolm and clear its database)
   - auth_setup    (change authentication-related settings)

A minute or so after starting Malcolm, the following services will be accessible:
  - Moloch: https://localhost/
  - Kibana: https://localhost/kibana/
  - PCAP upload (web): https://localhost/upload/
  - PCAP upload (sftp): sftp://[email protected]:8022/files/
  - Host and subnet name mapping editor: https://localhost/name-map-ui/
  - Account management: https://localhost:488/

The above example will result in the following artifacts for distribution as explained in the script's output:

$ ls -lh
total 2.0G
-rwxr-xr-x 1 user user  61k May 13 11:32 install.py
-rw-r--r-- 1 user user 2.0G May 13 11:37 malcolm_20190513_101117_f0d052c_images.tar.gz
-rw-r--r-- 1 user user  683 May 13 11:37 malcolm_20190513_101117_f0d052c.README.txt
-rw-r--r-- 1 user user 183k May 13 11:32 malcolm_20190513_101117_f0d052c.tar.gz

Installing from pre-packaged installation files

If you have obtained pre-packaged installation files to install Malcolm on a non-networked machine via an internal network share or on a USB key, you likely have the following files:

  • malcolm_YYYYMMDD_HHNNSS_xxxxxxx.README.txt - This readme file contains a minimal set up instructions for extracting the contents of the other tarballs and running the Malcolm appliance.
  • malcolm_YYYYMMDD_HHNNSS_xxxxxxx.tar.gz - This tarball contains the configuration files and directory configuration used by an instance of Malcolm. It can be extracted via tar -xf malcolm_YYYYMMDD_HHNNSS_xxxxxxx.tar.gz upon which a directory will be created (named similarly to the tarball) containing the directories and configuration files. Alternatively, install.py can accept this filename as an argument and handle its extraction and initial configuration for you.
  • malcolm_YYYYMMDD_HHNNSS_xxxxxxx_images.tar.gz - This tarball contains the Docker images used by Malcolm. It can be imported manually via docker load -i malcolm_YYYYMMDD_HHNNSS_xxxxxxx_images.tar.gz
  • install.py - This install script can load the Docker images and extract Malcolm configuration files from the aforementioned tarballs and do some initial configuration for you.

Run install.py malcolm_XXXXXXXX_XXXXXX_XXXXXXX.tar.gz and follow the prompts. If you do not already have Docker and Docker Compose installed, the install.py script will help you install them.

Preparing your system

Recommended system requirements

Malcolm runs on top of Docker which runs on recent releases of Linux, Apple macOS and Microsoft Windows 10.

To quote the Elasticsearch documentation, "If there is one resource that you will run out of first, it will likely be memory." The same is true for Malcolm: you will want at least 16 gigabytes of RAM to run Malcolm comfortably. For processing large volumes of traffic, I'd recommend at a bare minimum a dedicated server with 16 cores and 16 gigabytes of RAM. Malcolm can run on less, but more is better. You're going to want as much hard drive space as possible, of course, as the amount of PCAP data you're able to analyze and store will be limited by your hard drive.

Moloch's wiki has a couple of documents (here and here and here and a calculator here) which may be helpful, although not everything in those documents will apply to a Docker-based setup like Malcolm.

System configuration and tuning

If you already have Docker and Docker Compose installed, the install.py script can still help you tune system configuration and docker-compose.yml parameters for Malcolm. To run it in "configuration only" mode, bypassing the steps to install Docker and Docker Compose, run it like this:

python3 ./scripts/install.py --configure

Although install.py will attempt to automate many of the following configuration and tuning parameters, they are nonetheless listed in the following sections for reference:

docker-compose.yml parameters

Edit docker-compose.yml and search for the ES_JAVA_OPTS key. Edit the -Xms4g -Xmx4g values, replacing 4g with a number that is half of your total system memory, or just under 32 gigabytes, whichever is less. So, for example, if I had 64 gigabytes of memory I would edit those values to be -Xms31g -Xmx31g. This indicates how much memory can be allocated to the Elasticsearch heaps. For a pleasant experience, I would suggest not using a value under 10 gigabytes. Similar values can be modified for Logstash with LS_JAVA_OPTS, where using 3 or 4 gigabytes is recommended.

Various other environment variables inside of docker-compose.yml can be tweaked to control aspects of how Malcolm behaves, particularly with regards to processing PCAP files and Zeek logs. The environment variables of particular interest are located near the top of that file under Commonly tweaked configuration options, which include:

  • NGINX_BASIC_AUTH - if set to true, use TLS-encrypted HTTP basic authentication (default); if set to false, use Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) authentication

  • NGINX_LOG_ACCESS_AND_ERRORS - if set to true, all access to Malcolm via its web interfaces will be logged to Elasticsearch (default false)

  • MANAGE_PCAP_FILES – if set to true, all PCAP files imported into Malcolm will be marked as available for deletion by Moloch if available storage space becomes too low (default false)

  • ZEEK_AUTO_ANALYZE_PCAP_FILES – if set to true, all PCAP files imported into Malcolm will automatically be analyzed by Zeek, and the resulting logs will also be imported (default false)

  • MAXMIND_GEOIP_DB_LICENSE_KEY - Malcolm uses MaxMind's free GeoLite2 databases for GeoIP lookups. As of December 30, 2019, these databases are no longer available for download via a public URL. Instead, they must be downloaded using a MaxMind license key (available without charge from MaxMind). The license key can be specified here for GeoIP database downloads during build- and run-time.

  • MOLOCH_ANALYZE_PCAP_THREADS – the number of threads available to Moloch for analyzing PCAP files (default 1)

  • ZEEK_AUTO_ANALYZE_PCAP_THREADS – the number of threads available to Malcolm for analyzing Zeek logs (default 1)

  • LOGSTASH_OUI_LOOKUP – if set to true, Logstash will map MAC addresses to vendors for all source and destination MAC addresses when analyzing Zeek logs (default true)

  • LOGSTASH_REVERSE_DNS – if set to true, Logstash will perform a reverse DNS lookup for all external source and destination IP address values when analyzing Zeek logs (default false)

  • ES_EXTERNAL_HOSTS – if specified (in the format '10.0.0.123:9200'), logs received by Logstash will be forwarded on to another external Elasticsearch instance in addition to the one maintained locally by Malcolm

  • ES_EXTERNAL_SSL – if set to true, Logstash will use HTTPS for the connection to external Elasticsearch instances specified in ES_EXTERNAL_HOSTS

  • ES_EXTERNAL_SSL_CERTIFICATE_VERIFICATION – if set to true, Logstash will require full SSL certificate validation; this may fail if using self-signed certificates (default false)

  • KIBANA_OFFLINE_REGION_MAPS – if set to true, a small internal server will be surfaced to Kibana to provide the ability to view region map visualizations even when an Internet connection is not available (default true)

  • CURATOR_CLOSE_COUNT and CURATOR_CLOSE_UNITS - determine behavior for automatically closing older Elasticsearch indices to conserve memory; see Elasticsearch index curation

  • CURATOR_DELETE_COUNT and CURATOR_DELETE_UNITS - determine behavior for automatically deleting older Elasticsearch indices to reduce disk usage; see Elasticsearch index curation

  • CURATOR_DELETE_GIGS - if the Elasticsearch indices representing the log data exceed this size, in gigabytes, older indices will be deleted to bring the total size back under this threshold; see Elasticsearch index curation

  • CURATOR_SNAPSHOT_DISABLED - if set to False, daily snapshots (backups) will be made of the previous day's Elasticsearch log index; see Elasticsearch index curation

  • AUTO_TAG – if set to true, Malcolm will automatically create Moloch sessions and Zeek logs with tags based on the filename, as described in Tagging (default true)

  • BEATS_SSL – if set to true, Logstash will use require encrypted communications for any external Beats-based forwarders from which it will accept logs; if Malcolm is being used as a standalone tool then this can safely be set to false, but if external log feeds are to be accepted then setting it to true is recommended (default false)

  • ZEEK_EXTRACTOR_MODE – determines the file extraction behavior for file transfers detected by Zeek; see Automatic file extraction and scanning for more details

  • EXTRACTED_FILE_IGNORE_EXISTING – if set to true, files extant in ./zeek-logs/extract_files/ directory will be ignored on startup rather than scanned

  • EXTRACTED_FILE_PRESERVATION – determines behavior for preservation of Zeek-extracted files

  • VTOT_API2_KEY – used to specify a VirusTotal Public API v.20 key, which, if specified, will be used to submit hashes of Zeek-extracted files to VirusTotal

  • EXTRACTED_FILE_ENABLE_CLAMAV – if set to true (and VTOT_API2_KEY is unspecified), Zeek-extracted files will be scanned with ClamAV

  • EXTRACTED_FILE_ENABLE_FRESHCLAM – if set to true, ClamAV will periodically update virus databases

  • PCAP_ENABLE_NETSNIFF – if set to true, Malcolm will capture network traffic on the local network interface(s) indicated in PCAP_IFACE using netsniff-ng

  • PCAP_ENABLE_TCPDUMP – if set to true, Malcolm will capture network traffic on the local network interface(s) indicated in PCAP_IFACE using tcpdump; there is no reason to enable both PCAP_ENABLE_NETSNIFF and PCAP_ENABLE_TCPDUMP

  • PCAP_IFACE – used to specify the network interface(s) for local packet capture if PCAP_ENABLE_NETSNIFF or PCAP_ENABLE_TCPDUMP are enabled; for multiple interfaces, separate the interface names with a comma (e.g., 'enp0s25' or 'enp10s0,enp11s0')

  • PCAP_ROTATE_MEGABYTES – used to specify how large a locally-captured PCAP file can become (in megabytes) before it closed for processing and a new PCAP file created

  • PCAP_ROTATE_MINUTES – used to specify an time interval (in minutes) after which a locally-captured PCAP file will be closed for processing and a new PCAP file created

  • PCAP_FILTER – specifies a tcpdump-style filter expression for local packet capture; leave blank to capture all traffic

Linux host system configuration

Installing Docker

Docker installation instructions vary slightly by distribution. Please follow the links below to docker.com to find the instructions specific to your distribution:

After installing Docker, because Malcolm should be run as a non-root user, add your user to the docker group with something like:

$ sudo usermod -aG docker yourusername

Following this, either reboot or log out then log back in.

Docker starts automatically on DEB-based distributions. On RPM-based distributions, you need to start it manually or enable it using the appropriate systemctl or service command(s).

You can test docker by running docker info, or (assuming you have internet access), docker run --rm hello-world.

Installing docker-compose

Please follow this link on docker.com for instructions on installing docker-compose.

Operating system configuration

The host system (ie., the one running Docker) will need to be configured for the best possible Elasticsearch performance. Here are a few suggestions for Linux hosts (these may vary from distribution to distribution):

  • Append the following lines to /etc/sysctl.conf:
# the maximum number of open file handles
fs.file-max=2097152

# increase maximums for inotify watches
fs.inotify.max_user_watches=131072
fs.inotify.max_queued_events=131072
fs.inotify.max_user_instances=512

# the maximum number of memory map areas a process may have
vm.max_map_count=262144

# decrease "swappiness" (swapping out runtime memory vs. dropping pages)
vm.swappiness=1

# the maximum number of incoming connections
net.core.somaxconn=65535

# the % of system memory fillable with "dirty" pages before flushing
vm.dirty_background_ratio=40

# maximum % of dirty system memory before committing everything
vm.dirty_ratio=80
  • Depending on your distribution, create either the file /etc/security/limits.d/limits.conf containing:
# the maximum number of open file handles
* soft nofile 65535
* hard nofile 65535
# do not limit the size of memory that can be locked
* soft memlock unlimited
* hard memlock unlimited

OR the file /etc/systemd/system.conf.d/limits.conf containing:

[Manager]
# the maximum number of open file handles
DefaultLimitNOFILE=65535:65535
# do not limit the size of memory that can be locked
DefaultLimitMEMLOCK=infinity
  • Change the readahead value for the disk where the Elasticsearch data will be stored. There are a few ways to do this. For example, you could add this line to /etc/rc.local (replacing /dev/sda with your disk block descriptor):
# change disk read-adhead value (# of blocks)
blockdev --setra 512 /dev/sda
  • Change the I/O scheduler to deadline or noop. Again, this can be done in a variety of ways. The simplest is to add elevator=deadline to the arguments in GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX in /etc/default/grub, then running sudo update-grub2

  • If you are planning on using very large data sets, consider formatting the drive containing elasticsearch volume as XFS.

