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Menlo Security

Collect logs from Menlo Security products with Elastic Agent

Version
0.1.0 (View all)
Compatible Kibana version(s)
8.13.0 or higher
Supported Serverless project types

Security
Subscription level
Basic
Level of support
Elastic

Menlo Security’s isolation-centric approach splits web browsing and document retrieval between the user’s device and an isolated, Disposable Virtual Container (DVC) away from the endpoint. All risky code is executed in the isolated DVC and never reaches the endpoint. Only safe display data is sent to the user’s browser. User traffic is automatically sent to this infrastructure without any impact on the users themselves.

Web

Menlo Security's cloud based Browser Security prevents phishing and malware attacks on any browser and any device across your hybrid enterprise.

DLP

Data Loss Prevention (also known as Data Leak Prevention) detects potential data breaches or data ex-filtration transmissions and prevents them by detecting and optionally blocking sensitive data passing through the Menlo Security platform.

Compatibility

This module has been tested against the Menlo Security API version 2.0

Data streams

The Menlo Security integration collects data for the following two events:

Event Type
Web
DLP

Setup

To collect data through the REST API you will need your Menlo Security API URL and an API token.

The API token to collect logs must have the Log Export API permission

Logs Reference

Web

This is the Web dataset.

Example

An example event for web looks as following:

{
    "@timestamp": "2023-11-21T13:12:37.102Z",
    "agent": {
        "ephemeral_id": "22fb9f42-0c3b-4c46-9fae-06cd89923a5b",
        "id": "9a98930c-439d-4a0b-81f0-f4228f8c523f",
        "name": "docker-fleet-agent",
        "type": "filebeat",
        "version": "8.12.2"
    },
    "client": {
        "geo": {
            "country_iso_code": "US"
        },
        "ip": "192.18.1.3"
    },
    "cloud": {
        "region": "us-east-1c"
    },
    "data_stream": {
        "dataset": "menlo.web",
        "namespace": "ep",
        "type": "logs"
    },
    "destination": {
        "geo": {
            "country_iso_code": "US"
        },
        "ip": "192.18.1.1"
    },
    "dns": {
        "answers": {
            "data": [
                "192.18.1.1"
            ]
        }
    },
    "ecs": {
        "version": "8.11.0"
    },
    "elastic_agent": {
        "id": "9a98930c-439d-4a0b-81f0-f4228f8c523f",
        "snapshot": false,
        "version": "8.12.2"
    },
    "event": {
        "agent_id_status": "verified",
        "category": [
            "web",
            "network",
            "threat"
        ],
        "dataset": "menlo.web",
        "ingested": "2024-03-28T13:32:25Z",
        "kind": "alert",
        "outcome": "unknown",
        "reason": "a77757d5-d3be-47ab-9394-cfff5887ade4"
    },
    "http": {
        "request": {
            "method": "GET"
        },
        "response": {
            "status_code": 308
        }
    },
    "input": {
        "type": "cel"
    },
    "menlo": {
        "web": {
            "categories": "Business and Economy",
            "content_type": "text/html; charset=UTF-8",
            "has_password": false,
            "is_iframe": "false",
            "request_type": "page_request",
            "risk_score": "low",
            "tab_id": "1",
            "tally": -1,
            "ua_type": "supported_browser"
        }
    },
    "network": {
        "protocol": "http"
    },
    "observer": {
        "geo": {
            "country_iso_code": "US"
        },
        "ip": [
            "192.18.1.2"
        ],
        "product": "MSIP",
        "vendor": "Menlo Security",
        "version": "2.0"
    },
    "related": {
        "ip": [
            "192.18.1.3",
            "192.18.1.1"
        ],
        "user": [
            "example_user"
        ]
    },
    "server": {
        "geo": {
            "country_iso_code": "US"
        },
        "ip": "192.18.1.1"
    },
    "source": {
        "geo": {
            "country_iso_code": "US"
        },
        "ip": "192.18.1.3"
    },
    "tags": [
        "menlo",
        "forwarded"
    ],
    "url": {
        "domain": "elastic.co",
        "original": "http://elastic.co/",
        "path": "/",
        "registered_domain": "elastic.co",
        "scheme": "http",
        "top_level_domain": "co"
    },
    "user": {
        "name": "example_user"
    },
    "user_agent": {
        "device": {
            "name": "Mac"
        },
        "name": "Chrome",
        "original": "Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10_15_7) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/119.0.0.0 Safari/537.36",
        "os": {
            "full": "Mac OS X 10.15.7",
            "name": "Mac OS X",
            "version": "10.15.7"
        },
        "version": "119.0.0.0"
    }
}

