Kaspersky Unified Monitoring and Analysis Platform
- About Kaspersky Unified Monitoring and Analysis Platform
- Program architecture
- Installing and removing KUMA
- Program licensing
- About the End User License Agreement
- About the license
- About the License Certificate
- About the license key
- About the key file
- Adding a license key to the program web interface
- Viewing information about an added license key in the program web interface
- Removing a license key in the program web interface
- Integration with other solutions
- Integration with Kaspersky Security Center
- Configuring Kaspersky Security Center integration settings
- Adding a tenant to the list for Kaspersky Security Center integration
- Creating Kaspersky Security Center connection
- Editing Kaspersky Security Center connection
- Deleting Kaspersky Security Center connection
- Working with Kaspersky Security Center tasks
- Importing events from the Kaspersky Security Center database
- Kaspersky Endpoint Detection and Response integration
- Integration with Kaspersky CyberTrace
- Integration with Kaspersky Threat Intelligence Portal
- Integration with R-Vision Incident Response Platform
- Integration with Active Directory
- Connecting over LDAP
- Enabling and disabling LDAP integration
- Adding a tenant to the LDAP server integration list
- Creating an LDAP server connection
- Creating a copy of an LDAP server connection
- Changing an LDAP server connection
- Changing the data update frequency
- Changing the data storage period
- Starting account data update tasks
- Deleting an LDAP server connection
- Authorization with domain accounts
- Connecting over LDAP
- RuCERT integration
- Integration with Security Vision Incident Response Platform
- Kaspersky Industrial CyberSecurity for Networks integration
- Integration with Kaspersky Security Center
- KUMA resources
- KUMA services
- Analytics
- Working with tenants
- Working with incidents
- About the incidents table
- Saving and selecting incident filter configuration
- Deleting incident filter configurations
- Viewing information about an incident
- Incident creation
- Incident processing
- Changing incidents
- Automatic linking of alerts to incidents
- Categories and types of incidents
- Exporting incidents to RuCERT
- Sending incidents involving personal information leaks to RuCERT
- Working in hierarchy mode
- Working with alerts
- Working with events
- Retroscan
- Working with geographic data
- Transferring events from isolated network segments to KUMA
- Managing assets
- Asset categories
- Adding an asset category
- Configuring the table of assets
- Searching assets
- Viewing asset details
- Adding assets
- Assigning a category to an asset
- Editing the parameters of assets
- Deleting assets
- Updating third-party applications and fixing vulnerabilities on Kaspersky Security Center assets
- Moving assets to a selected administration group
- Asset audit
- Managing users
- Managing KUMA
- Contacting Technical Support
- REST API
- Creating a token
- Configuring permissions to access the API
- Authorizing API requests
- Standard error
- Operations
- Viewing a list of active lists on the correlator
- Import entries to an active list
- Searching alerts
- Closing alerts
- Searching assets
- Importing assets
- Deleting assets
- Searching events
- Viewing information about the cluster
- Resource search
- Loading resource file
- Viewing the contents of a resource file
- Importing resources
- Exporting resources
- Downloading the resource file
- Search for services
- Tenant search
- View token bearer information
- Dictionary updating in services
- Dictionary retrieval
- Appendices
- Commands for components manual starting and installing
- Integrity check of KUMA files
- Normalized event data model
- Alert data model
- Asset data model
- User account data model
- Audit event fields
- Event fields with general information
- User was successfully signed in or failed to sign in
- User login successfully changed
- User role was successfully changed
- Other data of the user was successfully changed
- User successfully logged out
- User password was successfully changed
- User was successfully created
- User access token was successfully changed
- Service was successfully created
- Service was successfully deleted
- Service was successfully reloaded
- Service was successfully restarted
- Service was successfully started
- Service was successfully paired
- Service status was changed
- Storage partition was deleted by user
- Storage partition was deleted automatically due to expiration
- Active list was successfully cleared or operation failed
- Active list item was successfully deleted or operation was unsuccessful
- Active list was successfully imported or operation failed
- Active list was exported successfully
- Resource was successfully added
- Resource was successfully deleted
- Resource was successfully updated
- Asset was successfully created
- Asset was successfully deleted
- Asset category was successfully added
- Asset category was deleted successfully
- Settings were updated successfully
- Information about third-party code
- Trademark notices
- Glossary
Nats type
The nats type is used for NATS communications
Available settings:
Basic settings tab:
- Name (required)—a unique name for this type of resource. Must contain from 1 to 128 Unicode characters.
- Tenant (required)—name of the tenant that owns the resource.
- Disabled toggle switch—used if you do not need to send events to a destination. By default, sending events is enabled.
- Type (required) – destination type, nats.
- URL (required)—URL that you need to connect to.
- Topic (required)—the topic for NATS messages. Must contain from 1 to 255 Unicode characters.
- Delimiter is used to specify a character representing the delimiter between events. By default,
\n
is used. - Authorization—type of authorization when connecting to the specified URL:
- disabled (by default).
- plain.
If this option is selected, you must indicate the secret containing user account credentials for authorization when connecting to the connector.
- If you previously created a secret, select it from the Secret drop-down list.
If no secret was previously added, the drop-down list shows No data.
- If you want to add a new secret, click the
button on the right of the Secret list.
The Secret window opens.
- In the Name field, enter the name that will be used to display the secret in the list of available secrets.
- In the User and Password fields, enter the credentials of the user account that the Agent will use to connect to the connector.
- If necessary, add any other information about the secret in the Description field.
- Click the Save button.
The secret will be added and displayed in the Secret list.
- If you previously created a secret, select it from the Secret drop-down list.
- Description—up to 256 Unicode characters describing the resource.
Advanced settings tab:
- Compression—you can use Snappy compression. By default, compression is disabled.
