Azure Active Directory
Azure Directory logs integration
Version |
1.11.1 (View all) |
Compatible Kibana version(s) |
8.12.0 or higher |
Supported Serverless project types |
Security Observability |
Subscription level |
Basic |
Azure Active Directory (AAD) logs are records of events and activities that occur within an organization's AAD environment.
These logs capture important information such as user sign-ins, changes to user accounts, and more. They can be used to monitor and track user activity, identify security threats, troubleshoot issues, and generate reports for compliance purposes.
The Azure Active Directory logs integration contain several data streams:
- Sign-in logs – Information about sign-ins and how your users use your resources.
- Identity Protection logs - Information about user risk status and the events that change it.
- Provisioning logs - Information about users and group synchronization to and from external enterprise applications.
- Audit logs – Information about changes to your tenant, such as users and group management, or updates to your tenant's resources.
Supported Azure log categories:
Data Stream | Log Category |
---|---|
Sign-in | SignInLogs |
Sign-in | |
Sign-in | |
Sign-in | |
Audit | |
Identity Protection | |
Identity Protection | |
Provisioning |
Requirements and setup
Refer to the Azure Logs page for more information about setting up and using this integration.
Settings
eventhub
:
string
This setting expects the name of a single Event Hub (see the difference between a namespace and an Event Hub). It is a fully managed, real-time data ingestion service. Elastic recommends using only letters, numbers, and the hyphen (-) character for Event Hub names to maximize compatibility. You can use existing Event Hubs having underscores (_) in the Event Hub name; in this case, the integration will replace underscores with hyphens (-) when it uses the Event Hub name to create dependent Azure resources behind the scenes (e.g., the storage account container to store Event Hub consumer offsets). Elastic also recommends using a separate event hub for each log type as the field mappings of each log type differ.
Default value insights-operational-logs
.
consumer_group
:
string
The publish/subscribe mechanism of Event Hubs is enabled through consumer groups. A consumer group is a view (state, position, or offset) of an entire event hub. Consumer groups enable multiple consuming applications to each have a separate view of the event stream, and to read the stream independently at their own pace and with their own offsets.
Default value: $Default
connection_string
:
string
The connection string required to communicate with the specified Event Hub, steps here https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/event-hubs/event-hubs-get-connection-string.
A Blob Storage account is required in order to store/retrieve/update the offset or state of the eventhub messages. This means that after stopping the filebeat azure module it can start back up at the spot that it stopped processing messages.
storage_account
:
string
The name of the storage account the state/offsets will be stored and updated.
storage_account_key
:
string
The storage account key, this key will be used to authorize access to data in your storage account.
storage_account_container
:
string
The storage account container where the integration stores the checkpoint data for the consumer group. It is an advanced option to use with extreme care. You MUST use a dedicated storage account container for each Azure log type (activity, sign-in, audit logs, and others). DO NOT REUSE the same container name for more than one Azure log type. See Container Names for details on naming rules from Microsoft. The integration generates a default container name if not specified.
resource_manager_endpoint
:
string
Optional, by default we are using the azure public environment, to override, users can provide a specific resource manager endpoint in order to use a different azure environment.
Resource manager endpoints:
# Azure ChinaCloud
https://management.chinacloudapi.cn/
# Azure GermanCloud
https://management.microsoftazure.de/
# Azure PublicCloud
https://management.azure.com/
# Azure USGovernmentCloud
https://management.usgovcloudapi.net/
Logs
Sign-in logs
Retrieves Azure Active Directory sign-in logs. The sign-ins report provides information about the usage of managed applications and user sign-in activities.
An example event for signinlogs
looks as following:
{
"log": {
"level": "4"
},
"source": {
"geo": {
"continent_name": "Oceania",
"country_name": "Australia",
"location": {
"lon": 143.2104,
"lat": -33.494
},
"country_iso_code": "AU"
},
"as": {
"number": 13335,
"organization": {
"name": "Cloudflare, Inc."