Exported fields

FieldDescriptionType
@timestamp
Event timestamp.
date
client.geo.country_iso_code
Country ISO code.
keyword
client.ip
IP address of the client (IPv4 or IPv6).
ip
cloud.account.id
The cloud account or organization id used to identify different entities in a multi-tenant environment. Examples: AWS account id, Google Cloud ORG Id, or other unique identifier.
keyword
cloud.availability_zone
Availability zone in which this host is running.
keyword
cloud.image.id
Image ID for the cloud instance.
keyword
cloud.instance.id
Instance ID of the host machine.
keyword
cloud.instance.name
Instance name of the host machine.
keyword
cloud.machine.type
Machine type of the host machine.
keyword
cloud.project.id
Name of the project in Google Cloud.
keyword
cloud.provider
Name of the cloud provider. Example values are aws, azure, gcp, or digitalocean.
keyword
cloud.region
Region in which this host is running.
keyword
container.id
Unique container id.
keyword
container.image.name
Name of the image the container was built on.
keyword
container.labels
Image labels.
object
container.name
Container name.
keyword
data_stream.dataset
Data stream dataset.
constant_keyword
data_stream.namespace
Data stream namespace.
constant_keyword
data_stream.type
Data stream type.
constant_keyword
destination.domain
The domain name of the destination system. This value may be a host name, a fully qualified domain name, or another host naming format. The value may derive from the original event or be added from enrichment.
keyword
destination.geo.country_iso_code
Country ISO code.
keyword
destination.ip
IP address of the destination (IPv4 or IPv6).
ip
dns.answers.data
The data describing the resource. The meaning of this data depends on the type and class of the resource record.
keyword
ecs.version
ECS version this event conforms to. ecs.version is a required field and must exist in all events. When querying across multiple indices -- which may conform to slightly different ECS versions -- this field lets integrations adjust to the schema version of the events.
keyword
error.message
Error message.
match_only_text
event.category
This is one of four ECS Categorization Fields, and indicates the second level in the ECS category hierarchy. event.category represents the "big buckets" of ECS categories. For example, filtering on event.category:process yields all events relating to process activity. This field is closely related to event.type, which is used as a subcategory. This field is an array. This will allow proper categorization of some events that fall in multiple categories.
keyword
event.created
event.created contains the date/time when the event was first read by an agent, or by your pipeline. This field is distinct from @timestamp in that @timestamp typically contain the time extracted from the original event. In most situations, these two timestamps will be slightly different. The difference can be used to calculate the delay between your source generating an event, and the time when your agent first processed it. This can be used to monitor your agent's or pipeline's ability to keep up with your event source. In case the two timestamps are identical, @timestamp should be used.
date
event.dataset
Event dataset.
constant_keyword
event.id
Unique ID to describe the event.
keyword
event.kind
This is one of four ECS Categorization Fields, and indicates the highest level in the ECS category hierarchy. event.kind gives high-level information about what type of information the event contains, without being specific to the contents of the event. For example, values of this field distinguish alert events from metric events. The value of this field can be used to inform how these kinds of events should be handled. They may warrant different retention, different access control, it may also help understand whether the data is coming in at a regular interval or not.
keyword
event.module
Event module.
constant_keyword
event.original
Raw text message of entire event. Used to demonstrate log integrity or where the full log message (before splitting it up in multiple parts) may be required, e.g. for reindex. This field is not indexed and doc_values are disabled. It cannot be searched, but it can be retrieved from _source. If users wish to override this and index this field, please see Field data types in the Elasticsearch Reference.
keyword
event.outcome
This is one of four ECS Categorization Fields, and indicates the lowest level in the ECS category hierarchy. event.outcome simply denotes whether the event represents a success or a failure from the perspective of the entity that produced the event. Note that when a single transaction is described in multiple events, each event may populate different values of event.outcome, according to their perspective. Also note that in the case of a compound event (a single event that contains multiple logical events), this field should be populated with the value that best captures the overall success or failure from the perspective of the event producer. Further note that not all events will have an associated outcome. For example, this field is generally not populated for metric events, events with event.type:info, or any events for which an outcome does not make logical sense.