After making all of these changes, do a reboot for good measure!

macOS host system configuration

Automatic installation using install.py

The install.py script will attempt to guide you through the installation of Docker and Docker Compose if they are not present. If that works for you, you can skip ahead to Configure docker daemon option in this section.

Install Homebrew

The easiest way to install and maintain docker on Mac is using the Homebrew cask. Execute the following in a terminal.

$ /bin/bash -c "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/master/install.sh)"
$ brew install cask
$ brew tap homebrew/cask-versions
Install docker-edge
$ brew cask install docker-edge

This will install the latest version of docker and docker-compose. It can be upgraded later using brew as well:

$ brew cask upgrade --no-quarantine docker-edge

You can now run docker from the Applications folder.

Configure docker daemon option

Some changes should be made for performance (this link gives a good succinct overview).

  • Resource allocation - For a good experience, you likely need at least a quad-core MacBook Pro with 16GB RAM and an SSD. I have run Malcolm on an older 2013 MacBook Pro with 8GB of RAM, but the more the better. Go in your system tray and select DockerPreferencesAdvanced. Set the resources available to docker to at least 4 CPUs and 8GB of RAM (>= 16GB is preferable).

  • Volume mount performance - You can speed up performance of volume mounts by removing unused paths from DockerPreferencesFile Sharing. For example, if you’re only going to be mounting volumes under your home directory, you could share /Users but remove other paths.

After making these changes, right click on the Docker 🐋 icon in the system tray and select Restart.

Windows host system configuration

Installing and configuring Docker Desktop for Windows

Installing and configuring Docker to run under Windows must be done manually, rather than through the install.py script as is done for Linux and macOS.

  1. In order to be able to configure Docker volume mounts correctly, you should be running Windows 10, version 1803 or higher.
  2. The control scripts in the scripts/ directory are written in the Python. They also rely on a few other utilities such as OpenSSL and htpasswd. The easiest way to run these tools in Windows is using the Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) (however, they may also be installed and configured manually: Python; OpenSSL; htpasswd, download the httpd….zip file and extract htpasswd.exe from the Apache…\bin\ directory). To install WSL, run the following command in PowerShell as Administrator:
    • Enable-WindowsOptionalFeature -Online -FeatureName Microsoft-Windows-Subsystem-Linux
  3. Install the Linux distribution of your choice in WSL. These instructions have been tested using Debian, but will probably work with other distributions as well.
  4. Run the following commands in PowerShell as Administrator to enable required Windows features:
    • Enable-WindowsOptionalFeature -Online -FeatureName Microsoft-Hyper-V -All
    • Enable-WindowsOptionalFeature -Online -FeatureName Containers –All
  5. If you have not yet done so after enabling the Windows features, reboot.
  6. Install Docker Desktop for Windows either by downloading the installer from the official Docker site or installing it through chocolatey.
  7. Run Docker Desktop, click the Settings option in the Docker system tray menu and make the following adjustments:
    • General
      • Ensure Start Docker Desktop when you log in is checked.
    • Shared Drives
      • Mark the drive onto which Malcolm is installed as Shared (e.g., check Shared for drive C).
    • Advanced
      • Increase CPUs to as many as you're comfortable with (at least 4 is best).
      • Increase Memory to as much as you're comfortable with (at least 16 is recommended, no fewer than 10).
      • Increase Disk image max size to however much space you want Malcolm to have available to it (ideally at least several hundred gigabytes), and change the Disk image location if needed to accommodate it.
  8. Make sure Docker applies/restarts (or just reboot), then go back in and check the Advanced settings to make sure things stick.
  9. To ensure Docker volume mounts work correctly when using WSL, WSL needs to be configured to mount at / instead of at /mnt. Inside your WSL Bash shell, run the following command to write /etc/wsl.conf to specify the WSL mount point:
    • echo -e '[automount]\nroot = /\noptions = "metadata"' | sudo tee /etc/wsl.conf
  10. Reboot.
  11. Run docker info in PowerShell to make sure Docker is running.
  12. Open a shell in your WSL distribution and run docker.exe info to make sure Docker is accessible from within WSL.
    • Previous versions of WSL required the native Linux docker command-line client to interact with the Windows Desktop Docker server. Recent improvements to WSL allow the Windows executables docker-compose.exe and docker.exe to be run seamlessly in WSL. Malcolm's control scripts detect this scenario.

Finish Malcolm's configuration

Once Docker is installed, configured and running as described in the previous section, run ./scripts/install.py --configure (in WSL it will probably be something like sudo python3 ./scripts/install.py --configure) to finish configuration of the local Malcolm installation.

The control scripts outlined in the Running Malcolm section may not be symlinked correctly under Windows. Rather than running ./scripts/start, ./scripts/stop, etc., you can run python3 ./scripts/control.py --start, python3 ./scripts/control.py --stop, etc. to the same effect.

Running Malcolm

Configure authentication

Malcolm requires authentication to access the user interface. Nginx can authenticate users with either local TLS-encrypted HTTP basic authentication or using a remote Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) authentication server.

With the local basic authentication method, user accounts are managed by Malcolm and can be created, modified, and deleted using a user management web interface. This method is suitable in instances where accounts and credentials do not need to be synced across many Malcolm installations.

LDAP authentication are managed on a remote directory service, such as a Microsoft Active Directory Domain Services or OpenLDAP.

Malcolm's authentication method is defined in the x-auth-variables section near the top of the docker-compose.yml file with the NGINX_BASIC_AUTH environment variable: true for local TLS-encrypted HTTP basic authentication, false for LDAP authentication.

In either case, you must run ./scripts/auth_setup before starting Malcolm for the first time in order to:

  • define the local Malcolm administrator account username and password (although these credentials will only be used for basic authentication, not LDAP authentication)
  • specify whether or not to (re)generate the self-signed certificates used for HTTPS access
    • key and certificate files are located in the nginx/certs/ directory
  • specify whether or not to (re)generate the self-signed certificates used by a remote log forwarder (see the BEATS_SSL environment variable above)
    • certificate authority, certificate, and key files for Malcolm’s Logstash instance are located in the logstash/certs/ directory
    • certificate authority, certificate, and key files to be copied to and used by the remote log forwarder are located in the filebeat/certs/ directory
  • specify whether or not to store the username/password for forwarding Logstash events to a secondary, external Elasticsearch instance (see the ES_EXTERNAL_HOSTS, ES_EXTERNAL_SSL, and ES_EXTERNAL_SSL_CERTIFICATE_VERIFICATION environment variables above)
    • these parameters are stored securely in the Logstash keystore file logstash/certs/logstash.keystore
Local account management

auth_setup is used to define the username and password for the administrator account. Once Malcolm is running, the administrator account can be used to manage other user accounts via a Malcolm User Management page served over HTTPS on port 488 (e.g., https://localhost:488 if you are connecting locally).

Malcolm user accounts can be used to access the interfaces of all of its components, including Moloch. Moloch uses its own internal database of user accounts, so when a Malcolm user account logs in to Moloch for the first time Malcolm creates a corresponding Moloch user account automatically. This being the case, it is not recommended to use the Moloch Users settings page or change the password via the Password form under the Moloch Settings page, as those settings would not be consistently used across Malcolm.

Users may change their passwords via the Malcolm User Management page by clicking User Self Service. A forgotten password can also be reset via an emailed link, though this requires SMTP server settings to be specified in htadmin/config.ini in the Malcolm installation directory.

Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) authentication

The nginx-auth-ldap module serves as the interface between Malcolm's Nginx web server and a remote LDAP server. When you run auth_setup for the first time, a sample LDAP configuration file is created at nginx/nginx_ldap.conf.

# This is a sample configuration for the ldap_server section of nginx.conf.
# Yours will vary depending on how your Active Directory/LDAP server is configured.
# See https://github.com/kvspb/nginx-auth-ldap#available-config-parameters for options.

ldap_server ad_server {
  url "ldap://ds.example.com:3268/DC=ds,DC=example,DC=com?sAMAccountName?sub?(objectClass=person)";

  binddn "bind_dn";
  binddn_passwd "bind_dn_password";

  group_attribute member;
  group_attribute_is_dn on;
  require group "CN=Malcolm,CN=Users,DC=ds,DC=example,DC=com";
  require valid_user;
  satisfy all;
}

auth_ldap_cache_enabled on;
auth_ldap_cache_expiration_time 10000;
auth_ldap_cache_size 1000;

This file is mounted into the nginx container when Malcolm is started to provide connection information for the LDAP server.

The contents of nginx_ldap.conf will vary depending on how the LDAP server is configured. Some of the avaiable parameters in that file include:

  • url - the ldap:// or ldaps:// connection URL for the remote LDAP server, which has the following syntax: ldap[s]://<hostname>:<port>/<base_dn>?<attributes>?<scope>?<filter>
  • binddn and binddn_password - the account credentials used to query the LDAP directory
  • group_attribute - the group attribute name which contains the member object (e.g., member or memberUid)
  • group_attribute_is_dn - whether or not to search for the user's full distinguished name as the value in the group's member attribute
  • require and satisfy - require user, require group and require valid_user can be used in conjunction with satisfy any or satisfy all to limit the users that are allowed to access the Malcolm instance

Before starting Malcolm, edit nginx/nginx_ldap.conf according to the specifics of your LDAP server and directory tree structure. Using a LDAP search tool such as ldapsearch in Linux or dsquery in Windows may be of help as you formulate the configuration. Your changes should be made within the curly braces of the ldap_server ad_server { … } section. You can troubleshoot configuration file syntax errors and LDAP connection or credentials issues by running ./scripts/logs (or docker-compose logs nginx) and examining the output of the nginx container.

The Malcolm User Management page described above is not available when using LDAP authentication.

LDAP connection security

Authentication over LDAP can be done using one of three ways, two of which offer data confidentiality protection:

  • StartTLS - the standard extension to the LDAP protocol to establish an encrypted SSL/TLS connection within an already established LDAP connection
  • LDAPS - a commonly used (though unofficial and considered deprecated) method in which SSL negotiation takes place before any commands are sent from the client to the server
  • Unencrypted (clear text) (not recommended)

In addition to the NGINX_BASIC_AUTH environment variable being set to false in the x-auth-variables section near the top of the docker-compose.yml file, the NGINX_LDAP_TLS_STUNNEL and NGINX_LDAP_TLS_STUNNEL environment variables are used in conjunction with the values in nginx/nginx_ldap.conf to define the LDAP connection security level. Use the following combinations of values to achieve the connection security methods above, respectively:

  • StartTLS
    • NGINX_LDAP_TLS_STUNNEL set to true in docker-compose.yml
    • NGINX_LDAP_TLS_STUNNEL_PROTOCOL set to winldap (for Microsoft Active Directory Domain Services) or openldap (for OpenLDAP) in docker-compose.yml
    • url should begin with ldap:// and its port should be either the default LDAP port (389) or the default Global Catalog port (3268) in nginx/nginx_ldap.conf
  • LDAPS
    • NGINX_LDAP_TLS_STUNNEL set to false in docker-compose.yml
    • url should begin with ldaps:// and its port should be either the default LDAPS port (636) or the default LDAPS Global Catalog port (3269) in nginx/nginx_ldap.conf
  • Unencrypted (clear text) (not recommended)
    • NGINX_LDAP_TLS_STUNNEL set to false in docker-compose.yml
    • url should begin with ldap:// and its port should be either the default LDAP port (389) or the default Global Catalog port (3268) in nginx/nginx_ldap.conf

For encrypted connections (whether using StartTLS or LDAPS), Malcolm will require and verify certificates when one or more trusted CA certificate files are placed in the nginx/ca-trust/ directory. Otherwise, any certificate presented by the domain server will be accepted.

