The Perfect Christmas Gift

George Abitbol* doesn’t feel well. Christmas is approaching at a fast pace and the gift he ordered days ago for his girlfriend didn’t find its way to his mailbox yet. He checked it out three times today and save for some spam catalogues on how to take care of his handsome silhouette, nothing resembling a gift showed up.

IMG_4107.jpg
Picture by Saâd Kadhi

He tried to call the French parcel service to know the whereabouts of the luxurious, limited version of the organic sweet potato chips his lovely Jacqueline* likes so much, which sells for four times the regular price (to bear the cost of the enhanced packaging, certainly), but he couldn’t get hold of a living soul all day long. When he placed the order, the delivery was supposed to be lightning fast. It turned out to be a false promise.

With a sinking heart, he climbs back the stairs leading to his apartment, fetches his laptop and sits on his club chair. With his headphones on, immersed in the wonderful jazz of Christian Scott, he wanders randomly through online shopping sites trying to make out his mind on what other presents he could get for his dear Jacqueline, in time for Christmas.

In the middle of the track called Encryption, featuring the uncanny Elena Pinderhugues on flute, a Twitter notification resonates in his ears. He checks it out and learn that TheHive Chefs, as true and elegant gentlemen, have published a new training VM for Cerana 0.3 (a.k.a. TheHive 3.0.3), including Cortex 1.1.4 and the latest set of Cortex-Analyzers.

George loves bees in all shapes and forms, including digital ones so he swiftly downloads the new VM and as the cautious person he is, he verifies the file’s SHA256 hash: 86a87b70627e8db672c57cb57821461f2564ae9b8087cc22fdd1e7a599c16aedWonderful! Everything checks out beautifully. He then imports the file in his VM software, starts the virtual machine and logs in as thehive then types in thehive1234 when asked for the password.

He thoroughly reads the documentation to configure various analyzers and integrate his favourite Security Incident Response Platform with MISP.  A few minutes later, his VM is ready for prime time and he starts playing with the new multi-source dashboards and interacting with fellow analysts on Gitter.

And he totally forgets about Jacqueline’s gift.

(*) Any resemblance to real and actual names is purely coincidental.

Correction: Dec 23, 2017
An earlier version of this post was referring to a previous training VM that included Cerana 0.2, a version affected by a privilege escalation vulnerability which was corrected in Cerana 0.3. Some typos were corrected as well.

Training VM Updated with Mellifera 13.2

Two days after the release of  Mellifera 13.2 (TheHive 2.13.2), we have updated the training VM with this version. You can download it from the following location:

https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B3G-Due88gfQMGZ2RjRlc1RfQ2M/view?usp=sharing

To ensure that your download went through nicely, check the file’s SHA256 hash which must be equal to the following value:

15dc0a1d1ef099abd852fefff3a12c1b752573c01b133fc6e643dd2fceb1d46f

The system’s login is thehive and the associated password is thehive1234.

Use It

You can start using TheHive & Cortex once the VM is started. To access TheHive, point your browser to the following URL:

http://IP_OF_VM:9000

For Cortex, the port is 9999:

http://IP_OF_VM:9999

Where to Go from Here?

Please read the associated documentation page to configure the services on your training virtual machine and plug it with MISP.

Need Help?

Something does not work as expected? No worries, we got you covered. Please join our  user forum, contact us on Gitter, or send us an email at support@thehive-project.org. We are here to help.

Train till you Drain: TheHive & Cortex VM

Rejoice folks! You can now play with TheHive & Cortex thanks to the test VM we created. It includes Mellifera 12, the latest major version of TheHive, Cortex 1.1.3, the latest Cortex analyzers with all dependencies and ElasticSearch installed on top of Ubuntu 16.04 with Oracle JRE 8.

The test VM is intended to be used… well… for testing or training purposes. We strongly encourage you to refrain from using it for production.

Get It

You can download the VM from the following location:

https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B3G-Due88gfQYWR6WVlkLWhRemM/view?usp=sharing

To ensure that your download went through nicely, check the file’s SHA256 hash which must be equal to the following value:

17df5989d852583e3046daefb97caadff90d30ecf4402df69cf6036d7ad1cacd

The system’s login is thehive and the associated password is thehive1234.

Use It

You can start using TheHive & Cortex once the VM is started. To access TheHive, point your browser to the following URL:

http://IP_OF_VM:9000

For Cortex, the port is 9999:

http://IP_OF_VM:9999

Configure TheHive

The first time you access TheHive, you’ll need to create the associated database by clicking on the Update Database button as shown below:

Screen_Shot_2017-07-06_at_21_52_46.png
Update TheHive’s Database on First Access

TheHive’s configuration file is located in /etc/thehive/application.conf. For additional configuration, read the docs.

Cortex

TheHive is already configured to use the local Cortex service.

Analyzer and Associated Report Templates

To fully benefit from the analyzers, you should install the associated report templates:

  • download the report template package
  • log in TheHive using an administrator account
  • go to Admin > Report templates menu
  • click on Import templates button and select the downloaded package
Plug it with MISP

The test VM does not contain a MISP instance and none is configured in TheHive’s configuration file.  To play with MISP, you may want to use the VM our good friends at CIRCL provide.  Once you’ve downloaded it or if you have an existing instance, edit /etc/thehive/application.conf and follow the configuration guide.

Restart or Go Mad

After each modification of /etc/thehive/application.conf do not forget to restart the service:

$ sudo service thehive restart

Troubles?

TheHive service logs are located in /var/log/thehive/application.log.

Configure Cortex

All available analyzers are installed with their dependencies, but none is configured. To configure analyzers, edit /etc/cortex/application.conf and follow the configuration guide.

Restart or Go Mad

After each modification of /etc/cortex/application.conf do not forget to restart the service:

$ sudo service cortex restart
Troubles?

Cortex service logs are located in /var/log/cortex/application.log.

Need Help?

Something does not work as expected? No worries, we got you covered. Please join our  user forum, contact us on Gitter, or send us an email at support@thehive-project.org. We are here to help.

 

Correction: July 8, 2017 
An earlier version of this post offered to download the VM from Dropbox but they suspended the associated link due to seemingly heavy traffic. The post was updated to replace the Dropbox link with a Google Drive one.