Project

General

Profile

Actions

Feature #6206

open

Investigate a more intuitive use of the timestamp field in traffic/metadata events

Added by Marko Jahnke over 1 year ago. Updated over 1 year ago.

Status:
New
Priority:
Normal
Target version:
Effort:
Difficulty:
Label:

Description

As proposed by Victor, I would like to foster a discussion about the above topic. If there is already a consolidated opinion about this that I did not see, this ticket could be closed.

In many SOCs, analysts use the suricata traffic/metadata EVE events for further investigating alerts from different sources (e.g., edr, server logs, network ids) using timeline analysis and visualization. For creating these timelines, it is common to use the "timestamp" field as the primary database key.

For alerts, it is quite obvious that the timestamp field corresponds more or less to the packet that has triggered or completed the conditions for the alert. Thus, these events appear on the timeline as close as possible to the potential attack attempt.

In contrast to that, the timestamp in metadata/traffic events is AFAIK given by the last packet that belongs to the respective protocol event (e.g., last packet of a http response or of an smtp transaction). Some analysts have the opinion that this is contraintuitive on the timeline, since this may be way later than the relevant traffic event itself.

A more intuitive usage of the timestamp field in traffic events would be protocol-specific, e.g. the beginning of a transaction. This is not canonical and needs to be discussed.

But one step towards a more intuitive use of the timestamp field could be to use the startts of the respective flow event if there is one. This could (IMHO easily) be implemented in output-json.c.

Sure, by correlation via flow and community IDs it is possible to identify these fields and use them as primary key in the back-end. But

a) some environments are lacking a proper correlation engine for different event source pipelines,
b) if there is one, the correlation with the flow events may introduce a significant delay (e.g., for long-lasting flows), and
c) setting the timestamp in suricata to a different (already available) value is assumed to be computationally easier than correlating.

So I would be interested in your opinions about this.


Related issues 1 (1 open0 closed)

Related to Suricata - Task #6443: Suricon 2023 brainstormAssignedVictor JulienActions
Actions

Also available in: Atom PDF