Starting Malcolm

Docker compose is used to coordinate running the Docker containers. To start Malcolm, navigate to the directory containing docker-compose.yml and run:

$ ./scripts/start

This will create the containers' virtual network and instantiate them, then leave them running in the background. The Malcolm containers may take a several minutes to start up completely. To follow the debug output for an already-running Malcolm instance, run:

$ ./scripts/logs

You can also use docker stats to monitor the resource utilization of running containers.

Stopping and restarting Malcolm

You can run ./scripts/stop to stop the docker containers and remove their virtual network. Alternatively, ./scripts/restart will restart an instance of Malcolm. Because the data on disk is stored on the host in docker volumes, doing these operations will not result in loss of data.

Malcolm can be configured to be automatically restarted when the Docker system daemon restart (for example, on system reboot). This behavior depends on the value of the restart: setting for each service in the docker-compose.yml file. This value can be set by running ./scripts/install.py --configure and answering "yes" to "Restart Malcolm upon system or Docker daemon restart?."

Clearing Malcolm’s data

Run ./scripts/wipe to stop the Malcolm instance and wipe its Elasticsearch database (including index snapshots).

Capture file and log archive upload

Malcolm serves a web browser-based upload form for uploading PCAP files and Zeek logs at https://localhost/upload/ if you are connecting locally.

Capture File and Log Archive Upload

Additionally, there is a writable files directory on an SFTP server served on port 8022 (e.g., sftp://USERNAME@localhost:8022/files/ if you are connecting locally).

The types of files supported are:

  • PCAP files (of mime type application/vnd.tcpdump.pcap or application/x-pcapng)
    • PCAPNG files are partially supported: Zeek is able to process PCAPNG files, but not all of Moloch's packet examination features work correctly
  • Zeek logs in archive files (application/gzip, application/x-gzip, application/x-7z-compressed, application/x-bzip2, application/x-cpio, application/x-lzip, application/x-lzma, application/x-rar-compressed, application/x-tar, application/x-xz, or application/zip)
    • where the Zeek logs are found in the internal directory structure in the archive file does not matter

Files uploaded via these methods are monitored and moved automatically to other directories for processing to begin, generally within one minute of completion of the upload.

Tagging

In addition to be processed for uploading, Malcolm events will be tagged according to the components of the filenames of the PCAP files or Zeek log archives files from which the events were parsed. For example, records created from a PCAP file named ACME_Scada_VLAN10.pcap would be tagged with ACME, Scada, and VLAN10. Tags are extracted from filenames by splitting on the characters "," (comma), "-" (dash), and "_" (underscore). These tags are viewable and searchable (via the tags field) in Moloch and Kibana. This behavior can be changed by modifying the AUTO_TAG environment variable in docker-compose.yml.

Tags may also be specified manually with the browser-based upload form.

Processing uploaded PCAPs with Zeek

The browser-based upload interface also provides the ability to specify tags for events extracted from the files uploaded. Additionally, an Analyze with Zeek checkbox may be used when uploading PCAP files to cause them to be analyzed by Zeek, similarly to the ZEEK_AUTO_ANALYZE_PCAP_FILES environment variable described above, only on a per-upload basis. Zeek can also automatically carve out files from file transfers; see Automatic file extraction and scanning for more details.

Live analysis

Capturing traffic on local network interfaces

Malcolm's pcap-capture container can capture traffic on one or more local network interfaces and periodically rotate these files for processing with Moloch and Zeek. The pcap-capture Docker container is started with additional privileges (IPC_LOCK, NET_ADMIN, NET_RAW, and SYS_ADMIN) in order for it to be able to open network interfaces in promiscuous mode for capture.

The environment variables prefixed with PCAP_ in the docker-compose.yml file determine local packet capture behavior. Local capture can also be configured by running ./scripts/install.py --configure and answering "yes" to "Should Malcolm capture network traffic to PCAP files?."

Note that currently Microsoft Windows and Apple macOS platforms run Docker inside of a virtualized environment. This would require additional configuration of virtual interfaces and port forwarding in Docker, the process for which is outside of the scope of this document.

Using a network sensor appliance

A remote network sensor appliance can be used to monitor network traffic, capture PCAP files, and forward Zeek logs, Moloch sessions, or other information to Malcolm. Hedgehog Linux is a Debian-based operating system built to

  • monitor network interfaces
  • capture packets to PCAP files
  • detect file transfers in network traffic and extract and scan those files for threats
  • generate and forward Zeek logs, Moloch sessions, and other information to Malcolm

Please see the Hedgehog Linux README for more information.

Manually forwarding Zeek logs from an external source

Malcolm’s Logstash instance can also be configured to accept Zeek logs from a remote forwarder by running ./scripts/install.py --configure and answering "yes" to "Expose Logstash port to external hosts?." Enabling encrypted transport of these logs files is discussed in Configure authentication and the description of the BEATS_SSL environment variable in the docker-compose.yml file.

Configuring Filebeat to forward Zeek logs to Malcolm might look something like this example filebeat.yml:

filebeat.inputs:
- type: log
  paths:
    - /var/zeek/*.log
  fields_under_root: true
  fields:
    type: "session"
  compression_level: 0
  exclude_lines: ['^\s*#']
  scan_frequency: 10s
  clean_inactive: 180m
  ignore_older: 120m
  close_inactive: 90m
  close_renamed: true
  close_removed: true
  close_eof: false
  clean_renamed: true
  clean_removed: true

output.logstash:
  hosts: ["192.0.2.123:5044"]
  ssl.enabled: true
  ssl.certificate_authorities: ["/foo/bar/ca.crt"]
  ssl.certificate: "/foo/bar/client.crt"
  ssl.key: "/foo/bar/client.key"
  ssl.supported_protocols: "TLSv1.2"
  ssl.verification_mode: "none"

Moloch

The Moloch interface will be accessible over HTTPS on port 443 at the docker hosts IP address (e.g., https://localhost if you are connecting locally).

Zeek log integration

A stock installation of Moloch extracts all of its network connection ("session") metadata ("SPI" or "Session Profile Information") from full packet capture artifacts (PCAP files). Zeek (formerly Bro) generates similar session metadata, linking network events to sessions via a connection UID. Malcolm aims to facilitate analysis of Zeek logs by mapping values from Zeek logs to the Moloch session database schema for equivalent fields, and by creating new "native" Moloch database fields for all the other Zeek log values for which there is not currently an equivalent in Moloch:

Zeek log session record

In this way, when full packet capture is an option, analysis of PCAP files can be enhanced by the additional information Zeek provides. When full packet capture is not an option, similar analysis can still be performed using the same interfaces and processes using the Zeek logs alone.

One value of particular mention is Zeek Log Type (zeek.logType in Elasticsearch). This value corresponds to the kind of Zeek .log file from which the record was created. In other words, a search could be restricted to records from conn.log by searching zeek.logType == conn, or restricted to records from weird.log by searching zeek.logType == weird. In this same way, to view only records from Zeek logs (excluding any from PCAP files), use the special Moloch EXISTS filter, as in zeek.logType == EXISTS!. On the other hand, to exclude Zeek logs and only view records from PCAP files, use zeek.logType != EXISTS!.

Click the icon of the owl 🦉 in the upper-left hand corner of to access the Moloch usage documentation (accessible at https://localhost/help if you are connecting locally), click the Fields label in the navigation pane, then search for zeek to see a list of the other Zeek log types and fields available to Malcolm.

Zeek fields

The values of records created from Zeek logs can be expanded and viewed like any native moloch session by clicking the plus icon to the left of the record in the Sessions view. However, note that when dealing with these Zeek records the full packet contents are not available, so buttons dealing with viewing and exporting PCAP information will not behave as they would for records from PCAP files. Other than that, Zeek records and their values are usable in Malcolm just like native PCAP session records.

Correlating Zeek logs and Moloch sessions

The Moloch interface displays both Zeek logs and Moloch sessions alongside each other. Using fields common to both data sources, one can craft queries to filter results matching desired criteria.

A few fields of particular mention that help limit returned results to those Zeek logs and Moloch session records generated from the same network connection are Community ID (communityId and zeek.community_id in Moloch and Zeek, respectively) and Zeek's connection UID (zeek.uid), which Malcolm maps to Moloch's rootId field.

Community ID is specification for standard flow hashing published by Corelight with the intent of making it easier to pivot from one dataset (e.g., Moloch sessions) to another (e.g., Zeek conn.log entries). In Malcolm both Moloch and Zeek populate this value, which makes it possible to filter for a specific network connection and see both data sources' results for that connection.

The rootId field is used by Moloch to link session records together when a particular session has too many packets to be represented by a single session. When normalizing Zeek logs to Moloch's schema, Malcolm piggybacks on rootId to store Zeek's connection UID to crossreference entries across Zeek log types. The connection UID is also stored in zeek.uid.

Filtering on community ID OR'ed with zeek UID (e.g., communityId == "1:r7tGG//fXP1P0+BXH3zXETCtEFI=" || rootId == "CQcoro2z6adgtGlk42") is an effective way to see both the Moloch sessions and Zeek logs generated by a particular network connection.

Correlating Moloch sessions and Zeek logs

Help

Click the icon of the owl 🦉 in the upper-left hand corner of to access the Moloch usage documentation (accessible at https://localhost/help if you are connecting locally), which includes such topics as search syntax, the Sessions view, SPIView, SPIGraph, and the Connections graph.

Sessions

The Sessions view provides low-level details of the sessions being investigated, whether they be Moloch sessions created from PCAP files or Zeek logs mapped to the Moloch session database schema.

Moloch's Sessions view

The Sessions view contains many controls for filtering the sessions displayed from all sessions down to sessions of interest:

  • search bar: Indicated by the magnifying glass 🔍 icon, the search bar allows defining filters on session/log metadata
  • time bounding controls: The 🕘, Start, End, Bounding, and Interval fields, and the date histogram can be used to visually zoom and pan the time range being examined.
  • search button: The Search button re-runs the sessions query with the filters currently specified.
  • views button: Indicated by the eyeball 👁 icon, views allow overlaying additional previously-specified filters onto the current sessions filters. For convenience, Malcolm provides several Moloch preconfigured views including several on the zeek.logType field.

Malcolm views

  • map: A global map can be expanded by clicking the globe 🌎 icon. This allows filtering sessions by IP-based geolocation when possible.

Some of these filter controls are also available on other Moloch pages (such as SPIView, SPIGraph, Connections, and Hunt).

The number of sessions displayed per page, as well as the page currently displayed, can be specified using the paging controls underneath the time bounding controls.

The sessions table is displayed below the filter controls. This table contains the sessions/logs matching the specified filters.

To the left of the column headers are two buttons. The Toggle visible columns button, indicated by a grid icon, allows toggling which columns are displayed in the sessions table. The Save or load custom column configuration button, indicated by a columns icon, allows saving the current displayed columns or loading previously-saved configurations. This is useful for customizing which columns are displayed when investigating different types of traffic. Column headers can also be clicked to sort the results in the table, and column widths may be adjusted by dragging the separators between column headers.

Details for individual sessions/logs can be expanded by clicking the plus icon on the left of each row. Each row may contain multiple sections and controls, depending on whether the row represents a Moloch session or a Zeek log. Clicking the field names and values in the details sections allows additional filters to be specified or summary lists of unique values to be exported.

When viewing Moloch session details (ie., a session generated from a PCAP file), an additional packets section will be visible underneath the metadata sections. When the details of a session of this type are expanded, Moloch will read the packet(s) comprising the session for display here. Various controls can be used to adjust how the packet is displayed (enabling natural decoding and enabling Show Images & Files may produce visually pleasing results), and other options (including PCAP download, carving images and files, applying decoding filters, and examining payloads in CyberChef) are available.

See also Moloch's usage documentation for more information on the Sessions view.

PCAP Export

Clicking the down arrow icon to the far right of the search bar presents a list of actions including PCAP Export (see Moloch's sessions help for information on the other actions). When full PCAP sessions are displayed, the PCAP Export feature allows you to create a new PCAP file from the matching Moloch sessions, including controls for which sessions are included (open items, visible items, or all matching items) and whether or not to include linked segments. Click Export PCAP button to generate the PCAP, after which you'll be presented with a browser download dialog to save or open the file. Note that depending on the scope of the filters specified this might take a long time (or, possibly even time out).