keyword
event.reason
Reason why this event happened, according to the source. This describes the why of a particular action or outcome captured in the event. Where event.action captures the action from the event, event.reason describes why that action was taken. For example, a web proxy with an event.action which denied the request may also populate event.reason with the reason why (e.g. blocked site).
keyword
event.severity
The numeric severity of the event according to your event source. What the different severity values mean can be different between sources and use cases. It's up to the implementer to make sure severities are consistent across events from the same source. The Syslog severity belongs in log.syslog.severity.code. event.severity is meant to represent the severity according to the event source (e.g. firewall, IDS). If the event source does not publish its own severity, you may optionally copy the log.syslog.severity.code to event.severity.
long
event.type
This is one of four ECS Categorization Fields, and indicates the third level in the ECS category hierarchy. event.type represents a categorization "sub-bucket" that, when used along with the event.category field values, enables filtering events down to a level appropriate for single visualization. This field is an array. This will allow proper categorization of some events that fall in multiple event types.
keyword
file.name
Name of the file including the extension, without the directory.
keyword
host.architecture
Operating system architecture.
keyword
host.containerized
If the host is a container.
boolean
host.domain
Name of the domain of which the host is a member. For example, on Windows this could be the host's Active Directory domain or NetBIOS domain name. For Linux this could be the domain of the host's LDAP provider.
keyword
host.id
Unique host id. As hostname is not always unique, use values that are meaningful in your environment. Example: The current usage of beat.name.
keyword
host.mac
Host mac addresses.
keyword
host.name
Name of the host. It can contain what hostname returns on Unix systems, the fully qualified domain name, or a name specified by the user. The sender decides which value to use.
keyword
host.os.build
OS build information.
keyword
host.os.codename
OS codename, if any.
keyword
host.os.family
OS family (such as redhat, debian, freebsd, windows).
keyword
host.os.kernel
Operating system kernel version as a raw string.
keyword
host.os.name
Operating system name, without the version.
keyword
host.os.name.text
Multi-field of host.os.name.
text
host.os.platform
Operating system platform (such centos, ubuntu, windows).
keyword
host.os.version
Operating system version as a raw string.
keyword
host.type
Type of host. For Cloud providers this can be the machine type like t2.medium. If vm, this could be the container, for example, or other information meaningful in your environment.
keyword
http.request.method
HTTP request method. The value should retain its casing from the original event. For example, GET, get, and GeT are all considered valid values for this field.
keyword
http.request.mime_type
Mime type of the body of the request. This value must only be populated based on the content of the request body, not on the Content-Type header. Comparing the mime type of a request with the request's Content-Type header can be helpful in detecting threats or misconfigured clients.
keyword
http.request.referrer
Referrer for this HTTP request.
keyword
http.response.status_code
HTTP response status code.
long
input.type
Input type
keyword
log.offset
Log offset
long
menlo.web.cached
Indicates whether the resource was obtained from the isolated browser’s cache (True) or by downloading from the origin server (False)
boolean
menlo.web.casb_app_name
Cloud application name
keyword
menlo.web.casb_cat_name
Application category ID
keyword
menlo.web.casb_fun_name
Application function name
keyword
menlo.web.casb_org_name
Application organization name
keyword
menlo.web.casb_profile_id
Menlo CASB profile ID
keyword
menlo.web.casb_profile_name
Menlo CASB profile name attached to application or exception rule
keyword
menlo.web.casb_profile_type
Menlo CASB profile type (sanctioned/unsanctioned/unclassified)
keyword
menlo.web.casb_risk_score
Menlo risk score for application (0-10)
keyword
menlo.web.categories
Category Rules Category type classification
keyword
menlo.web.content_type
Page type
keyword
menlo.web.has_password
Presence of password in form POST request
boolean
menlo.web.is_iframe
Is inline frame (iframe) element
boolean
menlo.web.request_type
Request type
keyword
menlo.web.risk_score
Risk calculated for URL
