Awesome
Brocapi
HTTP API for mass processing PCAPs through Bro IDS, tagging, and submitting the resulting logs to a syslog server.
Overview
Brocapi consists of two parts:
- A Flask API for receiving PCAPS via HTTP POST and queues a job in Redis via RQ
- An RQ worker that receives the jobs queued from the API to process the PCAPs through Bro and submit the resulting logs to a syslog server.
Requirements
Python Modules
flask
rq
redis
System Packages
Bro IDS
Redis instance running on the same host as the worker
A Syslog server accepting TCP or UDP connections
Optional
gunicorn
supervisor
Configuration
By default Brocapi expects the config to be located at /etc/brocapi.conf
[main]
# debug logging
debug = off
# worker log file
worker_log = /var/log/brocapi/brocapi_worker.log
# api log file
api_log = /var/log/brocapi/brocapi_api.log
[bro]
# location of your Bro binary
bro_bin = /opt/bro/bin/bro
# directory to contain job output
processing_dir = /opt/brocapi/jobs/
# bro logs to ignore completely
log_blacklist = ["loaded_scripts.log", "packet_filter.log", "reporter.log"]
[syslog]
# syslog host
syslog_host = 127.0.0.1
# syslog port
syslog_port = 514
# syslog protocol (tcp/udp)
syslog_proto = tcp
# syslog program prefix (format string). For example if you use "bro_" as the program prefix, your HTTP logs will have the syslog program bro_http
syslog_prefix = bro25_%s%
Running Brocapi
The API and workers can be run directly i.e.:
./brocapi.py
but there are a few sample configurations for running Brocapi as a service under Systemd:
- brocapi.service: Runs the flask app under gunicorn
- brocapi_worker.service: Runs the brocapi worker under supervisor. Included the supervisor config in brocapi_worker.ini
Submitting a Job
Brocapi only has one route /submit/pcap
and it expects a POST request with 1 required and 1 optional parameter:
- 1 or more PCAPs in an array called 'file'
- Optional 'tag' parameter which Brocapi will use as the value for the syslog hostname
Example submission using Curl without a job tag:
{11:38}~/Desktop ➭ curl -k -X POST -F 'file[]=@2017-08-28-Fobos-campaign-Rig-EK-sends-Bunitu.pcap' https://127.0.0.1/submit/pcap
{"status": "job queued", "files": ["2017-08-28-Fobos-campaign-Rig-EK-sends-Bunitu.pcap"], "tag": null, "job_id": "9179876e-08cf-4539-8de7-8a8bb3b0dcaf", "success": true}
Example submissions using Curl with a job tag:
{11:39}~/Desktop ➭ curl -k -X POST -F 'file[]=@2017-08-28-Fobos-campaign-Rig-EK-sends-Bunitu.pcap' -F 'tag=testing' https://127.0.0.1/submit/pcap
{"status": "job queued", "files": ["2017-08-28-Fobos-campaign-Rig-EK-sends-Bunitu.pcap"], "tag": "testing", "job_id": "507965ab-6511-4cd4-9542-4671eb140f92", "success": true}%
Returned data:
{
"status": "job queued", ## Status of the job. Right now the only value is "job queued" since we're not async and waiting on the full status
"files": [
"2017-08-28-Fobos-campaign-Rig-EK-sends-Bunitu.pcap" ## An array of the pcaps that were submitted
],
"tag": "testing", ## The tag that was supplied to mark the job
"job_id": "507965ab-6511-4cd4-9542-4671eb140f92", ## UUID for the job
"success": true ## Success or failure
}
Job Directories
Once a job is received, the API will create the following example directory structure for the job:
jobs # Configured jobs directory
└── fe5f53b3-474d-4cb7-8ece-a2786f841af7 # UUID for the job
├── logs # Directory for all the logs
│ ├── bro # Directory containing all the Bro logs
│ │ ├── capture_loss.log
│ │ ├── conn.log
│ │ ├── dhcp.log
│ │ ├── dns.log
│ │ ├── files.log
│ │ ├── http.log
│ │ ├── loaded_scripts.log
│ │ ├── packet_filter.log
│ │ ├── ssl.log
│ │ ├── stats.log
│ │ ├── weird.log
│ │ └── x509.log
│ └── syslog # Not used right now
└── pcaps # Directory containing the submitted PCAPS
├── 1725aa89-2f9e-5a44-88da-6bce278e77d3.pcap
├── 1ec8ca5f-66dd-5200-9cf2-235638ef13f9.pcap
├── 20a3341d-8134-5136-a03c-cb8c3d3fc5be.pcap
├── 20cf04e4-a9ef-5415-9f17-bf4c80214c33.pcap
└── 2f506083-8a84-57c4-8d37-9304157b0899.pcap
Worker Activity
Once the API queues a job into Redis via RQ, a worker will pick up the job and perform the following actions
- Iterate through the supplied PCAPS and invoke Bro with the following paramters:
bro -C -r <pcap> local
- If any logs were generated, create a connection to the configured syslog server
- Iterate through each generated log type and submit each line to the configured syslog server
TODO
- Make config location configurable
- Make log_blacklist configurable. It exists in the config, but isn't honored by the worker
- Make the Redis host configurable
- Support moving logs on the host post-job for setups where a log sender might be monitoring a directory
- Add a route for retrieving logs, pcaps, status, etc of previously submitted jobs