}
},
"address": "1.1.1.1",
"ip": "1.1.1.1"
},
"message": "This error occurred due to 'Keep me signed in' interrupt when the user was signing-in.",
"tags": [
"preserve_original_event"
],
"geo": {
"country_name": "Seine-Et-Marne",
"city_name": "Champs-Sur-Marne",
"location": {
"lon": 2.12341234,
"lat": 48.12341234
},
"country_iso_code": "FR"
},
"cloud": {
"provider": "azure"
},
"@timestamp": "2019-10-18T09:45:48.072Z",
"ecs": {
"version": "1.11.0"
},
"related": {
"ip": [
"1.1.1.1"
]
},
"client": {
"ip": "1.1.1.1"
},
"event": {
"duration": 0,
"ingested": "2021-09-14T17:20:47.736433526Z",
"original": "{\"Level\":\"4\",\"callerIpAddress\":\"1.1.1.1\",\"category\":\"SignInLogs\",\"correlationId\":\"8a4de8b5-095c-47d0-a96f-a75130c61d53\",\"durationMs\":0,\"identity\":\"Test LTest\",\"location\":\"FR\",\"operationName\":\"Sign-in activity\",\"operationVersion\":\"1.0\",\"properties\":{\"appDisplayName\":\"Office 365\",\"appId\":\"8a4de8b5-095c-47d0-a96f-a75130c61d53\",\"clientAppUsed\":\"Browser\",\"conditionalAccessStatus\":\"notApplied\",\"correlationId\":\"8a4de8b5-095c-47d0-a96f-a75130c61d53\",\"createdDateTime\":\"2019-10-18T04:45:48.0729893-05:00\",\"deviceDetail\":{\"browser\":\"Chrome 77.0.3865\",\"deviceId\":\"\",\"operatingSystem\":\"MacOs\"},\"id\":\"8a4de8b5-095c-47d0-a96f-a75130c61d53\",\"ipAddress\":\"1.1.1.1\",\"isInteractive\":false,\"location\":{\"city\":\"Champs-Sur-Marne\",\"countryOrRegion\":\"FR\",\"geoCoordinates\":{\"latitude\":48.12341234,\"longitude\":2.12341234},\"state\":\"Seine-Et-Marne\"},\"originalRequestId\":\"8a4de8b5-095c-47d0-a96f-a75130c61d53\",\"processingTimeInMilliseconds\":239,\"riskDetail\":\"none\",\"riskLevelAggregated\":\"none\",\"riskLevelDuringSignIn\":\"none\",\"riskState\":\"none\",\"servicePrincipalId\":\"\",\"status\":{\"errorCode\":50140,\"failureReason\":\"This error occurred due to 'Keep me signed in' interrupt when the user was signing-in.\"},\"tokenIssuerName\":\"\",\"tokenIssuerType\":\"AzureAD\",\"userDisplayName\":\"Test LTest\",\"userId\":\"8a4de8b5-095c-47d0-a96f-a75130c61d53\",\"userPrincipalName\":\"test@elastic.co\"},\"resourceId\":\"/tenants/8a4de8b5-095c-47d0-a96f-a75130c61d53/providers/Microsoft.aadiam\",\"resultDescription\":\"This error occurred due to 'Keep me signed in' interrupt when the user was signing-in.\",\"resultSignature\":\"None\",\"resultType\":\"50140\",\"tenantId\":\"8a4de8b5-095c-47d0-a96f-a75130c61d53\",\"time\":\"2019-10-18T09:45:48.0729893Z\"}",
"kind": "event",
"action": "Sign-in activity",
"id": "8a4de8b5-095c-47d0-a96f-a75130c61d53",
"category": [
"authentication"
],
"type": [
"info"
],
"outcome": "failure"
},
"user": {
"name": "test",
"full_name": "Test LTest",
"id": "8a4de8b5-095c-47d0-a96f-a75130c61d53",
"domain": "elastic.co"
},
"azure": {
"tenant_id": "8a4de8b5-095c-47d0-a96f-a75130c61d53",
"correlation_id": "8a4de8b5-095c-47d0-a96f-a75130c61d53",
"signinlogs": {
"operation_name": "Sign-in activity",
"result_description": "This error occurred due to 'Keep me signed in' interrupt when the user was signing-in.",
"result_type": "50140",
"operation_version": "1.0",
"identity": "Test LTest",
"result_signature": "None",
"category": "SignInLogs",
"properties": {
"risk_level_aggregated": "none",
"client_app_used": "Browser",
"is_interactive": false,
"service_principal_id": "",
"app_display_name": "Office 365",
"created_at": "2019-10-18T04:45:48.0729893-05:00",
"risk_level_during_signin": "none",
"device_detail": {
"device_id": "",
"operating_system": "MacOs",
"browser": "Chrome 77.0.3865"
},
"risk_detail": "none",
"token_issuer_name": "",
"risk_state": "none",
"user_principal_name": "test@elastic.co",
"token_issuer_type": "AzureAD",
"processing_time_ms": 239,
"original_request_id": "8a4de8b5-095c-47d0-a96f-a75130c61d53",
"user_id": "8a4de8b5-095c-47d0-a96f-a75130c61d53",
"conditional_access_status": "notApplied",
"correlation_id": "8a4de8b5-095c-47d0-a96f-a75130c61d53",
"id": "8a4de8b5-095c-47d0-a96f-a75130c61d53",
"user_display_name": "Test LTest",
"app_id": "8a4de8b5-095c-47d0-a96f-a75130c61d53",
"status": {
"error_code": 50140
}
}
},
"resource": {
"provider": "Microsoft.aadiam",
"id": "/tenants/8a4de8b5-095c-47d0-a96f-a75130c61d53/providers/Microsoft.aadiam"
}
}
}
Exported fields
Field | Description | Type |
---|---|---|
@timestamp | Event timestamp. | date |
azure.correlation_id | Correlation ID | keyword |
azure.resource.authorization_rule | Authorization rule | keyword |