keyword
menlo.web.sbox
Sandbox Inspection Result
keyword
menlo.web.sbox_mal_act
List of malicious activities found
keyword
menlo.web.soph
Full file scan result
keyword
menlo.web.tab_id
Tab creation number within a surrogate
keyword
menlo.web.tally
Count of risks encountered
long
menlo.web.threat_types
Top level risk
keyword
menlo.web.threats
Threat type identified by Menlo Security internal data
keyword
menlo.web.ua_type
The type of user agent
keyword
menlo.web.virus_details
Virus detail
keyword
menlo.web.xff_ip
X-Forwarded-For HTTP header field originating client IP address
keyword
message
For log events the message field contains the log message, optimized for viewing in a log viewer. For structured logs without an original message field, other fields can be concatenated to form a human-readable summary of the event. If multiple messages exist, they can be combined into one message.
match_only_text
network.protocol
In the OSI Model this would be the Application Layer protocol. For example, http, dns, or ssh. The field value must be normalized to lowercase for querying.
keyword
observer.geo.country_iso_code
Country ISO code.
keyword
observer.ip
IP addresses of the observer.
ip
observer.product
The product name of the observer.
keyword
observer.vendor
Vendor name of the observer.
keyword
observer.version
Observer version.
keyword
related.hash
All the hashes seen on your event. Populating this field, then using it to search for hashes can help in situations where you're unsure what the hash algorithm is (and therefore which key name to search).
keyword
related.ip
All of the IPs seen on your event.
ip
related.user
All the user names or other user identifiers seen on the event.
keyword
server.geo.country_iso_code
Country ISO code.
keyword
server.ip
IP address of the server (IPv4 or IPv6).
ip
source.geo.country_iso_code
Country ISO code.
keyword
source.ip
IP address of the source (IPv4 or IPv6).
ip
tags
List of keywords used to tag each event.
keyword
url.domain
Domain of the url, such as "www.elastic.co". In some cases a URL may refer to an IP and/or port directly, without a domain name. In this case, the IP address would go to the domain field. If the URL contains a literal IPv6 address enclosed by [ and ] (IETF RFC 2732), the [ and ] characters should also be captured in the domain field.
keyword
url.original
Unmodified original url as seen in the event source. Note that in network monitoring, the observed URL may be a full URL, whereas in access logs, the URL is often just represented as a path. This field is meant to represent the URL as it was observed, complete or not.
wildcard
url.original.text
Multi-field of url.original.
match_only_text
url.path
Path of the request, such as "/search".
wildcard
url.registered_domain
The highest registered url domain, stripped of the subdomain. For example, the registered domain for "foo.example.com" is "example.com". This value can be determined precisely with a list like the public suffix list (http://publicsuffix.org). Trying to approximate this by simply taking the last two labels will not work well for TLDs such as "co.uk".
keyword
url.scheme
Scheme of the request, such as "https". Note: The : is not part of the scheme.
keyword
url.subdomain
The subdomain portion of a fully qualified domain name includes all of the names except the host name under the registered_domain. In a partially qualified domain, or if the the qualification level of the full name cannot be determined, subdomain contains all of the names below the registered domain. For example the subdomain portion of "www.east.mydomain.co.uk" is "east". If the domain has multiple levels of subdomain, such as "sub2.sub1.example.com", the subdomain field should contain "sub2.sub1", with no trailing period.
keyword
url.top_level_domain
The effective top level domain (eTLD), also known as the domain suffix, is the last part of the domain name. For example, the top level domain for example.com is "com". This value can be determined precisely with a list like the public suffix list (http://publicsuffix.org). Trying to approximate this by simply taking the last label will not work well for effective TLDs such as "co.uk".
keyword
user.name
Short name or login of the user.
keyword
user.name.text
Multi-field of user.name.
match_only_text
user_agent.device.name
Name of the device.
keyword
user_agent.name
Name of the user agent.
keyword
user_agent.original
Unparsed user_agent string.
keyword
user_agent.original.text
Multi-field of user_agent.original.
match_only_text
user_agent.os.full
Operating system name, including the version or code name.
keyword
user_agent.os.full.text
Multi-field of user_agent.os.full.
match_only_text
user_agent.os.name
Operating system name, without the version.
keyword
user_agent.os.name.text
Multi-field of user_agent.os.name.
match_only_text
user_agent.os.version
Operating system version as a raw string.
keyword
user_agent.version
Version of the user agent.
keyword