Export PCAP

See the issues section of this document for an error that can occur using this feature when Zeek log sessions are displayed.View

SPIView

Moloch's SPI (Session Profile Information) View provides a quick and easy-to-use interface for exploring session/log metrics. The SPIView page lists categories for general session metrics (e.g., protocol, source and destination IP addresses, sort and destination ports, etc.) as well as for all of various types of network understood by Moloch and Zeek. These categories can be expanded and the top n values displayed, along with each value's cardinality, for the fields of interest they contain.

Moloch's SPIView

Click the the plus icon to the right of a category to expand it. The values for specific fields are displayed by clicking the field description in the field list underneatn the category name. The list of field names can be filtered by typing part of the field name in the Search for fields to display in this category text input. The Load All and Unload All buttons can be used to toggle display of all of the fields belonging to that category. Once displayed, a field's name or one of its values may be clicked to provide further actions for filtering or displaying that field or its values. Of particular interest may be the Open [fieldname] SPI Graph option when clicking on a field's name. This will open a new tab with the SPI Graph (see below) populated with the field's top values.

Note that because the SPIView page can potentially run many queries, SPIView limits the search domain to seven days (in other words, seven indices, as each index represents one day's worth of data). When using SPIView, you will have best results if you limit your search time frame to less than or equal to seven days. This limit can be adjusted by editing the spiDataMaxIndices setting in config.ini and rebuilding the malcolmnetsec/moloch docker container.

See also Moloch's usage documentation for more information on SPIView.

SPIGraph

Moloch's SPI (Session Profile Information) Graph visualizes the occurrence of some field's top n values over time, and (optionally) geographically. This is particularly useful for identifying trends in a particular type of communication over time: traffic using a particular protocol when seen sparsely at regular intervals on that protocol's date histogram in the SPIGraph may indicate a connection check, polling, or beaconing (for example, see the llmnr protocol in the screenshot below).

Moloch's SPIGraph

Controls can be found underneath the time bounding controls for selecting the field of interest, the number of elements to be displayed, the sort order, and a periodic refresh of the data.

See also Moloch's usage documentation for more information on SPIGraph.

Connections

The Connections page presents network communications via a force-directed graph, making it easy to visualize logical relationships between network hosts.

Moloch's Connections graph

Controls are available for specifying the query size (where smaller values will execute more quickly but may only contain an incomplete representation of the top n sessions, and larger values may take longer to execute but will be more complete), which fields to use as the source and destionation for node values, a minimum connections threshold, and the method for determining the "weight" of the link between two nodes. As is the case with most other visualizations in Moloch, the graph is interactive: clicking on a node or the link between two nodes can be used to modify query filters, and the nodes themselves may be repositioned by dragging and dropping them. A node's color indicates whether it communicated as a source/originator, a destination/responder, or both.

While the default source and destination fields are Src IP and Dst IP:Dst Port, the Connections view is able to use any combination of any of the fields populated by Moloch and Zeek. For example:

  • Src OUI and Dst OUI (hardware manufacturers)
  • Src IP and Protocols
  • Originating Network Segment and Responding Network Segment (see CIDR subnet to network segment name mapping)
  • Originating GeoIP City and Responding GeoIP City

or any other combination of these or other fields.

See also Moloch's usage documentation for more information on the Connections graph.

Hunt

Moloch's Hunt feature allows an analyst to search within the packets themselves (including payload data) rather than simply searching the session metadata. The search string may be specified using ASCII (with or without case sensitivity), hex codes, or regular expressions. Once a hunt job is complete, matching sessions can be viewed in the Sessions view.

Clicking the Create a packet search job on the Hunt page will allow you to specify the following parameters for a new hunt job:

  • a packet search job name
  • a maximum number of packets to examine per session
  • the search string and its format (ascii, ascii (case sensitive), hex, regex, or hex regex)
  • whether to search source packets, destination packets, or both
  • whether to search raw or reassembled packets

Click the ➕ Create button to begin the search. Moloch will scan the source PCAP files from which the sessions were created according to the search criteria. Note that whatever filters were specified when the hunt job is executed will apply to the hunt job as well; the number of sessions matching the current filters will be displayed above the hunt job parameters with text like "ⓘ Creating a new packet search job will search the packets of # sessions."

Hunt creation

Once a hunt job is submitted, it will be assigned a unique hunt ID (a long unique string of characters like yuBHAGsBdljYmwGkbEMm) and its progress will be updated periodically in the Hunt Job Queue with the execution percent complete, the number of matches found so far, and the other parameters with which the job was submitted. More details for the hunt job can be viewed by expanding its row with the plus icon on the left.

Hunt completed

Once the hunt job is complete (and a minute or so has passed, as the huntId must be added to the matching session records in the database), click the folder 📂 icon on the right side of the hunt job row to open a new Sessions tab with the search bar prepopulated to filter to sessions with packets matching the search criteria.

Hunt result sessions

From this list of filtered sessions you can expand session details and explore packet payloads which matched the hunt search criteria.

The hunt feature is available only for sessions created from full packet capture data, not Zeek logs. This being the case, it is a good idea to click the eyeball 👁 icon and select the PCAP Files view to exclude Zeek logs from candidate sessions prior to using the hunt feature.

See also Moloch's usage documentation for more information on the hunt feature.

Statistics

Moloch provides several other reports which show information about the state of Moloch and the underlying Elasticsearch database.

The Files list displays a list of PCAP files processed by Moloch, the date and time of the earliest packet in each file, and the file size:

Moloch's Files list

The ES Indices list (available under the Stats page) lists the Elasticsearch indices within which log data is contained:

Moloch's ES indices list

The History view provides a historical list of queries issues to Moloch and the details of those queries:

Moloch's History view

See also Moloch's usage documentation for more information on the Files list, statistics, and history.

Settings

General settings

The Settings page can be used to tweak Moloch preferences, defined additional custom views and column configurations, tweak the color theme, and more.

See Moloch's usage documentation for more information on settings.

Moloch general settings

Moloch custom view management

Kibana

While Moloch provides very nice visualizations, especially for network traffic, Kibana (an open source general-purpose data visualization tool for Elasticsearch) can be used to create custom visualizations (tables, charts, graphs, dashboards, etc.) using the same data.

The Kibana container can be accessed at https://localhost/kibana/ if you are connecting locally. Several preconfigured dashboards for Zeek logs are included in Malcolm's Kibana configuration.

The official Kibana User Guide has excellent tutorials for a variety of topics.

Kibana has several components for data searching and visualization:

Discover

The Discover view enables you to view events on a record-by-record basis (similar to a session record in Moloch or an individual line from a Zeek log). See the official Kibana User Guide for information on using the Discover view:

Screenshots

Kibana's Discover view

Viewing the details of a session in Discover

Filtering by tags to display only sessions with public IP addresses

Changing the fields displayed in Discover

Opening a previously-saved search

Visualizations and dashboards

Prebuilt visualizations and dashboards

Malcolm comes with dozens of prebuilt visualizations and dashboards for the network traffic represented by each of the Zeek log types. Click Dashboard to see a list of these dashboards. As is the case with all Kibana's visualizations, all of the charts, graphs, maps, and tables are interactive and can be clicked on to narrow or expand the scope of the data you are investigating. Similarly, click Visualize to explore the prebuilt visualizations used to build the dashboards.

Many of Malcolm's prebuilt visualizations for Zeek logs are heavily inspired by the excellent Kibana Dashboards that are part of Security Onion.

Screenshots

The Connections dashboard displays information about the "top talkers" across all types of sessions

The HTTP dashboard displays important details about HTTP traffic

There are several Connections visualizations using locations from GeoIP lookups

Kibana includes both coordinate and region map types

The Notices dashboard highlights things which Zeek determine are potentially bad

The Signatures dashboard displays signature hits, such as antivirus hits on files extracted from network traffic

The Software dashboard displays the type, name, and version of software seen communicating on the network

The PE (portable executables) dashboard displays information about executable files transferred over the network

The SMTP dashboard highlights details about SMTP traffic

The SSL dashboard displays information about SSL versions, certificates, and TLS JA3 fingerprints

The files dashboard displays metrics about the files transferred over the network

This dashboard provides insight into DNP3 (Distributed Network Protocol), a protocol used commonly in electric and water utilities

Modbus is a standard protocol found in many industrial control systems (ICS)

BACnet is a communications protocol for Building Automation and Control (BAC) networks

EtherNet/IP is an industrial network protocol that adapts the Common Industrial Protocol to standard Ethernet

MQTT is a lightweight publish-subscribe network protocol that transports messages between devices

PROFINET is an industry technical standard for data communication over Industrial Ethernet

S7comm is a Siemens proprietary protocol that runs between programmable logic controllers (PLCs) of the Siemens family

Building your own visualizations and dashboards

See the official Kibana User Guide for information on creating your own visualizations and dashboards:

Screenshots

Kibana boasts many types of visualizations for displaying your data

Timelion is a powerful tool for visualizing time series data

Visual Builder is another time series data visualizer

Search Queries in Moloch and Kibana

Kibana support two query syntaxes: the legacy Lucene stynax and the new Kibana Query Language (KQL), both of which are somewhat different than Moloch's query syntax (see the help at https://localhost/help#search if you are connecting locally). The Moloch interface is for searching and visualizing both Moloch sessions and Zeek logs. The prebuilt dashboards in the Kibana interface are for searching and visualizing Zeek logs, but will not include Moloch sessions. Here are some common patterns used in building search query strings for Moloch and Kibana, respectively. See the links provided for further documentation.

Moloch Search String Kibana Search String (Lucene) Kibana Search String (KQL)
Field exists zeek.logType == EXISTS! _exists_:zeek.logType zeek.logType:*
Field does not exist zeek.logType != EXISTS! NOT _exists_:zeek.logType NOT zeek.logType:*
Field matches a value port.dst == 22 dstPort:22 dstPort:22
Field does not match a value port.dst != 22 NOT dstPort:22 NOT dstPort:22
Field matches at least one of a list of values tags == [external_source, external_destination] tags:(external_source OR external_destination) tags:(external_source or external_destination)
Field range (inclusive) http.statuscode >= 200 && http.statuscode <= 300 http.statuscode:[200 TO 300] http.statuscode >= 200 and http.statuscode <= 300
Field range (exclusive) http.statuscode > 200 && http.statuscode < 300 http.statuscode:{200 TO 300} http.statuscode > 200 and http.statuscode < 300
Field range (mixed exclusivity) http.statuscode >= 200 && http.statuscode < 300 http.statuscode:[200 TO 300} http.statuscode >= 200 and http.statuscode < 300
Match all search terms (AND) (tags == [external_source, external_destination]) && (http.statuscode == 401) tags:(external_source OR external_destination) AND http.statuscode:401 tags:(external_source or external_destination) and http.statuscode:401
Match any search terms (OR) `(zeek_ftp.password == EXISTS!) (zeek_http.password == EXISTS!)
Global string search (anywhere in the document) all Moloch search expressions are field-based microsoft microsoft
Wildcards host.dns == "*micro?oft*" (? for single character, * for any characters) dns.host:*micro?oft* (? for single character, * for any characters) dns.host:*micro*ft* (* for any characters)
Regex host.http == /.*www\.f.*k\.com.*/ zeek_http.host:/.*www\.f.*k\.com.*/ Kibana Query Language does not currently support regex
IPv4 values ip == 0.0.0.0/0 srcIp:"0.0.0.0/0" OR dstIp:"0.0.0.0/0" srcIp:"0.0.0.0/0" OR dstIp:"0.0.0.0/0"
IPv6 values `(ip.src == EXISTS! ip.dst == EXISTS!) && (ip != 0.0.0.0/0)`
GeoIP information available country == EXISTS! _exists_:zeek.destination_geo OR _exists_:zeek.source_geo zeek.destination_geo:* or zeek.source_geo:*
Zeek log type zeek.logType == notice zeek.logType:notice zeek.logType:notice
IP CIDR Subnets ip.src == 172.16.0.0/12 srcIp:"172.16.0.0/12" srcIp:"172.16.0.0/12"
Search time frame Use Moloch time bounding controls under the search bar Use Kibana time range controls in the upper right-hand corner Use Kibana time range controls in the upper right-hand corner

When building complex queries, it is strongly recommended that you enclose search terms and expressions in parentheses to control order of operations.