azure.resource.group | Resource group | keyword |
azure.resource.id | Resource ID | keyword |
azure.resource.name | Name | keyword |
azure.resource.namespace | Resource type/namespace | keyword |
azure.resource.provider | Resource type/namespace | keyword |
azure.signinlogs.caller_ip_address | The IP address of the client that made the request. | ip |
azure.signinlogs.category | Category | keyword |
azure.signinlogs.identity | Identity | keyword |
azure.signinlogs.operation_name | The operation name | keyword |
azure.signinlogs.operation_version | The operation version | keyword |
azure.signinlogs.properties.app_display_name | App display name | keyword |
azure.signinlogs.properties.app_id | App ID | keyword |
azure.signinlogs.properties.applied_conditional_access_policies | A list of conditional access policies that are triggered by the corresponding sign-in activity. | flattened |
azure.signinlogs.properties.authentication_details | The result of the authentication attempt and additional details on the authentication method. | flattened |
azure.signinlogs.properties.authentication_processing_details | Additional authentication processing details, such as the agent name in case of PTA/PHS or Server/farm name in case of federated authentication. | flattened |
azure.signinlogs.properties.authentication_protocol | Authentication protocol type. | keyword |
azure.signinlogs.properties.authentication_requirement | This holds the highest level of authentication needed through all the sign-in steps, for sign-in to succeed. | keyword |
azure.signinlogs.properties.authentication_requirement_policies | Set of CA policies that apply to this sign-in, each as CA: policy name, and/or MFA: Per-user | flattened |
azure.signinlogs.properties.autonomous_system_number | Autonomous system number. | long |
azure.signinlogs.properties.client_app_used | Client app used | keyword |
azure.signinlogs.properties.conditional_access_status | Conditional access status | keyword |
azure.signinlogs.properties.correlation_id | Correlation ID | keyword |
azure.signinlogs.properties.created_at | Date and time (UTC) the sign-in was initiated. | date |
azure.signinlogs.properties.cross_tenant_access_type | keyword | |
azure.signinlogs.properties.device_detail.browser | Browser | keyword |
azure.signinlogs.properties.device_detail.device_id | Device ID | keyword |
azure.signinlogs.properties.device_detail.display_name | Display name | keyword |
azure.signinlogs.properties.device_detail.is_compliant | If the device is compliant | boolean |
azure.signinlogs.properties.device_detail.is_managed | If the device is managed | boolean |
azure.signinlogs.properties.device_detail.operating_system | Operating system | keyword |
azure.signinlogs.properties.device_detail.trust_type | Trust type | keyword |
azure.signinlogs.properties.flagged_for_review | boolean | |
azure.signinlogs.properties.home_tenant_id | keyword | |
azure.signinlogs.properties.id | Unique ID representing the sign-in activity. | keyword |
azure.signinlogs.properties.incoming_token_type | Incoming token type. | keyword |
azure.signinlogs.properties.is_interactive | Is interactive | boolean |
azure.signinlogs.properties.is_tenant_restricted | boolean | |
azure.signinlogs.properties.network_location_details | The network location details including the type of network used and its names. | flattened |
azure.signinlogs.properties.original_request_id | Original request ID | keyword |
azure.signinlogs.properties.processing_time_ms | Processing time in milliseconds | float |
azure.signinlogs.properties.resource_display_name | Resource display name | keyword |
azure.signinlogs.properties.resource_id | The identifier of the resource that the user signed in to. | keyword |
azure.signinlogs.properties.resource_tenant_id | keyword | |
azure.signinlogs.properties.risk_detail | Risk detail | keyword |
azure.signinlogs.properties.risk_event_types | The list of risk event types associated with the sign-in. Possible values: unlikelyTravel, anonymizedIPAddress, maliciousIPAddress, unfamiliarFeatures, malwareInfectedIPAddress, suspiciousIPAddress, leakedCredentials, investigationsThreatIntelligence, generic, or unknownFutureValue. | keyword |
azure.signinlogs.properties.risk_event_types_v2 | The list of risk event types associated with the sign-in. Possible values: unlikelyTravel, anonymizedIPAddress, maliciousIPAddress, unfamiliarFeatures, malwareInfectedIPAddress, suspiciousIPAddress, leakedCredentials, investigationsThreatIntelligence, generic, or unknownFutureValue. | keyword |
