Skip to content

cbapi Python Bindings - 1.1.0

Compare
Choose a tag to compare
@jgarman jgarman released this 02 Jun 02:25
· 772 commits to master since this release

This release includes compatibility fixes for Cb Response 6.1. Changes from 1.0.1 include:

  • Substantial changes to the Process Model Object for Cb Response 6.1. See details below.
  • New StoragePartition Model Object to control Solr core loading/unloading in Cb Response 6.1.
  • New IngressFilter Model Object to control ingress filter settings in Cb Response 6.1.
  • Fix issues with event_export.py example script.
  • Add .all_events property to the Process Model Object to expose a list of all events across all segments.
  • Add example script to perform auto-banning based on watchlist hits from Cb Event Forwarder S3 output files.
  • Add bulk operations to the ThreatReport and Alert Query objects:
    • You can now call .set_ignored(), .assign(), and .change_status() on an Alert Query object to change the respective fields for every Alert that matches the query.
    • You can now call .set_ignored() on a ThreatReport Query object to set or clear the ignored flag for every ThreatReport that matches the query.

Changes to Process model object

Cb Response 6.1 uses a new way of recording process events that greatly increases the speed and scale of collection, allowing you to store and search data for more endpoints on the same hardware. Details on the new database format can be found on the Developer Network website at the Process API Changes for Cb Response 6.0 page.

The Process Model Object traditionally referred to a single "segment" of events in the Cb Response database. In Cb Response versions prior to 6.0, a single segment will include up to 10,000 individual endpoint events, enough to handle over 95% of the typical event activity for a given process. Therefore, even though a Process Model Object technically refers to a single segment in a process, since most processes had less than 10,000 events and therefore were only comprised of a single segment, this distinction wasn't necessary.

However, now that processes are split across many segments, a better way of handling this is necessary. Therefore, Cb Response 6.0 introduces the new .group_by() method. This method is new in cbapi 1.1.0 and is part of five new query filters available when communicating with a Cb Response 6.1 server. These filters are accessible via methods on the Process Query object. These new methods are:

  • .group_by() - Group the result set by a field in the response. Typically you will want to group by id, which
    will ensure that the result set only has one result per process rather than one result per event segment. For more information on processes, process segments, and how segments are stored in Cb Response 6.0, see the Process API Changes for Cb Response 6.0 page on the Developer Network website.
  • .min_last_update() - Only return processes that have events after a given date/time stamp (relative to the
    individual sensor's clock)
  • .max_last_update() - Only return processes that have events before a given date/time stamp (relative to the individual sensor's clock)
  • .min_last_server_update() - Only return processes that have events after a given date/time stamp (relative to the Cb Response server's clock)
  • .max_last_server_update() - Only return processes that have events before a given date/time stamp (relative to the Cb Response server's clock)