DLP

This is the DLP dataset.

Example

An example event for dlp looks as following:

{
    "@timestamp": "2024-03-28T13:30:21.204Z",
    "agent": {
        "ephemeral_id": "1054908a-63b4-46fd-8028-f975d0f878c2",
        "id": "9a98930c-439d-4a0b-81f0-f4228f8c523f",
        "name": "docker-fleet-agent",
        "type": "filebeat",
        "version": "8.12.2"
    },
    "data_stream": {
        "dataset": "menlo.dlp",
        "namespace": "ep",
        "type": "logs"
    },
    "ecs": {
        "version": "8.11.0"
    },
    "elastic_agent": {
        "id": "9a98930c-439d-4a0b-81f0-f4228f8c523f",
        "snapshot": false,
        "version": "8.12.2"
    },
    "event": {
        "action": "block",
        "agent_id_status": "verified",
        "category": [
            "intrusion_detection",
            "network"
        ],
        "created": "2020-03-09T17:17:22.227Z",
        "dataset": "menlo.dlp",
        "id": "a4c2161b3f81a287ec46d3c993a33f3b97ded5fd854fa184e7f50679303111ce",
        "ingested": "2024-03-28T13:30:33Z",
        "kind": "alert",
        "outcome": "success",
        "severity": 5
    },
    "file": {
        "hash": {
            "sha256": "fd1aee671d92aba0f9f0a8a6d5c6b843e09c8295ced9bb85e16d97360b4d7b3a"
        },
        "name": "more_credit_cards.csv"
    },
    "http": {
        "request": {
            "method": "GET"
        }
    },
    "input": {
        "type": "cel"
    },
    "menlo": {
        "dlp": {
            "alerted": "false",
            "category": "Download Sites",
            "ccl": {
                "id": "CreditordebitcardnumbersGlobal",
                "match_counts": 1,
                "score": 1
            },
            "status": "dirty",
            "stream_name": "/safefile-input/working_file",
            "user_input": "false"
        }
    },
    "observer": {
        "product": "MSIP",
        "vendor": "Menlo Security",
        "version": "2.0"
    },
    "related": {
        "hash": [
            "fd1aee671d92aba0f9f0a8a6d5c6b843e09c8295ced9bb85e16d97360b4d7b3a"
        ],
        "user": [
            "admin@menlosecurity.com"
        ]
    },
    "rule": {
        "id": "1f3ef32c-ec62-42fb-8cad-e1fee3375099",
        "name": "Credit card block rule"
    },
    "tags": [
        "menlo",
        "forwarded"
    ],
    "url": {
        "domain": "tinynewupload.com",
        "original": "http://tinynewupload.com/",
        "path": "/",
        "registered_domain": "tinynewupload.com",
        "scheme": "http",
        "top_level_domain": "com"
    },
    "user": {
        "name": "admin@menlosecurity.com"
    }
}