azure.signinlogs.properties.risk_level_aggregated | Risk level aggregated | keyword |
azure.signinlogs.properties.risk_level_during_signin | Risk level during signIn | keyword |
azure.signinlogs.properties.risk_state | Risk state | keyword |
azure.signinlogs.properties.service_principal_credential_key_id | Key id of the service principal that initiated the sign-in. | keyword |
azure.signinlogs.properties.service_principal_id | The application identifier used for sign-in. This field is populated when you are signing in using an application. | keyword |
azure.signinlogs.properties.service_principal_name | The application name used for sign-in. This field is populated when you are signing in using an application. | keyword |
azure.signinlogs.properties.sso_extension_version | keyword | |
azure.signinlogs.properties.status.error_code | Error code | long |
azure.signinlogs.properties.token_issuer_name | Token issuer name | keyword |
azure.signinlogs.properties.token_issuer_type | Token issuer type | keyword |
azure.signinlogs.properties.unique_token_identifier | Unique token identifier for the request. | keyword |
azure.signinlogs.properties.user_display_name | User display name | keyword |
azure.signinlogs.properties.user_id | User ID | keyword |
azure.signinlogs.properties.user_principal_name | User principal name | keyword |
azure.signinlogs.properties.user_type | keyword | |
azure.signinlogs.result_description | Result description | keyword |
azure.signinlogs.result_signature | Result signature | keyword |
azure.signinlogs.result_type | Result type | keyword |
azure.signinlogs.tenant_id | Tenant ID | keyword |
azure.subscription_id | Azure subscription ID | keyword |
azure.tenant_id | tenant ID | 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, resource, or service is located. | 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 | The cloud project identifier. Examples: Google Cloud Project id, Azure Project id. | keyword |
cloud.provider | Name of the cloud provider. Example values are aws, azure, gcp, or digitalocean. | keyword |
cloud.region | Region in which this host, resource, or service is located. | 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 name. | constant_keyword |
data_stream.namespace | Data stream namespace. | constant_keyword |
data_stream.type | Data stream type. | constant_keyword |
destination.address | Some event destination addresses are defined ambiguously. The event will sometimes list an IP, a domain or a unix socket. You should always store the raw address in the .address field. Then it should be duplicated to .ip or .domain , depending on which one it is. | keyword |
destination.as.number | Unique number allocated to the autonomous system. The autonomous system number (ASN) uniquely identifies each network on the Internet. | long |
destination.as.organization.name | Organization name. | keyword |
destination.as.organization.name.text | Multi-field of destination.as.organization.name . | match_only_text |
destination.geo.city_name | City name. | keyword |
destination.geo.continent_name | Name of the continent. | keyword |
destination.geo.country_iso_code | Country ISO code. | keyword |
destination.geo.country_name | Country name. | keyword |
destination.geo.location | Longitude and latitude. | geo_point |
destination.geo.name | User-defined description of a location, at the level of granularity they care about. Could be the name of their data centers, the floor number, if this describes a local physical entity, city names. Not typically used in automated geolocation. | keyword |
destination.geo.region_iso_code | Region ISO code. | keyword |
destination.geo.region_name | Region name. | keyword |
destination.ip | IP address of the destination (IPv4 or IPv6). | ip |
destination.port | Port of the destination. | long |
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.duration | Duration of the event in nanoseconds. If event.start and event.end are known this value should be the difference between the end and start time. | long |
event.id | Unique ID to describe the event. | keyword |
