21 September, 2007

First Impressions of Sguil 0.7.0

Since first using Sguil on version 0.5.3, I have definitely become a believer in Sguil and network security monitoring. Sguil is much more than just a front-end for looking at Snort alerts. It integrates other features, such as session data and full content packet captures, that make security monitoring much more effective than just looking at IDS alerts.

I recently upgraded my version of Sguil from the release version, 0.6.1, to the new beta version, 0.7.0. I have not even been using it for a week yet, but I do have a few first impressions.

Before talking about Sguil itself, I would like to say thanks to Bamm Visscher, the original author of Sguil, Steve Halligan, a major contributor, and all the others who have contributed. I can say that it is easy to tell that Sguil is written and developed by security analysts, and it is bound to make you look smart to your bosses. Sguil has a thriving community of users and contributors that have been very active in improvements and documentation.

Upgrading Sguil from 0.6.1 to 0.7.0 was less difficult than I had anticipated. Reading the Sguil on RedHat HOWTO is a good idea, even if using a different operating system or distribution. It is not necessary to follow the HOWTO but it does provide a lot of useful information to ease the installation or upgrade process.

The basic procedure for upgrading was to stop sguild and sensor_agent, run the provided script to update the database, upgrade the components, and add PADS. Of course, if you are doing this in a production environment then you probably would want to backup the database, sguild files on the server, and sguil files on the sensors. Since I was upgrading at home, I didn't bother backing up my database.

Under the hood, communications between sensors and the Sguil server has changed. The network and data flow diagrams I contributed to the NSMWiki show the change from one sensor agent to multiple agents. One reason for this change is that it will make it easier to distribute sensor services across multiple systems, allowing people to run packet logging, Snort in IDS mode, or sancp on separate systems. I can see this being extremely useful if you are performance-limited because of old hardware, or if you monitor high-traffic environments.

Another reason for the change in agents was to make it easier to add other data sources. An example of this, the only one I know of so far, is Victor Julien's modsec2sguil. It will be interesting to see if the changes to Sguil lead to other agents to add support for other data sources. I know that David Bianco has discussed writing an OSSEC agent to add a host-based IDS as a Sguil data source.

The changes to the client seem relatively minor but are useful. David Bianco already has written about added support for cloaking investigative activities in Sguil. Sguil 0.7.0 has added support for proxying DNS requests through a third party like OpenDNS. In fact, this feature was enabled by default when I installed my new client.

Another change is PADS, which will display real-time alerts to the client as new assets are detected on the network. An example of a PADS alerts is:

PADS New Asset - smtp Microsoft Exchange SMTP
Though I like the idea of PADS a lot, it currently has some issues that definitely limit its usefulness. In its current form, Sguil's implementation of PADS has a bug where it generates alerts for external services, for instance when my home systems connect to external web or SMTP servers. The goal of PADS in the context of Sguil is really internal service detection so you can see any unusual or non-standard services on systems you are monitoring.

Even once the bug is fixed, I can see it being extremely noisy on a large, diverse network. I may make a separate post in the future with ideas regarding PADS. Profiles for groups of systems and their services is definitely one idea that might be useful, but I'm not sure how hard it would be to implement. PADS has potential, but it will take some time.

Another nice change in the Sguil client is the ability to click the reference URLs or SID when displaying Snort rules, opening your browser to the relevant page. This was a feature that was sorely needed and it will be nice not to need copy and paste for Snort rule references.

I'm looking forward to further testing and the future release of 0.7.0.

2 comments:

  1. Hi nr,

    I am really interested to deploy sguil 0.7 on my test network and then pass to my production network (actually with 2 snort sensors, one is inline).

    I want to know which are the bugs you mentioned about PADS and how can I fix it.

    many thanks nr.

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  2. The one problem I had with PADS was alerting on external services. For instance, when browsing to an external web site I would see an alert for the external web service. geek00l pointed out that I could fix this by adding a bpf filter to my options when starting PADS. With a bpf filter to look only for my network, it should be much less noisy and more useful. However, I believe the intention is for the network to be monitored to be set in the configuration file. If that's the case, it is a bug, but either way there is a fairly simple work-around.

    My other reservations are with using it in large environments. Ideally, I would like asset profiling so you can establish predefined services for various profiles, for example, workstations, web servers and DNS servers. Then when you bring a new box online it would not alert unless the system had non-standard services based on the profile. I think the goal should be to only see unexpected services instead of the current implementation where you see any new services.

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