Exported fields

FieldDescriptionType
@timestamp
Event timestamp.
date
cloud.account.id
The cloud account or organization id used to identify different entities in a multi-tenant environment. Examples: AWS account id, Google Cloud ORG Id, or other unique identifier.
keyword
cloud.availability_zone
Availability zone in which this host is running.
keyword
cloud.image.id
Image ID for the cloud instance.
keyword
cloud.instance.id
Instance ID of the host machine.
keyword
cloud.instance.name
Instance name of the host machine.
keyword
cloud.machine.type
Machine type of the host machine.
keyword
cloud.project.id
Name of the project in Google Cloud.
keyword
cloud.provider
Name of the cloud provider. Example values are aws, azure, gcp, or digitalocean.
keyword
cloud.region
Region in which this host is running.
keyword
container.id
Unique container id.
keyword
container.image.name
Name of the image the container was built on.
keyword
container.labels
Image labels.
object
container.name
Container name.
keyword
data_stream.dataset
Data stream dataset.
constant_keyword
data_stream.namespace
Data stream namespace.
constant_keyword
data_stream.type
Data stream type.
constant_keyword
ecs.version
ECS version this event conforms to. ecs.version is a required field and must exist in all events. When querying across multiple indices -- which may conform to slightly different ECS versions -- this field lets integrations adjust to the schema version of the events.
keyword
event.action
The action captured by the event. This describes the information in the event. It is more specific than event.category. Examples are group-add, process-started, file-created. The value is normally defined by the implementer.
keyword
event.category
This is one of four ECS Categorization Fields, and indicates the second level in the ECS category hierarchy. event.category represents the "big buckets" of ECS categories. For example, filtering on event.category:process yields all events relating to process activity. This field is closely related to event.type, which is used as a subcategory. This field is an array. This will allow proper categorization of some events that fall in multiple categories.
keyword
event.created
event.created contains the date/time when the event was first read by an agent, or by your pipeline. This field is distinct from @timestamp in that @timestamp typically contain the time extracted from the original event. In most situations, these two timestamps will be slightly different. The difference can be used to calculate the delay between your source generating an event, and the time when your agent first processed it. This can be used to monitor your agent's or pipeline's ability to keep up with your event source. In case the two timestamps are identical, @timestamp should be used.
date
event.dataset
Event dataset.
constant_keyword
event.id
Unique ID to describe the event.
keyword
event.kind
This is one of four ECS Categorization Fields, and indicates the highest level in the ECS category hierarchy. event.kind gives high-level information about what type of information the event contains, without being specific to the contents of the event. For example, values of this field distinguish alert events from metric events. The value of this field can be used to inform how these kinds of events should be handled. They may warrant different retention, different access control, it may also help understand whether the data is coming in at a regular interval or not.
keyword
event.module
Event module.
constant_keyword
event.original
Raw text message of entire event. Used to demonstrate log integrity or where the full log message (before splitting it up in multiple parts) may be required, e.g. for reindex. This field is not indexed and doc_values are disabled. It cannot be searched, but it can be retrieved from _source. If users wish to override this and index this field, please see Field data types in the Elasticsearch Reference.
keyword
event.outcome
This is one of four ECS Categorization Fields, and indicates the lowest level in the ECS category hierarchy. event.outcome simply denotes whether the event represents a success or a failure from the perspective of the entity that produced the event. Note that when a single transaction is described in multiple events, each event may populate different values of event.outcome, according to their perspective. Also note that in the case of a compound event (a single event that contains multiple logical events), this field should be populated with the value that best captures the overall success or failure from the perspective of the event producer. Further note that not all events will have an associated outcome. For example, this field is generally not populated for metric events, events with event.type:info, or any events for which an outcome does not make logical sense.
keyword
event.severity
The numeric severity of the event according to your event source. What the different severity values mean can be different between sources and use cases. It's up to the implementer to make sure severities are consistent across events from the same source. The Syslog severity belongs in log.syslog.severity.code. event.severity is meant to represent the severity according to the event source (e.g. firewall, IDS). If the event source does not publish its own severity, you may optionally copy the log.syslog.severity.code to event.severity.