event.ingested | Timestamp when an event arrived in the central data store. This is different from @timestamp , which is when the event originally occurred. It's also different from event.created , which is meant to capture the first time an agent saw the event. In normal conditions, assuming no tampering, the timestamps should chronologically look like this: @timestamp < event.created < event.ingested . | date |
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 coming in at a regular interval or not. | keyword |
event.module | Event module | constant_keyword |
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.mime_type | MIME type should identify the format of the file or stream of bytes using https://www.iana.org/assignments/media-types/media-types.xhtml\[IANA official types], where possible. When more than one type is applicable, the most specific type should be used. | keyword |
file.size | File size in bytes. Only relevant when file.type is "file". | long |
geo.city_name | City name. | keyword |
geo.continent_name | Name of the continent. | keyword |
geo.country_iso_code | Country ISO code. | keyword |
geo.country_name | Country name. | keyword |
geo.location | Longitude and latitude. | geo_point |
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.hostname | Hostname of the host. It normally contains what the hostname command returns on the host machine. | 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.ip | Host ip addresses. | ip |
host.mac | Host MAC addresses. The notation format from RFC 7042 is suggested: Each octet (that is, 8-bit byte) is represented by two [uppercase] hexadecimal digits giving the value of the octet as an unsigned integer. Successive octets are separated by a hyphen. | 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 . | match_only_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 |
log.level | Original log level of the log event. If the source of the event provides a log level or textual severity, this is the one that goes in log.level . If your source doesn't specify one, you may put your event transport's severity here (e.g. Syslog severity). Some examples are warn , err , i , informational . | 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.community_id | A hash of source and destination IPs and ports, as well as the protocol used in a communication. This is a tool-agnostic standard to identify flows. Learn more at https://github.com/corelight/community-id-spec. | 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 |
source.address | Some event source addresses are defined ambiguously. The event will sometimes list an IP, a domain or a unix socket. You should always store the raw address in the .address field. Then it should be duplicated to .ip or .domain , depending on which one it is. | keyword |
source.as.number | Unique number allocated to the autonomous system. The autonomous system number (ASN) uniquely identifies each network on the Internet. | long |
source.as.organization.name | Organization name. | keyword |
source.as.organization.name.text | Multi-field of source.as.organization.name . | match_only_text |
source.geo.city_name | City name. | keyword |
source.geo.continent_name | Name of the continent. | keyword |
source.geo.country_iso_code | Country ISO code. | keyword |
source.geo.country_name | Country name. | keyword |
source.geo.location | Longitude and latitude. | geo_point |
source.geo.name | User-defined description of a location, at the level of granularity they care about. Could be the name of their data centers, the floor number, if this describes a local physical entity, city names. Not typically used in automated geolocation. | keyword |
source.geo.region_iso_code | Region ISO code. | keyword |
source.geo.region_name | Region name. | keyword |
source.ip | IP address of the source (IPv4 or IPv6). | ip |
source.port | Port of the source. | long |
tags | List of keywords used to tag each event. | keyword |
user.domain | Name of the directory the user is a member of. For example, an LDAP or Active Directory domain name. | keyword |
user.full_name | User's full name, if available. | keyword |
user.full_name.text | Multi-field of user.full_name . | match_only_text |
user.id | Unique identifier of the user. | 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 |
Identity Protection logs
Retrieves Azure AD Identity Protection logs. The Azure AD Identity Protection service analyzes events from AD users' behavior, detects risk situations, and can respond by reporting only or even blocking users at risk, according to policy configurations.