As Zeek logs are ingested, Malcolm parses and normalizes the logs' fields to match Moloch's underlying Elasticsearch schema. A complete list of these fields can be found in the Moloch help (accessible at https://localhost/help#fields if you are connecting locally).

Whenever possible, Zeek fields are mapped to existing corresponding Moloch fields: for example, the orig_h field in Zeek is mapped to Moloch's srcIp field. The original Zeek fields are also left intact. To complicate the issue, the Moloch interface uses its own aliases to reference those fields: the source IP field is referenced as ip.src (Moloch's alias) in Moloch and srcIp or zeek.orig_h in Kibana.

The table below shows the mapping of some of these fields.

Field Description Moloch Field Alias(es) Moloch-mapped Zeek Field(s) Zeek Field(s)
Community ID Flow Hash communityId zeek.community_id
Destination IP ip.dst dstIp zeek.resp_h
Destination MAC mac.dst dstMac zeek.resp_l2_addr
Destination Port port.dst dstPort zeek.resp_p
Duration session.length length zeek_conn.duration
First Packet Time starttime firstPacket zeek.ts, @timestamp
IP Protocol ip.protocol ipProtocol zeek.proto
Last Packet Time stoptime lastPacket
MIME Type email.bodymagic, http.bodymagic http.bodyMagic zeek.filetype, zeek_files.mime_type, zeek_ftp.mime_type, zeek_http.orig_mime_types, zeek_http.resp_mime_types, zeek_irc.dcc_mime_type
Protocol/Service protocols protocol zeek.proto, zeek.service
Request Bytes databytes.src, bytes.src srcBytes, srcDataBytes zeek_conn.orig_bytes, zeek_conn.orig_ip_bytes
Request Packets packets.src srcPackets zeek_conn.orig_pkts
Response Bytes databytes.dst, bytes.dst dstBytes, dstDataBytes zeek_conn.resp_bytes, zeek_conn.resp_ip_bytes
Response Packets packets.dst dstPackets zeek_con.resp_pkts
Source IP ip.src srcIp zeek.orig_h
Source MAC mac.src srcMac zeek.orig_l2_addr
Source Port port.src srcPort zeek.orig_p
Total Bytes databytes, bytes totDataBytes, totBytes
Total Packets packets totPackets
Username user user zeek.user
Zeek Connection UID zeek.uid
Zeek File UID zeek.fuid
Zeek Log Type zeek.logType

In addition to the fields listed above, Moloch provides several special field aliases for matching any field of a particular type. While these aliases do not exist in Kibana per se, they can be approximated as illustrated below.

Matches Any Moloch Special Field Example Kibana/Zeek Equivalent Example
IP Address ip == 192.168.0.1 srcIp:192.168.0.1 OR dstIp:192.168.0.1
Port port == [80, 443, 8080, 8443] srcPort:(80 OR 443 OR 8080 OR 8443) OR dstPort:(80 OR 443 OR 8080 OR 8443)
Country (code) country == [RU,CN] zeek.destination_geo.country_code2:(RU OR CN) OR zeek.source_geo.country_code2:(RU OR CN) OR dns.GEO:(RU OR CN)
Country (name) zeek.destination_geo.country_name:(Russia OR China) OR zeek.source_geo.country_name:(Russia OR China)
ASN asn == "*Mozilla*" srcASN:*Mozilla* OR dstASN:*Mozilla* OR dns.ASN:*Mozilla*
Host host == www.microsoft.com zeek_http.host:www.microsoft.com (or zeek_dhcp.host_name, zeek_dns.host, zeek_ntlm.host, smb.host, etc.)
Protocol (layers >= 4) protocols == tls protocol:tls
User user == EXISTS! && user != anonymous _exists_:user AND (NOT user:anonymous)

For details on how to filter both Zeek logs and Moloch session records for a particular connection, see Correlating Zeek logs and Moloch sessions.

Other Malcolm features

Automatic file extraction and scanning

Malcolm can leverage Zeek's knowledge of network protocols to automatically detect file transfers and extract those files from PCAPs as Zeek processes them. This behavior can be enabled globally by modifying the ZEEK_EXTRACTOR_MODE environment variable in docker-compose.yml, or on a per-upload basis for PCAP files uploaded via the browser-based upload form when Analyze with Zeek is selected.

To specify which files should be extracted, the following values are acceptable in ZEEK_EXTRACTOR_MODE:

  • none: no file extraction
  • interesting: extraction of files with mime types of common attack vectors
  • mapped: extraction of files with recognized mime types
  • known: extraction of files for which any mime type can be determined
  • all: extract all files

Extracted files can be examined through either (but not both) of two methods:

Files which are flagged as potentially malicious via either of these methods will be logged as Zeek signatures.log entries, and can be viewed in the Signatures dashboard in Kibana.

The EXTRACTED_FILE_PRESERVATION environment variable in docker-compose.yml determines the behavior for preservation of Zeek-extracted files:

  • quarantined: preserve only flagged files in ./zeek-logs/extract_files/quarantine
  • all: preserve flagged files in ./zeek-logs/extract_files/quarantine and all other extracted files in ./zeek-logs/extract_files/preserved
  • none: preserve no extracted files

Automatic host and subnet name assignment

IP/MAC address to hostname mapping via host-map.txt

The host-map.txt file in the Malcolm installation directory can be used to define names for network hosts based on IP and/or MAC addresses in Zeek logs. The default empty configuration looks like this:

# IP or MAC address to host name map:
#   address|host name|required tag
#
# where:
#   address: comma-separated list of IPv4, IPv6, or MAC addresses
#          e.g., 172.16.10.41, 02:42:45:dc:a2:96, 2001:0db8:85a3:0000:0000:8a2e:0370:7334
#
#   host name: host name to be assigned when event address(es) match
#
#   required tag (optional): only check match and apply host name if the event
#                            contains this tag
#

Each non-comment line (not beginning with a #), defines an address-to-name mapping for a network host. For example:

127.0.0.1,127.0.1.1,::1|localhost|
192.168.10.10|office-laptop.intranet.lan|
06:46:0b:a6:16:bf|serial-host.intranet.lan|testbed

Each line consists of three |-separated fields: address(es), hostname, and, optionally, a tag which, if specified, must belong to a log for the matching to occur.

As Zeek logs are processed into Malcolm's Elasticsearch instance, the log's source and destination IP and MAC address fields (zeek.orig_h, zeek.resp_h, zeek.orig_l2_addr, and zeek.resp_l2_addr, respectively) are compared against the lists of addresses in host-map.txt. When a match is found, a new field is added to the log: zeek.orig_hostname or zeek.resp_hostname, depending on whether the matching address belongs to the originating or responding host. If the third field (the "required tag" field) is specified, a log must also contain that value in its tags field in addition to matching the IP or MAC address specified in order for the corresponding _hostname field to be added.

zeek.orig_hostname and zeek.resp_hostname may each contain multiple values. For example, if both a host's source IP address and source MAC address were matched by two different lines, zeek.orig_hostname would contain the hostname values from both matching lines.

CIDR subnet to network segment name mapping via cidr-map.txt

The cidr-map.txt file in the Malcolm installation directory can be used to define names for network segments based on IP addresses in Zeek logs. The default empty configuration looks like this:

# CIDR to network segment format:
#   IP(s)|segment name|required tag
#
# where:
#   IP(s): comma-separated list of CIDR-formatted network IP addresses
#          e.g., 10.0.0.0/8, 169.254.0.0/16, 172.16.10.41
#
#   segment name: segment name to be assigned when event IP address(es) match
#
#   required tag (optional): only check match and apply segment name if the event
#                            contains this tag
#

Each non-comment line (not beginning with a #), defines an subnet-to-name mapping for a network host. For example:

192.168.50.0/24,192.168.40.0/24,10.0.0.0/8|corporate|
192.168.100.0/24|control|
192.168.200.0/24|dmz|
172.16.0.0/12|virtualized|testbed

Each line consists of three |-separated fields: CIDR-formatted subnet IP range(s), subnet name, and, optionally, a tag which, if specified, must belong to a log for the matching to occur.

As Zeek logs are processed into Malcolm's Elasticsearch instance, the log's source and destination IP address fields (zeek.orig_h and zeek.resp_h, respectively) are compared against the lists of addresses in cidr-map.txt. When a match is found, a new field is added to the log: zeek.orig_segment or zeek.resp_segment, depending on whether the matching address belongs to the originating or responding host. If the third field (the "required tag" field) is specified, a log must also contain that value in its tags field in addition to its IP address falling within the subnet specified in order for the corresponding _segment field to be added.

zeek.orig_segment and zeek.resp_segment may each contain multiple values. For example, if cidr-map.txt specifies multiple overlapping subnets on different lines, zeek.orig_segment would contain the hostname values from both matching lines if zeek.orig_h belonged to both subnets.

If both zeek.orig_segment and zeek.resp_segment are added to a log, and if they contain different values, the tag cross_segment will be added to the log's tags field for convenient identification of cross-segment traffic. This traffic could be easily visualized using Moloch's Connections graph, by setting the Src: value to Originating Network Segment and the Dst: value to Responding Network Segment:

Cross-segment traffic in Connections

Defining hostname and CIDR subnet names interface

As an alternative to manually editing cidr-map.txt and host-map.txt, a Host and Subnet Name Mapping editor is available at https://localhost/name-map-ui/ if you are connecting locally. Upon loading, the editor is populated from cidr-map.txt, host-map.txt and net-map.json.

This editor provides the following controls:

  • 🔎 Search mappings - narrow the list of visible items using a search filter
  • Type, Address, Name and Tag (column headings) - sort the list of items by clicking a column header
  • 📝 (per item) - modify the selected item
  • 🚫 (per item) - remove the selected item
  • 🖳 host / 🖧 segment, Address, Name, Tag (optional) and 💾 - save the item with these values (either adding a new item or updating the item being modified)
  • 📥 Import - clear the list and replace it with the contents of an uploaded net-map.json file
  • 📤 Export - format and download the list as a net-map.json file
  • 💾 Save Mappings - format and store net-map.json in the Malcolm directory (replacing the existing net-map.json file)
  • 🔁 Restart Logstash - restart log ingestion, parsing and enrichment

Host and Subnet Name Mapping Editor

Applying mapping changes

When changes are made to either cidr-map.txt, host-map.txt or net-map.json, Malcolm's Logstash container must be restarted. The easiest way to do this is to restart malcolm via restart (see Stopping and restarting Malcolm) or by clicking the 🔁 Restart Logstash button in the name mapping interface interface.

Restarting Logstash may take several minutes, after which log ingestion will be resumed.

Elasticsearch index curation

Malcolm uses Elasticsearch Curator to periodically examine indices representing the log data and perform actions on indices meeting criteria for age or disk usage. The environment variables prefixed with CURATOR_ in the docker-compose.yml file determine the criteria for the following actions:

This behavior can also be modified by running ./scripts/install.py --configure.

Other custom filters and actions may be defined by the user by manually modifying the action_file.yml file used by the curator container and ensuring that it is mounted into the container as a volume in the curator: section of your docker-compose.yml file:

  curator:
…
    volumes:
      - ./curator/config/action_file.yml:/config/action_file.yml
…

The settings governing index curation can affect Malcolm's performance in both log ingestion and queries, and there are caveats that should be taken into consideration when configuring this feature. Please read the Elasticsearch documentation linked in this section with regards to index curation.

Index curation only deals with disk space consumed by Elasticsearch indices: it does not have anything to do with PCAP file storage. The MANAGE_PCAP_FILES environment variable in the docker-compose.yml file can be used to allow Moloch to prune old PCAP files based on available disk space.

Malcolm installer ISO

Malcolm's Docker-based deployment model makes Malcolm able to run on a variety of platforms. However, in some circumstances (for example, as a long-running appliance as part of a security operations center, or inside of a virtual machine) it may be desirable to install Malcolm as a dedicated standalone installation.

Malcolm can be packaged into an installer ISO based on the current stable release of Debian. This customized Debian installation is preconfigured with the bare minimum software needed to run Malcolm.

Generating the ISO

Official downloads of the Malcolm installer ISO are not provided: however, it can be built easily on an internet-connected Linux host running current versions of VirtualBox and Vagrant.