- Buffer size is used to set the size of the buffer. The default value is 16 KB, and the maximum value is 64 KB.
- Timeout field is used to set the timeout (in seconds) for another service or component response. The default value is
30
. - Disk buffer size limit field is used to specify the size of the disk buffer in bytes. The default size is 10 GB.
- Storage ID is a NATS storage identifier.
- TLS mode specifies whether TLS encryption is used:
- Disabled (default)—do not use TLS encryption.
- Enabled—use encryption without certificate verification.
- With verification—use encryption with verification that the certificate was signed with the KUMA root certificate. The root certificate and key of KUMA are created automatically during program installation and are stored on the KUMA Core server in the folder /opt/kaspersky/kuma/core/certificates/.
- Custom CA—use encryption with verification that the certificate was signed by a Certificate Authority. The secret containing the certificate is selected from the Custom CA drop-down list, which is displayed when this option is selected.
Creating a certificate signed by a Certificate Authority
To use this TLS mode, you must do the following on the KUMA Core server (OpenSSL commands are used in the examples below):
- Create the key that will be used by the Certificate Authority.
Example command:
openssl genrsa -out ca.key 2048
- Generate a certificate for the key that was just created.
Example command:
openssl req -new -x509 -days 365 -key ca.key -subj "/CN=<common host name of Certificate Authority>" -out ca.crt
- Create a private key and a request to have it signed by the Certificate Authority.
Example command:
openssl req -newkey rsa:2048 -nodes -keyout server.key -subj "/CN=<common host name of KUMA server>" -out server.csr
- Create a certificate signed by the Certificate Authority. The subjectAltName must include the domain names or IP addresses of the server for which the certificate is being created.
Example command:
openssl x509 -req -extfile <(printf "subjectAltName=DNS:domain1.ru,DNS:domain2.com,IP:192.168.0.1") -days 365 -in server.csr -CA ca.crt -CAkey ca.key -CAcreateserial -out server.crt
- The obtained
server.crt
certificate should be uploaded in the KUMA web interface as a certificate-type secret, which should then be selected from the Custom CA drop-down list.
- Create the key that will be used by the Certificate Authority.
When using TLS, it is impossible to specify an IP address as a URL.
- Delimiter is used to specify the character delimiting the events. By default,
\n
is used. - Buffer flush interval—this field is used to set the time interval (in seconds) at which the data is sent to the destination. The default value is
100
. - Workers—this field is used to set the number of services processing the queue. By default, this value is equal to the number of vCPUs of the KUMA Core server.
- Debug—a drop-down list where you can specify whether resource logging should be enabled. By default it is Disabled.
- The Disk buffer disabled drop-down list is used to enable or disable the use of a disk buffer. By default, the disk buffer is disabled.
- In the Filter section, you can specify the conditions to define events that will be processed by this resource. You can select an existing filter resource from the drop-down list, or select Create new to create a new filter.
Creating a filter in resources
- In the Filter drop-down list, select Create new.
- If you want to keep the filter as a separate resource, select the Save filter check box.
In this case, you will be able to use the created filter in various services.
This check box is cleared by default.
- If you selected the Save filter check box, enter a name for the created filter resource in the Name field. The name must contain from 1 to 128 Unicode characters.
- In the Conditions settings block, specify the conditions that the events must meet:
- Click the Add condition button.
- In the Left operand and Right operand drop-down lists, specify the search parameters.
Depending on the data source selected in the Right operand field, you may see fields of additional parameters that you need to use to define the value that will be passed to the filter. For example, when choosing active list you will need to specify the name of the active list, the entry key, and the entry key field.
- In the operator drop-down list, select the relevant operator.
- =—the left operand equals the right operand.
- <—the left operand is less than the right operand.
- <=—the left operand is less than or equal to the right operand.
- >—the left operand is greater than the right operand.
- >=—the left operand is greater than or equal to the right operand.
- inSubnet—the left operand (IP address) is in the subnet of the right operand (subnet).
- contains—the left operand contains values of the right operand.
- startsWith—the left operand starts with one of the values of the right operand.
- endsWith—the left operand ends with one of the values of the right operand.
- match—the left operand matches the regular expression of the right operand. The RE2 regular expressions are used.
- hasBit—checks whether the left operand (string or number) contains bits whose positions are listed in the right operand (in a constant or in a list).
- hasVulnerability—checks whether the left operand contains an asset with the vulnerability and vulnerability severity specified in the right operand.
- inActiveList—this operator has only one operand. Its values are selected in the Key fields field and are compared with the entries in the active list selected from the Active List drop-down list.
- inDictionary—checks whether the specified dictionary contains an entry defined by the key composed with the concatenated values of the selected event fields.
- inCategory—the asset in the left operand is assigned at least one of the asset categories of the right operand.
- inActiveDirectoryGroup—the Active Directory account in the left operand belongs to one of the Active Directory groups in the right operand.
- TIDetect—this operator is used to find events using CyberTrace Threat Intelligence (TI) data. This operator can be used only on events that have completed enrichment with data from CyberTrace Threat Intelligence. In other words, it can only be used in collectors at the destination selection stage and in correlators.
- If necessary, select the do not match case check box. When this check box is selected, the operator ignores the case of the values.
The selection of this check box does not apply to the InSubnet, InActiveList, InCategory or InActiveDirectoryGroup operators.
This check box is cleared by default.
- If you want to add a negative condition, select If not from the If drop-down list.
- You can add multiple conditions or a group of conditions.
- If you have added multiple conditions or groups of conditions, choose a search condition (and, or, not) by clicking the AND button.
- If you want to add existing filters that are selected from the Select filter drop-down list, click the Add filter button.
You can view the nested filter settings by clicking the
button.