An example event for identity_protection
looks as following:
{
"@timestamp": "2022-08-22T18:07:16.000Z",
"azure": {
"correlation_id": "ce0ed07f9ccf5be15e4b97d2979af6569b1f67db87ddc9b88b5bb743ea091e47",
"identityprotection": {
"category": "UserRiskEvents",
"operation_name": "User Risk Detection",
"operation_version": "1.0",
"properties": {
"activity": "signin",
"activity_datetime": "2022-08-22T18:05:06.133Z",
"additional_info": [
{
"Key": "userAgent",
"Value": "Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; rv:91.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/91.0"
}
],
"correlation_id": "266133c2-fabb-492f-9ebf-bdf12317b817",
"detected_datetime": "2022-08-22T18:05:06.133Z",
"detection_timing_type": "realtime",
"id": "ce0ed07f9ccf5be15e4b97d2979af6569b1f67db87ddc9b88b5bb743ea091e47",
"ip_address": "67.43.156.42",
"location": {
"city": "Dresden",
"countryOrRegion": "DE",
"geoCoordinates": {
"altitude": 0,
"latitude": 51.0714,
"longitude": 13.7399
},
"state": "Sachsen"
},
"request_id": "e1b6d9d7-5fc0-4638-ae1a-e0abceb92200",
"risk_detail": "none",
"risk_event_type": "anonymizedIPAddress",
"risk_last_updated_datetime": "2022-08-22T18:07:16.894Z",
"risk_level": "high",
"risk_state": "atRisk",
"risk_type": "anonymizedIPAddress",
"source": "IdentityProtection",
"token_issuer_type": "AzureAD",
"user_display_name": "Joe Danger",
"user_id": "51e26eae-d07b-44e5-bb0b-249f49569a8c",
"user_principal_name": "joe.danger@contoso.onmicrosoft.com",
"user_type": "member"
},
"result_signature": "None"
},
"resource": {
"id": "/tenants/5611623b-9128-461e-9d7f-a0d9c270ead2/providers/microsoft.aadiam",
"provider": "microsoft.aadiam"
},
"tenant_id": "5611623b-9128-461e-9d7f-a0d9c270ead2"
},
"cloud": {
"provider": "azure"
},
"ecs": {
"version": "8.5.0"
},
"event": {
"action": "User Risk Detection",
"duration": 0,
"kind": "event"
},
"source": {
"as": {
"number": 35908
},
"geo": {
"continent_name": "Asia",
"country_iso_code": "BT",
"country_name": "Bhutan",
"location": {
"lat": 27.5,
"lon": 90.5
}
},
"ip": "67.43.156.42"
}
}
Exported fields
Field | Description | Type |
---|---|---|
@timestamp | Event timestamp. | date |
azure.correlation_id | Correlation ID | keyword |
azure.identityprotection.category | Category | keyword |
azure.identityprotection.operation_name | Operation name | keyword |
azure.identityprotection.operation_version | Operation version | keyword |
azure.identityprotection.properties.activity | Indicates the activity type the detected risk is linked to. Possible values are: signin, user, unknownFutureValue. | keyword |
azure.identityprotection.properties.activity_datetime | Date and time that the risky activity occurred. The DateTimeOffset type represents date and time information using ISO 8601 format and is always in UTC time. For example, midnight UTC on Jan 1, 2014 is look like this: 2014-01-01T00:00:00Z. | date |
azure.identityprotection.properties.additional_info | Additional information associated with the risk detection. Possible keys in the additionalInfo JSON string are: userAgent, alertUrl, relatedEventTimeInUtc, relatedUserAgent, deviceInformation, relatedLocation, requestId, correlationId, lastActivityTimeInUtc, malwareName, clientLocation, clientIp, riskReasons. For more information about riskReasons and possible values, see https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/graph/api/resources/riskdetection?view=graph-rest-1.0#riskreasons-values. | flattened |
azure.identityprotection.properties.correlation_id | Correlation ID of the sign-in associated with the risk detection. This property is null if the risk detection is not associated with a sign-in. | keyword |
azure.identityprotection.properties.cross_tenant_access_type | keyword | |
azure.identityprotection.properties.detected_datetime | Date and time that the risk was detected. The DateTimeOffset type represents date and time information using ISO 8601 format and is always in UTC time. For example, midnight UTC on Jan 1, 2014 looks like this: 2014-01-01T00:00:00Z. | date |
azure.identityprotection.properties.detection_timing_type | Timing of the detected risk (real-time/offline). Possible values are: notDefined, realtime, nearRealtime, offline, unknownFutureValue. | keyword |
azure.identityprotection.properties.home_tenant_id | keyword | |
azure.identityprotection.properties.id | Unique ID of the risk detection. | keyword |
azure.identityprotection.properties.ip_address | Provides the IP address of the client from where the risk occurred. | ip |
azure.identityprotection.properties.is_deleted | Indicates whether the user is deleted. | boolean |
azure.identityprotection.properties.is_guest | boolean | |
azure.identityprotection.properties.is_processing | Indicates whether a user's risky state is being processed by the backend. | boolean |