long
file.hash.sha256
SHA256 hash.
keyword
file.name
Name of the file including the extension, without the directory.
keyword
host.architecture
Operating system architecture.
keyword
host.containerized
If the host is a container.
boolean
host.domain
Name of the domain of which the host is a member. For example, on Windows this could be the host's Active Directory domain or NetBIOS domain name. For Linux this could be the domain of the host's LDAP provider.
keyword
host.id
Unique host id. As hostname is not always unique, use values that are meaningful in your environment. Example: The current usage of beat.name.
keyword
host.mac
Host mac addresses.
keyword
host.name
Name of the host. It can contain what hostname returns on Unix systems, the fully qualified domain name, or a name specified by the user. The sender decides which value to use.
keyword
host.os.build
OS build information.
keyword
host.os.codename
OS codename, if any.
keyword
host.os.family
OS family (such as redhat, debian, freebsd, windows).
keyword
host.os.kernel
Operating system kernel version as a raw string.
keyword
host.os.name
Operating system name, without the version.
keyword
host.os.name.text
Multi-field of host.os.name.
text
host.os.platform
Operating system platform (such centos, ubuntu, windows).
keyword
host.os.version
Operating system version as a raw string.
keyword
host.type
Type of host. For Cloud providers this can be the machine type like t2.medium. If vm, this could be the container, for example, or other information meaningful in your environment.
keyword
http.request.method
HTTP request method. The value should retain its casing from the original event. For example, GET, get, and GeT are all considered valid values for this field.
keyword
input.type
Input type
keyword
log.offset
Log offset
long
menlo.dlp.alerted
Whether or not an email alert was sent to a DLP Auditor profile
boolean
menlo.dlp.category
Category Rules Category type classification
keyword
menlo.dlp.ccl.id
Name of DLP dictionary that was violated
keyword
menlo.dlp.ccl.match_counts
Number of matches of the string that caused the violation
long
menlo.dlp.ccl.score
DLP score from the dictionary that caused the violation
long
menlo.dlp.status
Result from the DLP engine
keyword
menlo.dlp.stream_name
Internal name used for the file (usually working_file) or text stream (uid)
keyword
menlo.dlp.user_input
Whether or not this event was generated as a result of user form input
boolean
observer.product
The product name of the observer.
keyword
observer.vendor
Vendor name of the observer.
keyword
observer.version
Observer version.
keyword
related.hash
All the hashes seen on your event. Populating this field, then using it to search for hashes can help in situations where you're unsure what the hash algorithm is (and therefore which key name to search).
keyword
related.user
All the user names or other user identifiers seen on the event.
keyword
rule.id
A rule ID that is unique within the scope of an agent, observer, or other entity using the rule for detection of this event.
keyword
rule.name
The name of the rule or signature generating the event.
keyword
tags
List of keywords used to tag each event.
keyword
url.domain
Domain of the url, such as "www.elastic.co". In some cases a URL may refer to an IP and/or port directly, without a domain name. In this case, the IP address would go to the domain field. If the URL contains a literal IPv6 address enclosed by [ and ] (IETF RFC 2732), the [ and ] characters should also be captured in the domain field.
keyword
url.original
Unmodified original url as seen in the event source. Note that in network monitoring, the observed URL may be a full URL, whereas in access logs, the URL is often just represented as a path. This field is meant to represent the URL as it was observed, complete or not.
wildcard
url.original.text
Multi-field of url.original.
match_only_text
url.path
Path of the request, such as "/search".
wildcard
url.registered_domain
The highest registered url domain, stripped of the subdomain. For example, the registered domain for "foo.example.com" is "example.com". This value can be determined precisely with a list like the public suffix list (http://publicsuffix.org). Trying to approximate this by simply taking the last two labels will not work well for TLDs such as "co.uk".
keyword
url.scheme
Scheme of the request, such as "https". Note: The : is not part of the scheme.
keyword
url.top_level_domain
The effective top level domain (eTLD), also known as the domain suffix, is the last part of the domain name. For example, the top level domain for example.com is "com". This value can be determined precisely with a list like the public suffix list (http://publicsuffix.org). Trying to approximate this by simply taking the last label will not work well for effective TLDs such as "co.uk".
keyword
user.name
Short name or login of the user.
keyword
user.name.text
Multi-field of user.name.
match_only_text

Changelog

VersionDetailsKibana version(s)

0.1.0

Enhancement View pull request
Initial draft of the package

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