To perform a clean build the Malcolm installer ISO, navigate to your local Malcolm working copy and run:

$ ./malcolm-iso/build_via_vagrant.sh -f
…
Starting build machine...
Bringing machine 'default' up with 'virtualbox' provider...
…

Building the ISO may take 30 minutes or more depending on your system. As the build finishes, you will see the following message indicating success:

…
Finished, created "/CSI-SIEM/malcolm-iso/malcolm-2.1.0.iso"
…

By default, Malcolm's Docker images are not packaged with the installer ISO, assuming instead that you will pull the latest images with a docker-compose pull command as described in the Quick start section. If you wish to build an ISO with the latest Malcolm images included, follow the directions to create pre-packaged installation files, which include a tarball with a name like malcolm_YYYYMMDD_HHNNSS_xxxxxxx_images.tar.gz. Then, pass that images tarball to the ISO build script with a -d, like this:

$ ./malcolm-iso/build_via_vagrant.sh -f -d malcolm_YYYYMMDD_HHNNSS_xxxxxxx_images.tar.gz
…

A system installed from the resulting ISO will load the Malcolm Docker images upon first boot. This method is desirable when the ISO is to be installed in an "air gapped" environment or for distribution to non-networked machines.

Installation

The ISO medium boots on systems that support EFI-mode booting. The installer is designed to require as little user input as possible. For this reason, there are NO user prompts and confirmations about partitioning and reformatting hard disks for use by the operating system. The installer assumes that all non-removable storage media (eg., SSD, HDD, NVMe, etc.) are available for use and ⛔🆘😭💀 will partition and format them without warning 💀😭🆘⛔.

The installer will ask for several pieces of information prior to installing the Malcolm base operating system:

  • Hostname
  • Domain name
  • Root password – (optional) a password for the privileged root account which is rarely needed
  • User name: the name for the non-privileged service account user account under which the Malcolm runs
  • User password – a password for the non-privileged sensor account
  • Encryption password (optional) – if the encrypted installation option was selected at boot time, the encryption password must be entered every time the system boots

At the end of the installation process, you will be prompted with a few self-explanatory yes/no questions:

Following these prompts, the installer will reboot and the Malcolm base operating system will boot.

Setup

When the system boots for the first time, the Malcolm Docker images will load if the installer was built with pre-packaged installation files as described above. Wait for this operation to continue (the progress dialog will disappear when they have finished loading) before continuing the setup.

Open a terminal (click the red terminal 🗔 icon next to the Debian swirl logo 🍥 menu button in the menu bar). At this point, setup is similar to the steps described in the Quick start section. Navigate to the Malcolm directory (cd ~/CSI-SIEM) and run auth_setup to configure authentication. If the ISO didn't have pre-packaged Malcolm images, or if you'd like to retrieve the latest updates, run docker-compose pull. Finalize your configuration by running python3 scripts/install.py --configure and follow the prompts as illustrated in the installation example.

Once Malcolm is configured, you can start Malcolm via the command line or by clicking the circular yellow Malcolm icon in the menu bar.

Time synchronization

If you wish to set up time synchronization via NTP or htpdate, open a terminal and run sudo configure-interfaces.py. Select Continue, then choose Time Sync. Here you can configure the operating system to keep its time synchronized with either an NTP server (using the NTP protocol), another Malcolm instance, or another HTTP/HTTPS server. On the next dialog, choose the time synchronization method you wish to configure.

If htpdate is selected, you will be prompted to enter the IP address or hostname and port of an HTTP/HTTPS server (for a Malcolm instance, port 9200 may be used) and the time synchronization check frequency in minutes. A test connection will be made to determine if the time can be retrieved from the server.

If ntpdate is selected, you will be prompted to enter the IP address or hostname of the NTP server.

Upon configuring time synchronization, a "Time synchronization configured successfully!" message will be displayed.

Hardening

The Malcolm aggregator base operating system targets the following guidelines for establishing a secure configuration posture:

STIG compliance exceptions

Currently there are 158 compliance checks that can be verified automatically and 23 compliance checks that must be verified manually.

The Malcolm aggregator base operating system claims the following exceptions to STIG compliance:

# ID Title Justification
1 SV-86535r1 When passwords are changed a minimum of eight of the total number of characters must be changed. Account/password policy exception: As an aggregator running Malcolm is intended to be used as an appliance rather than a general user-facing software platform, some exceptions to password enforcement policies are claimed.
2 SV-86537r1 When passwords are changed a minimum of four character classes must be changed. Account/password policy exception
3 SV-86549r1 Passwords for new users must be restricted to a 24 hours/1 day minimum lifetime. Account/password policy exception
4 SV-86551r1 Passwords must be restricted to a 24 hours/1 day minimum lifetime. Account/password policy exception
5 SV-86553r1 Passwords for new users must be restricted to a 60-day maximum lifetime. Account/password policy exception
6 SV-86555r1 Existing passwords must be restricted to a 60-day maximum lifetime. Account/password policy exception
7 SV-86557r1 Passwords must be prohibited from reuse for a minimum of five generations. Account/password policy exception
8 SV-86565r1 The operating system must disable account identifiers (individuals, groups, roles, and devices) if the password expires. Account/password policy exception
9 SV-86567r2 Accounts subject to three unsuccessful logon attempts within 15 minutes must be locked for the maximum configurable period. Account/password policy exception
10 SV-86569r1 If three unsuccessful root logon attempts within 15 minutes occur the associated account must be locked. Account/password policy exception
11 SV-86603r1 The … operating system must prevent the installation of software, patches, service packs, device drivers, or operating system components of local packages without verification they have been digitally signed using a certificate that is issued by a Certificate Authority (CA) that is recognized and approved by the organization. As the base distribution is not using embedded signatures, debsig-verify would reject all packages (see comment in /etc/dpkg/dpkg.cfg). Enabling it after installation would disallow any future updates.
12 SV-86607r1 USB mass storage must be disabled. The ability to ingest data (such as PCAP files) from a mounted USB mass storage device is a requirement of the system.
13 SV-86609r1 File system automounter must be disabled unless required. The ability to ingest data (such as PCAP files) from a mounted USB mass storage device is a requirement of the system.
14 SV-86705r1 The operating system must shut down upon audit processing failure, unless availability is an overriding concern. If availability is a concern, the system must alert the designated staff (System Administrator [SA] and Information System Security Officer [ISSO] at a minimum) in the event of an audit processing failure. As maximizing availability is a system requirement, audit processing failures will be logged on the device rather than halting the system.
15 SV-86713r1 The operating system must immediately notify the System Administrator (SA) and Information System Security Officer ISSO (at a minimum) when allocated audit record storage volume reaches 75% of the repository maximum audit record storage capacity. same as above
16 SV-86715r1 The operating system must immediately notify the System Administrator (SA) and Information System Security Officer (ISSO) (at a minimum) when the threshold for the repository maximum audit record storage capacity is reached. same as above
17 SV-86597r1 A file integrity tool must verify the baseline operating system configuration at least weekly. This functionality is not configured by default, but it could be configured post-install using Auditbeat or aide
18 SV-86697r2 The file integrity tool must use FIPS 140-2 approved cryptographic hashes for validating file contents and directories. same as above
19 SV-86707r1 The operating system must off-load audit records onto a different system or media from the system being audited. same as above
20 SV-86709r1 The operating system must encrypt the transfer of audit records off-loaded onto a different system or media from the system being audited. same as above
21 SV-86833r1 The system must send rsyslog output to a log aggregation server. same as above
22 SV-87815r2 The audit system must take appropriate action when there is an error sending audit records to a remote system. same as above
23 SV-86693r2 The file integrity tool must be configured to verify Access Control Lists (ACLs). As this is not a multi-user system, the ACL check would be irrelevant.
24 SV-86837r1 The system must use and update a DoD-approved virus scan program. As this is a network traffic analysis appliance rather than an end-user device, regular user files will not be created. A virus scan program would impact device performance and would be unnecessary.
25 SV-86839r1 The system must update the virus scan program every seven days or more frequently. As this is a network traffic analysis appliance rather than an end-user device, regular user files will not be created. A virus scan program would impact device performance and would be unnecessary.
26 SV-86847r2 All network connections associated with a communication session must be terminated at the end of the session or after 10 minutes of inactivity from the user at a command prompt, except to fulfill documented and validated mission requirements. Malcolm be controlled from the command line in a manual capture scenario, so timing out a session based on command prompt inactivity would be inadvisable.
27 SV-86893r2 The operating system must, for networked systems, synchronize clocks with a server that is synchronized to one of the redundant United States Naval Observatory (USNO) time servers, a time server designated for the appropriate DoD network (NIPRNet/SIPRNet), and/or the Global Positioning System (GPS). While time synchronization is supported on the Malcolm aggregator base operating system, an exception is claimed for this rule as the device may be configured to sync to servers other than the ones listed in the STIG.
28 SV-86905r1 For systems using DNS resolution, at least two name servers must be configured. STIG recommendations for DNS servers are not enforced on the Malcolm aggregator base operating system to allow for use in a variety of network scenarios.
29 SV-86919r1 Network interfaces must not be in promiscuous mode. One purpose of the Malcolm aggregator base operating system is to sniff and capture network traffic.
30 SV-86931r2 An X Windows display manager must not be installed unless approved. A locked-down X Windows session is required for the sensor's kiosk display.
31 SV-86519r3 The operating system must set the idle delay setting for all connection types. As this is a network traffic aggregation and analysis appliance rather than an end-user device, timing out displays or connections would not be desirable.
32 SV-86523r1 The operating system must initiate a session lock for the screensaver after a period of inactivity for graphical user interfaces. This option is configurable during install time. Some installations of the Malcolm aggregator base operating system may be on appliance hardware not equipped with a keyboard by default, in which case it may not be desirable to lock the session.
33 SV-86525r1 The operating system must initiate a session lock for graphical user interfaces when the screensaver is activated. This option is configurable during install time. Some installations of the Malcolm aggregator base operating system may be on appliance hardware not equipped with a keyboard by default, in which case it may not be desirable to lock the session.
34 SV-86589r1 The operating system must uniquely identify and must authenticate organizational users (or processes acting on behalf of organizational users) using multifactor authentication. As this is a network traffic capture appliance rather than an end-user device or a multiuser network host, this requirement is not applicable.
35 SV-86921r2 The system must be configured to prevent unrestricted mail relaying. Does not apply as the Malcolm aggregator base operating system not does run a mail server service.
36 SV-86929r1 If the Trivial File Transfer Protocol (TFTP) server is required, the TFTP daemon must be configured to operate in secure mode. Does not apply as the Malcolm aggregator base operating system does not run a TFTP server.
37 SV-86935r3 The Network File System (NFS) must be configured to use RPCSEC_GSS. Does not apply as the Malcolm aggregator base operating system does not run an NFS server.
38 SV-87041r2 The operating system must have the required packages for multifactor authentication installed. As this is a network traffic capture appliance rather than an end-user device or a multiuser network host, this requirement is not applicable.
39 SV-87051r2 The operating system must implement multifactor authentication for access to privileged accounts via pluggable authentication modules (PAM). As this is a network traffic capture appliance rather than an end-user device or a multiuser network host, this requirement is not applicable.
40 SV-87059r2 The operating system must implement smart card logons for multifactor authentication for access to privileged accounts. As this is a network traffic capture appliance rather than an end-user device or a multiuser network host, this requirement is not applicable.
41 SV-87829r1 Wireless network adapters must be disabled. As an appliance intended to capture network traffic in a variety of network environments, wireless adapters may be needed to capture and/or report wireless traffic.
42 SV-86699r1 The system must not allow removable media to be used as the boot loader unless approved. the Malcolm aggregator base operating system supports a live boot mode that can be booted from removable media.

Please review the notes for these additional rules. While not claiming an exception, they may be implemented or checked in a different way than outlined by the RHEL STIG as the Malcolm aggregator base operating system is not built on RHEL or for other reasons.