azure.identityprotection.properties.last_updated_datetime | Date and time when the risk detection was last updated. | date |
azure.identityprotection.properties.location | Location of the sign-in. | flattened |
azure.identityprotection.properties.request_id | Request ID of the sign-in associated with the risk detection. This property is null if the risk detection is not associated with a sign-in. | keyword |
azure.identityprotection.properties.resource_tenant_id | keyword | |
azure.identityprotection.properties.risk_detail | Details of the detected risk. Possible values are: none, adminGeneratedTemporaryPassword, userPerformedSecuredPasswordChange, userPerformedSecuredPasswordReset, adminConfirmedSigninSafe, aiConfirmedSigninSafe, userPassedMFADrivenByRiskBasedPolicy, adminDismissedAllRiskForUser, adminConfirmedSigninCompromised, hidden, adminConfirmedUserCompromised, unknownFutureValue. | keyword |
azure.identityprotection.properties.risk_event_type | The type of risk event detected. The possible values are unlikelyTravel, anonymizedIPAddress, maliciousIPAddress, unfamiliarFeatures, malwareInfectedIPAddress, suspiciousIPAddress, leakedCredentials, investigationsThreatIntelligence, generic,adminConfirmedUserCompromised, passwordSpray, impossibleTravel, newCountry, anomalousToken, tokenIssuerAnomaly,suspiciousBrowser, riskyIPAddress, mcasSuspiciousInboxManipulationRules, suspiciousInboxForwarding, and unknownFutureValue. If the risk detection is a premium detection, will show generic. For more information about each value, see https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/graph/api/resources/riskdetection?view=graph-rest-1.0#riskeventtype-values values. | keyword |
azure.identityprotection.properties.risk_last_updated_datetime | The date and time that the risky user was last updated. | date |
azure.identityprotection.properties.risk_level | Level of the detected risk. Possible values are: low, medium, high, hidden, none, unknownFutureValue. | keyword |
azure.identityprotection.properties.risk_state | The state of a detected risky user or sign-in. Possible values are: none, confirmedSafe, remediated, dismissed, atRisk, confirmedCompromised, unknownFutureValue. | keyword |
azure.identityprotection.properties.risk_type | keyword | |
azure.identityprotection.properties.source | Source of the risk detection. For example, activeDirectory. | keyword |
azure.identityprotection.properties.token_issuer_type | Indicates the type of token issuer for the detected sign-in risk. Possible values are: AzureAD, ADFederationServices, UnknownFutureValue. | keyword |
azure.identityprotection.properties.user_display_name | The user display name of the user. | keyword |
azure.identityprotection.properties.user_id | Unique ID of the user. | keyword |
azure.identityprotection.properties.user_principal_name | The user principal name (UPN) of the user. | keyword |
azure.identityprotection.properties.user_type | The type of the user (for example, "member"). | keyword |
azure.identityprotection.result_signature | Result signature | keyword |
azure.resource.group | Resource group | keyword |
azure.resource.id | Resource ID | keyword |
azure.resource.name | Name | keyword |
azure.resource.namespace | Resource type/namespace | keyword |
azure.resource.provider | Resource type/namespace | keyword |
azure.subscription_id | Azure subscription ID | keyword |
azure.tenant_id | tenant ID | 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, resource, or service is located. | 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 | The cloud project identifier. Examples: Google Cloud Project id, Azure Project id. | keyword |
cloud.provider | Name of the cloud provider. Example values are aws, azure, gcp, or digitalocean. | keyword |
cloud.region | Region in which this host, resource, or service is located. | 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 name. | constant_keyword |
data_stream.namespace | Data stream namespace. | constant_keyword |
data_stream.type | Data stream type. | constant_keyword |
destination.address | Some event destination addresses are defined ambiguously. The event will sometimes list an IP, a domain or a unix socket. You should always store the raw address in the .address field. Then it should be duplicated to .ip or .domain , depending on which one it is. | keyword |
destination.as.number | Unique number allocated to the autonomous system. The autonomous system number (ASN) uniquely identifies each network on the Internet. | long |
destination.as.organization.name | Organization name. | keyword |
destination.as.organization.name.text | Multi-field of destination.as.organization.name . | match_only_text |
destination.geo.city_name | City name. | keyword |
