Awesome
<h1 align="center"> Threat Bus </h1> <h4 align="center">A threat intelligence dissemination layer for open-source security tools.
Getting Started — Contributing Guidelines — Writing Plugins — License — Documentation
</h4> <div align="center"> </div>Key Features
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Connect Open-Source Security Tools: Threat Bus is a pub-sub broker for threat intelligence data. With Threat Bus you can seamlessly integrate threat intel platforms like OpenCTI or MISP with detection tools and databases like Zeek or VAST.
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Native STIX-2: Threat Bus transports indicators and sightings encoded as per the STIX-2 open format specification.
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Plugin-based Architecture: The project is plugin-based and can be extended easily. Read about the different plugin types and how to write your own. We welcome contributions to adopt new open source tools!
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Official Plugins: We maintain many plugins right in the official Threat Bus repository. Check out our integrations for MISP, Zeek, CIFv3, and generally apps that connect via ZeroMQ, like vast-threatbus and our OpenCTI connector.
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Snapshotting: The snapshot feature allows subscribers to directly request threat intelligence data for a certain time range from other applications. Threat Bus handles the point-to-point communication of all involved apps.
Getting Started
The config.yaml.example
file provides a working configuration for Threat Bus
with all existing application plugins enabled together with the RabbitMQ
backbone.
The following example shows how to connect Zeek via Threat Bus. There are more integrations available, so make sure to check out all Threat Bus projects on PyPI.
The example assumes that threatbus
is available in your PATH. See the
section on Installation below for more information on how to
get there.
Start Threat Bus
threatbus
Start with a specially named config file
The config.yaml.example
file in this directory gives an overview of
the available config keys and their default values.
threatbus -c /path/to/your/special-config.yaml
Environment variables take precedence over config file values. Prefix
everything with THREATBUS_
export THREATBUS_LOGGING__CONSOLE=true
threatbus -c /path/to/your/special-config.yaml
Note that you must use a double underscores __
in your env to refer to nested
config variables.
Start Zeek as Threat Bus app
zeek -i <INTERFACE> -C ./apps/zeek/threatbus.zeek
Start Zeek and request a snapshot
zeek -i <INTERFACE> -C ./apps/zeek/threatbus.zeek "Tenzir::snapshot_intel=30 days"
Threat Bus also ships as pre-built Docker image and is available on Docker Hub.
Use the Threat Bus Docker container
docker run tenzir/threatbus:latest --help
Start Threat Bus container with a custom config file
docker run -p 47661:47661 -v $PWD/my-custom-config.yaml:/opt/tenzir/threatbus/my-custom-config.yaml tenzir/threatbus:latest -c my-custom-config.yaml
Tip: Threat Bus checks for config files with default names. If you mount your
config file to /opt/tenzir/threatbus/config.yaml
, you can start the
application without specifying the config file location with the -c
parameter.
Installation
Install threatbus
and all plugins that you require. Optionally, use a virtual
environment.
Note that Threat Bus requires at least Python 3.7+, earlier versions are not supported.
virtualenv venv # optional
source venv/bin/activate # optional
pip install threatbus
pip install threatbus-inmem # inmemory backbone plugin
pip install threatbus-rabbitmq # RabbitMQ backbone plugin
pip install threatbus-misp[zmq] # MISP application plugin
pip install threatbus-zeek # Zeek application plugin
pip install threatbus-zmq # ZeroMQ application plugin
pip install threatbus-<plugin_name>
Testing
Use the Makefile
to run unit and integration tests.
make unit-tests
make integration-tests
The integration tests require a local Zeek and Docker installation.
Development
Setup a virtual environment and install threatbus
and some plugins with the
in development mode:
virtualenv venv
source venv/bin/activate
make dev-mode
Configuration & Extension
A plugin must define a setup.py
. Whenever a plugin is installed, you have to
add a corresponding configuration section to threatbus
' config.yaml
. That
section has to be named after the name
in the entrypoint declaration of the
plugin's setup.py
file.
Please adhere to the plugin naming conventions
and always prefix your plugin name with threatbus-
.
Plugins can either be apps or backbones. Application plugins (apps) add new functionality to Threat Bus and allow communication to a specific app and/or via a specific protocol (e.g., ZeroMQ or Zeek/broker). Backbone plugins add a new storage and distribution backend to Threat Bus (e.g., in-memory or RabbitMQ).
Example:
- plugin folder structure:
plugins ├── apps | └── threatbus-myapp │ ├── setup.py | └── threatbus_myapp.py └── backbones └── threatbus-inmem ├── setup.py └── threatbus_inmem.py
setup.py
from setuptools import setup setup( name="threatbus-myapp", install_requires="threatbus", entry_points={"threatbus.app": ["myapp = threatbus_myapp"]}, py_modules=["threatbus_myapp"], )
config.yaml
entry forthreatbus
... plugins: apps: myapp: ...
Threat Bus API
Plugins specifications are available in threatbus/appspecs.py
and
threatbus/backbonespecs.py
, respectively. For any plugin, you should at least
implement the run
function.
App plugins are provided two callback functions to use for subscription management. Internally, Threat Bus will propagate subscription requests to all installed backbone plugins.
The subscription callback allows applications to request an optional snapshot
time delta. Threat Bus will forward snapshot requests to all those apps that
have implemented the snapshot feature (see threatbus/appspecs.py
).
Implementation
Please use the StoppableWorker base class to model your plugin's busy work. Plugins should never block the main thread of the application. Implementing that class also facilitates a graceful shutdown.
All officially maintained Threat Bus plugins implement StoppableWorker
. Refer
to any of the existing plugins for an example.
License
Threat Bus comes with a 3-clause BSD license.