# ID Title Note
1 SV-86585r1 Systems with a Basic Input/Output System (BIOS) must require authentication upon booting into single-user and maintenance modes. Although the compliance check script does not detect it, booting into recovery mode does in fact require the root password.
2 SV-86587r1 Systems using Unified Extensible Firmware Interface (UEFI) must require authentication upon booting into single-user and maintenance modes. Although the compliance check script does not detect it, booting into recovery mode does in fact require the root password.
3 SV-86651r1 All files and directories contained in local interactive user home directories must have mode 0750 or less permissive. Depending on when the compliance check script is run, some ephemeral files may exist in the service account's home directory which will cause this check to fail. For practical purposes the Malcolm aggregator base operating system's configuration does, however, comply.
4 SV-86623r3 Vendor packaged system security patches and updates must be installed and up to date. When the the Malcolm aggregator base operating system sensor appliance software is built, all of the latest applicable security patches and updates are included in it. How future updates are to be handled is still in design.
6 SV-86691r2 The operating system must implement NIST FIPS-validated cryptography for the following: to provision digital signatures, to generate cryptographic hashes, and to protect data requiring data-at-rest protections in accordance with applicable federal laws, Executive Orders, directives, policies, regulations, and standards. the Malcolm aggregator base operating system does use FIPS-compatible libraries for cryptographic functions. However, the kernel parameter being checked by the compliance check script is incompatible with some of the systems initialization scripts.

In addition, DISA STIG rules SV-86663r1, SV-86695r2, SV-86759r3, SV-86761r3, SV-86763r3, SV-86765r3, SV-86595r1, and SV-86615r2 relate to the SELinux kernel which is not used in the Malcolm aggregator base operating system, and are thus skipped.

CIS benchmark compliance exceptions

Currently there are 271 checks to determine compliance with the CIS Debian Linux 9 Benchmark.

The Malcolm aggregator base operating system claims exceptions from the recommendations in this benchmark in the following categories:

1.1 Install Updates, Patches and Additional Security Software - When the the Malcolm aggregator appliance software is built, all of the latest applicable security patches and updates are included in it. How future updates are to be handled is still in design.

1.3 Enable verify the signature of local packages - As the base distribution is not using embedded signatures, debsig-verify would reject all packages (see comment in /etc/dpkg/dpkg.cfg). Enabling it after installation would disallow any future updates.

2.14 Add nodev option to /run/shm Partition, 2.15 Add nosuid Option to /run/shm Partition, 2.16 Add noexec Option to /run/shm Partition - The Malcolm aggregator base operating system does not mount /run/shm as a separate partition, so these recommendations do not apply.

2.18 Disable Mounting of cramfs Filesystems, 2.19 Disable Mounting of freevxfs Filesystems, 2.20 Disable Mounting of jffs2 Filesystems, 2.21 Disable Mounting of hfs Filesystems, 2.22 Disable Mounting of hfsplus Filesystems, 2.23 Disable Mounting of squashfs Filesystems, 2.24 Disable Mounting of udf Filesystems - The Malcolm aggregator base operating system is not compiling a custom Linux kernel, so these filesystems are inherently supported as they are part Debian Linux's default kernel.

4.6 Disable USB Devices - The ability to ingest data (such as PCAP files) from a mounted USB mass storage device is a requirement of the system.

6.1 Ensure the X Window system is not installed, 6.2 Ensure Avahi Server is not enabled, 6.3 Ensure print server is not enabled - An X Windows session is provided for displaying dashboards. The library packages libavahi-common-data, libavahi-common3, and libcups2 are dependencies of some of the X components used by the Malcolm aggregator base operating system, but the avahi and cups services themselves are disabled.

6.17 Ensure virus scan Server is enabled, 6.18 Ensure virus scan Server update is enabled - As this is a network traffic analysis appliance rather than an end-user device, regular user files will not be created. A virus scan program would impact device performance and would be unnecessary.

7.2.4 Log Suspicious Packets, 7.2.7 Enable RFC-recommended Source Route Validation, 7.4.1 Install TCP Wrappers - As Malcolm may operate as a network traffic capture appliance sniffing packets on a network interface configured in promiscuous mode, these recommendations do not apply.

8.4.1 Install aide package and 8.4.2 Implement Periodic Execution of File Integrity - This functionality is not configured by default, but it could be configured post-install using Auditbeat or aide.

8.1.1.2 Disable System on Audit Log Full, 8.1.1.3 Keep All Auditing Information, 8.1.1.5 Ensure set remote_server for audit service, 8.1.1.6 Ensure enable_krb5 set to yes for remote audit service, 8.1.1.7 Ensure set action for audit storage volume is fulled, 8.1.1.9 Set space left for auditd service, a few other audit-related items under section 8.1, 8.2.5 Configure rsyslog to Send Logs to a Remote Log Host - As maximizing availability is a system requirement, audit processing failures will be logged on the device rather than halting the system. auditd is set up to syslog when its local storage capacity is reached.

Password-related recommendations under 9.2 and 10.1 - The library package libpam-pwquality is used in favor of libpam-cracklib which is what the compliance scripts are looking for. Also, as an appliance running Malcolm is intended to be used as an appliance rather than a general user-facing software platform, some exceptions to password enforcement policies are claimed.

9.3.13 Limit Access via SSH - The Malcolm aggregator base operating system does not create multiple regular user accounts: only root and an aggregator service account are used. SSH access for root is disabled. SSH login with a password is also disallowed: only key-based authentication is accepted. The service account accepts no keys by default. As such, the AllowUsers, AllowGroups, DenyUsers, and DenyGroups values in sshd_config do not apply.

9.5 Restrict Access to the su Command - The Malcolm aggregator base operating system does not create multiple regular user accounts: only root and an aggregator service account are used.

10.1.10 Set maxlogins for all accounts and 10.5 Set Timeout on ttys - The Malcolm aggregator base operating system does not create multiple regular user accounts: only root and an aggregator service account are used.

12.10 Find SUID System Executables, 12.11 Find SGID System Executables - The few files found by these scripts are valid exceptions required by the Malcolm aggregator base operating system's core requirements.

Please review the notes for these additional guidelines. While not claiming an exception, the Malcolm aggregator base operating system may implement them in a manner different than is described by the CIS Debian Linux 9 Benchmark or the hardenedlinux/harbian-audit audit scripts.

4.1 Restrict Core Dumps - The Malcolm aggregator base operating system disables core dumps using a configuration file for ulimit named /etc/security/limits.d/limits.conf. The audit script checking for this does not check the limits.d subdirectory, which is why this is incorrectly flagged as noncompliant.

5.4 Ensure ctrl-alt-del is disabled - The Malcolm aggregator base operating system disables the ctrl+alt+delete key sequence by executing systemctl disable ctrl-alt-del.target during installation and the command systemctl mask ctrl-alt-del.target at boot time.

6.19 Configure Network Time Protocol (NTP) - While time synchronization is supported on the Malcolm aggregator base operating system, an exception is claimed for this rule as the network sensor device may be configured to sync to servers in a different way than specified in the benchmark.

7.4.4 Create /etc/hosts.deny, 7.7.1 Ensure Firewall is active, 7.7.4.1 Ensure default deny firewall policy, 7.7.4.3 Ensure default deny firewall policy, 7.7.4.4 Ensure outbound and established connections are configured - The Malcolm aggregator base operating system is configured with an appropriately locked-down software firewall (managed by "Uncomplicated Firewall" ufw). However, the methods outlined in the CIS benchmark recommendations do not account for this configuration.

8.7 Verifies integrity all packages - The script which verifies package integrity only "fails" because of missing (status ??5?????? displayed by the utility) language ("locale") files, which are removed as part of the Malcolm aggregator base operating system's trimming-down process. All non-locale-related system files pass intergrity checks.

Known issues

PCAP file export error when Zeek logs are in Moloch search results

Moloch has a nice feature that allows you to export PCAP files matching the filters currently populating the search field. However, Moloch viewer will raise an exception if records created from Zeek logs are found among the search results to be exported. For this reason, if you are using the export PCAP feature it is recommended that you apply the PCAP Files view to filter your search results prior to doing the export.

Manual Kibana index pattern refresh

Because some fields are created in Elasticsearch dynamically when Zeek logs are ingested by Logstash, they may not have been present when Kibana configures its index pattern field mapping during initialization. As such, those fields will not show up in Kibana visualizations until Kibana’s copy of the field list is refreshed. Malcolm periodically refreshes this list, but if fields are missing from your visualizations you may wish to do it manually.

After Malcolm ingests your data (or, more specifically, after it has ingested a new log type it has not seen before) you may manually refresh Kibana’s field list by clicking ManagementIndex Patterns, then selecting the sessions2-* index pattern and clicking the reload 🗘 button near the upper-right of the window.

Refreshing Kibana's cached index pattern

Installation example using Ubuntu 18.04 LTS

This installation should work without issues if you have a newer version than 1.23.2. If you have an older version you have to install 1.23.2 or higher. Follow the next steps to install docker-compose version 1.23.2:

Here's a step-by-step example of getting CSI-SIEM using Malcolm from GitHub, configuring your system and your Malcolm instance, and running it on a system running Ubuntu Linux. Your mileage may vary depending on your individual system configuration, but this should be a good starting point.

user@host:~$ sudo curl -L "https://github.com/docker/compose/releases/download/1.23.2/docker-compose-$(uname -s)-$(uname -m)" -o /usr/local/bin/docker-compose
user@host:~/$ sudo apt-get remove docker-compose
user@host:~/$ sudo chmod +x /usr/local/bin/docker-compose
user@host:~/$ sudo ln -s /usr/local/bin/docker-compose /usr/bin/docker-compose

If you are using the tar file skip the next git clone step, and continue. If you are obtaining Malcolm using git instead, run the following command to clone Malcolm into a local working copy:

user@host:~$ git clone https://github.com/Information-Warfare-Center/CSI-SIEM/
Cloning into 'Malcolm'...
remote: Enumerating objects: 443, done.
remote: Counting objects: 100% (443/443), done.
remote: Compressing objects: 100% (310/310), done.
remote: Total 443 (delta 81), reused 441 (delta 79), pack-reused 0
Receiving objects: 100% (443/443), 6.87 MiB | 18.86 MiB/s, done.
Resolving deltas: 100% (81/81), done.

user@host:~$   sudo chown -R csi:csi CSI-SIEM/

user@host:~$ cd CSI-SIEM/
-PLEASE READ THE NOTE BELOW ABOUT FILE PERMISSION!!

NOTE: You must give ownership of the CSI-SIEM folder to your non-sudo account — If you're using CSI-Linux the csi user account must own the CSI-SIEM folder in order for the SIEM to install correctly. You cannot install Malcolm using root, or the permissions will not work correctly. The initial install script will use sudo in the next step, but the --configure step after that will only work using a non-privileged user that is allowed to write to the folder. Use the chown command to give your user ownership of CSI-SIEM the folder. If for some reason anything fails during the installation and says you don't have permission, perform the chown command again on the entire folder recursively.

Next, run the install.py script to configure your system. Replace user in this example with your local account username, and follow the prompts. Most questions have an acceptable default you can accept by pressing the Enter key. Depending on whether you are installing Malcolm from the release tarball or inside of a git working copy, the questions below will be slightly different, but for the most part are the same.

user@host:~/Downloads$ sudo python3 scripts/install.py
Installing required packages: ['apache2-utils', 'make', 'openssl']

"docker info" failed, attempt to install Docker? (Y/n): y

Attempt to install Docker using official repositories? (Y/n): y
Installing required packages: ['apt-transport-https', 'ca-certificates', 'curl', 'gnupg-agent', 'software-properties-common']
Installing docker packages: ['docker-ce', 'docker-ce-cli', 'containerd.io']
Installation of docker packages apparently succeeded

Add a non-root user to the "docker" group? (y/n): y

Enter user account: user

Add another non-root user to the "docker" group? (y/n): n

"docker-compose version" failed, attempt to install docker-compose? (Y/n): y

Install docker-compose directly from docker github? (Y/n): y
Download and installation of docker-compose apparently succeeded


fs.file-max increases allowed maximum for file handles
fs.file-max= appears to be missing from /etc/sysctl.conf, append it? (Y/n): y

fs.inotify.max_user_watches increases allowed maximum for monitored files
fs.inotify.max_user_watches= appears to be missing from /etc/sysctl.conf, append it? (Y/n): y

fs.inotify.max_queued_events increases queue size for monitored files
fs.inotify.max_queued_events= appears to be missing from /etc/sysctl.conf, append it? (Y/n): y

fs.inotify.max_user_instances increases allowed maximum monitor file watchers
fs.inotify.max_user_instances= appears to be missing from /etc/sysctl.conf, append it? (Y/n): y


vm.max_map_count increases allowed maximum for memory segments
vm.max_map_count= appears to be missing from /etc/sysctl.conf, append it? (Y/n): y


net.core.somaxconn increases allowed maximum for socket connections
net.core.somaxconn= appears to be missing from /etc/sysctl.conf, append it? (Y/n): y


vm.swappiness adjusts the preference of the system to swap vs. drop runtime memory pages
vm.swappiness= appears to be missing from /etc/sysctl.conf, append it? (Y/n): y


vm.dirty_background_ratio defines the percentage of system memory fillable with "dirty" pages before flushing
vm.dirty_background_ratio= appears to be missing from /etc/sysctl.conf, append it? (Y/n): y


vm.dirty_ratio defines the maximum percentage of dirty system memory before committing everything
vm.dirty_ratio= appears to be missing from /etc/sysctl.conf, append it? (Y/n): y


/etc/security/limits.d/limits.conf increases the allowed maximums for file handles and memlocked segments
/etc/security/limits.d/limits.conf does not exist, create it? (Y/n): y

install.py will now exit. Run install.py again like you did at the beginning of the example, only remove the sudo and add --configure to run install.py in "configuration only" mode. Also, you may need to run the 'sudo chown -R user:group CSI-SIEM/' command again, because the install.py makes a file on the last configuration and that may stop you from running the next command when not using sudo. You do not want to run the next step as a Root user or using sudo! Run the next command without sudo, or modify the permission for the user you are using.

user@host:~/CSI-SIEM$ python3 scripts/install.py --configure

Now that any necessary system configuration changes have been made, the local Malcolm instance will be configured:

Setting 6g for Elasticsearch and 2500m for Logstash. Is this OK? (Y/n): y

Restart Malcolm upon system or Docker daemon restart? (y/N): N

If you selected Yes for Restart Malcolm you'll get the following, if not just skip it. Don't select Yes unless you 
want the SIEM to run on every start up; it is not recommended.

Select Malcolm restart behavior ('no', 'on-failure', 'always', 'unless-stopped'): unless-stopped

Authenticate against Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) server? (y/N): n

Periodically close old Elasticsearch indices? (Y/n): y

Indices older than 5 years will be periodically closed. Is this OK? (Y/n): n

Enter index close threshold (e.g., 90 days, 2 years, etc.): 90 days

Indices older than 1 years will be periodically closed. Is this OK? (Y/n): y

Periodically delete old Elasticsearch indices? (Y/n): y

Indices older than 10 years will be periodically deleted. Is this OK? (Y/n): n

Enter index delete threshold (e.g., 90 days, 2 years, etc.): 90 days 

Indices older than 5 years will be periodically deleted. Is this OK? (Y/n): y

Periodically delete the oldest Elasticsearch indices when the database exceeds a certain size? (Y/n): y

Indices will be deleted when the database exceeds 10000 gigabytes. Is this OK? (Y/n): n

Enter index threshold in gigabytes: 100

Indices will be deleted when the database exceeds 100 gigabytes. Is this OK? (Y/n): y

Automatically analyze all PCAP files with Zeek? (y/N): y

Perform reverse DNS lookup locally for source and destination IP addresses in Zeek logs? (y/N): n

Perform hardware vendor OUI lookups for MAC addresses? (Y/n): y

Expose Logstash port to external hosts? (y/N): n

Forward Logstash logs to external Elasticstack instance? (y/N): n

Enable file extraction with Zeek? (y/N): y

Select file extraction behavior ('none', 'known', 'mapped', 'all', 'interesting'): interesting

Select file preservation behavior ('quarantined', 'all', 'none'): quarantined

Scan extracted files with ClamAV? (y/N): y

Download updated ClamAV virus signatures periodically? (Y/n): y

Should Malcolm capture network traffic to PCAP files? (y/N): y

Specify capture interface(s) (comma-separated): enp0s3

Capture packets using netsniff-ng? (Y/n): y

Capture packets using tcpdump? (y/N): n

Malcolm has been installed to /home/user/CSI-SIEM. See README.md for more information.
Scripts for starting and stopping Malcolm and changing authentication-related settings can be found
in /home/user/CSI-SIEM/scripts.

At this point you should reboot your computer so that the new system settings can be applied. After rebooting, log back in and return to the directory to which Malcolm was installed (or to which the git working copy was cloned).

Now we need to set up authentication and generate some unique self-signed SSL certificates. You can replace analyst in this example with whatever username you wish to use to log in to the Malcolm web interface. Go back to the CSI-SIEM folder and run the following commands:

user@host:~/CSI-SIEM$ ./scripts/auth_setup
Username: analyst
analyst password:
analyst password (again):

(Re)generate self-signed certificates for HTTPS access [Y/n]? y

(Re)generate self-signed certificates for a remote log forwarder [Y/n]? y

Store username/password for forwarding Logstash events to a secondary, external Elasticsearch instance [y/N]? n

For now, rather than build Malcolm from scratch, we'll pull images from Docker Hub:

user@host:~/CSI-SIEM$ docker-compose pull
Pulling curator       ... done
Pulling elastalert    ... done
Pulling elasticsearch ... done
Pulling file-monitor  ... done
Pulling filebeat      ... done
Pulling freq          ... done
Pulling name-map-ui   ... done
Pulling htadmin       ... done
Pulling kibana        ... done
Pulling logstash      ... done
Pulling moloch        ... done
Pulling nginx-proxy   ... done
Pulling pcap-capture  ... done
Pulling pcap-monitor  ... done
Pulling upload        ... done
Pulling zeek          ... done

user@host:~/CSI-SIEM$ docker images
REPOSITORY                                          TAG                 IMAGE ID            CREATED             SIZE
malcolmnetsec/curator                               2.1.0               xxxxxxxxxxxx        20 hours ago        246MB
malcolmnetsec/elastalert                            2.1.0               xxxxxxxxxxxx        20 hours ago        408MB
malcolmnetsec/filebeat-oss                          2.1.0               xxxxxxxxxxxx        20 hours ago        474MB
malcolmnetsec/file-monitor                          2.1.0               xxxxxxxxxxxx        20 hours ago        386MB
malcolmnetsec/file-upload                           2.1.0               xxxxxxxxxxxx        20 hours ago        199MB
malcolmnetsec/freq                                  2.1.0               xxxxxxxxxxxx        20 hours ago        390MB
malcolmnetsec/htadmin                               2.1.0               xxxxxxxxxxxx        20 hours ago        180MB
malcolmnetsec/kibana-oss                            2.1.0               xxxxxxxxxxxx        20 hours ago        1.07GB
malcolmnetsec/logstash-oss                          2.1.0               xxxxxxxxxxxx        20 hours ago        1.05GB
malcolmnetsec/moloch                                2.1.0               xxxxxxxxxxxx        20 hours ago        667MB
malcolmnetsec/name-map-ui                           2.1.0               xxxxxxxxxxxx        20 hours ago        134MB
malcolmnetsec/nginx-proxy                           2.1.0               xxxxxxxxxxxx        20 hours ago        118MB
malcolmnetsec/pcap-capture                          2.1.0               xxxxxxxxxxxx        20 hours ago        111MB
malcolmnetsec/pcap-monitor                          2.1.0               xxxxxxxxxxxx        20 hours ago        156MB
malcolmnetsec/zeek                                  2.1.0               xxxxxxxxxxxx        20 hours ago        442MB
docker.elastic.co/elasticsearch/elasticsearch-oss   7.6.2               xxxxxxxxxxxx        20 hours ago        693MB

Finally, we can start Malcolm. When Malcolm starts it will stream informational and debug messages to the console. If you wish, you can safely close the console or use Ctrl+C to stop these messages; Malcolm will continue running in the background.

user@host:~/CSI-SIEM$ ./scripts/start
Creating network "malcolm_default" with the default driver
Creating malcolm_curator_1       ... done
Creating malcolm_elastalert_1    ... done
Creating malcolm_elasticsearch_1 ... done
Creating malcolm_file-monitor_1  ... done
Creating malcolm_filebeat_1      ... done
Creating malcolm_freq_1          ... done
Creating malcolm_htadmin_1       ... done
Creating malcolm_kibana_1        ... done
Creating malcolm_logstash_1      ... done
Creating malcolm_name-map-ui_1   ... done
Creating malcolm_moloch_1        ... done
Creating malcolm_nginx-proxy_1   ... done
Creating malcolm_pcap-capture_1  ... done
Creating malcolm_pcap-monitor_1  ... done
Creating malcolm_upload_1        ... done
Creating malcolm_zeek_1          ... done

In a few minutes, Malcolm services will be accessible via the following URLs:
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  - Moloch: https://localhost/
  - Kibana: https://localhost/kibana/
  - PCAP Upload (web): https://localhost/upload/
  - PCAP Upload (sftp): sftp://[email protected]:8022/files/
  - Host and subnet name mapping editor: https://localhost/name-map-ui/
  - Account management: https://localhost:488/
…
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
…
Attaching to malcolm_curator_1, malcolm_elastalert_1, malcolm_elasticsearch_1, malcolm_file-monitor_1, malcolm_filebeat_1, malcolm_freq_1, malcolm_htadmin_1, malcolm_kibana_1, malcolm_logstash_1, malcolm_name-map-ui_1, malcolm_moloch_1, malcolm_nginx-proxy_1, malcolm_pcap-capture_1, malcolm_pcap-monitor_1, malcolm_upload_1, malcolm_zeek_1
…

It will take several minutes for all of Malcolm's components to start up. Logstash will take the longest, probably 3 to 5 minutes. You'll know Logstash is fully ready when you see Logstash spit out a bunch of starting up messages, ending with this:

…
logstash_1  | [2019-06-11T15:45:42,009][INFO ][logstash.agent    ] Pipelines running {:count=>4, :running_pipelines=>[:"malcolm-output", :"malcolm-input", :"malcolm-zeek", :"malcolm-enrichment"], :non_running_pipelines=>[]}
logstash_1  | [2019-06-11T15:45:42,599][INFO ][logstash.agent    ] Successfully started Logstash API endpoint {:port=>9600}
…

You can now open a web browser and navigate to one of the Malcolm user interfaces.

Monitoring Malcolm

If you are technically-minded, you may wish to follow the debug output provided by ./scripts/start (or ./scripts/logs if you need to re-open the log stream after you've closed it), although there is a lot there and it may be hard to distinguish whether or not something is okay.

Running docker-compose ps -a should give you a good idea if all of Malcolm's Docker containers started up and, in some cases, may be able to indicate if the containers are "healthy" or not.

After upgrading following one of the previous outlines, give Malcolm several minutes to get started. Once things are up and running, open one of Malcolm's web interfaces to verify that things are working.

Loading new Kibana dashboards and visualizations

Once the upgraded instance Malcolm has started up, you'll probably want to import the new dashboards and visualizations for Kibana. You can signal Malcolm to load the new visualizations by opening Kibana, clicking ManagementIndex Patterns, then selecting the sessions2-* index pattern and clicking the delete 🗑 button near the upper-right of the window. Confirm the Delete index pattern? prompt by clicking Delete. Close the Kibana browser window. After a few minutes the missing index pattern will be detected and Kibana will be signalled to load its new dashboards and visualizations.

Copyright

Malcolm is Copyright 2020 Battelle Energy Alliance, LLC, and is developed and released through the cooperation of the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.

See License.txt for the terms of its release.

Contact information of author(s) for Malcolm:

Seth Grover

Contact information of author(s) of CSI-Linux can be found at:

[CSI-Linux's Website] (https://csilinux.com)

Other Software

Idaho National Laboratory is a cutting edge research facility which is constantly producing high quality research and software. Feel free to take a look at our other software and scientific offerings at:

Primary Technology Offerings Page

Supported Open Source Software

Raw Experiment Open Source Software

Unsupported Open Source Software

CSI-Linux