destination.geo.continent_name | Name of the continent. | keyword |
destination.geo.country_iso_code | Country ISO code. | keyword |
destination.geo.country_name | Country name. | keyword |
destination.geo.location | Longitude and latitude. | geo_point |
destination.geo.name | User-defined description of a location, at the level of granularity they care about. Could be the name of their data centers, the floor number, if this describes a local physical entity, city names. Not typically used in automated geolocation. | keyword |
destination.geo.region_iso_code | Region ISO code. | keyword |
destination.geo.region_name | Region name. | keyword |
destination.ip | IP address of the destination (IPv4 or IPv6). | ip |
destination.port | Port of the destination. | long |
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.duration | Duration of the event in nanoseconds. If event.start and event.end are known this value should be the difference between the end and start time. | long |
event.id | Unique ID to describe the event. | keyword |
event.ingested | Timestamp when an event arrived in the central data store. This is different from @timestamp , which is when the event originally occurred. It's also different from event.created , which is meant to capture the first time an agent saw the event. In normal conditions, assuming no tampering, the timestamps should chronologically look like this: @timestamp < event.created < event.ingested . | date |
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 coming in at a regular interval or not. | keyword |
event.module | Event module | constant_keyword |
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.mime_type | MIME type should identify the format of the file or stream of bytes using https://www.iana.org/assignments/media-types/media-types.xhtml\[IANA official types], where possible. When more than one type is applicable, the most specific type should be used. | keyword |
file.size | File size in bytes. Only relevant when file.type is "file". | long |
geo.city_name | City name. | keyword |
geo.continent_name | Name of the continent. | keyword |
geo.country_iso_code | Country ISO code. | keyword |
geo.country_name | Country name. | keyword |
geo.location | Longitude and latitude. | geo_point |
geo.name | User-defined description of a location, at the level of granularity they care about. Could be the name of their data centers, the floor number, if this describes a local physical entity, city names. Not typically used in automated geolocation. | keyword |
geo.region_iso_code | Region ISO code. | keyword |
geo.region_name | Region name. | 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.hostname | Hostname of the host. It normally contains what the hostname command returns on the host machine. | 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.ip | Host ip addresses. | ip |
host.mac | Host MAC addresses. The notation format from RFC 7042 is suggested: Each octet (that is, 8-bit byte) is represented by two [uppercase] hexadecimal digits giving the value of the octet as an unsigned integer. Successive octets are separated by a hyphen. | 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 . | match_only_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 |
log.level | Original log level of the log event. If the source of the event provides a log level or textual severity, this is the one that goes in log.level . If your source doesn't specify one, you may put your event transport's severity here (e.g. Syslog severity). Some examples are warn , err , i , informational . | 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.community_id | A hash of source and destination IPs and ports, as well as the protocol used in a communication. This is a tool-agnostic standard to identify flows. Learn more at https://github.com/corelight/community-id-spec. | 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 |
source.address | Some event source addresses are defined ambiguously. The event will sometimes list an IP, a domain or a unix socket. You should always store the raw address in the .address field. Then it should be duplicated to .ip or .domain , depending on which one it is. | keyword |
source.as.number | Unique number allocated to the autonomous system. The autonomous system number (ASN) uniquely identifies each network on the Internet. | long |
source.as.organization.name | Organization name. | keyword |
source.as.organization.name.text | Multi-field of source.as.organization.name . | match_only_text |
source.geo.city_name | City name. | keyword |
source.geo.continent_name | Name of the continent. | keyword |
source.geo.country_iso_code | Country ISO code. | keyword |
source.geo.country_name | Country name. | keyword |
source.geo.location | Longitude and latitude. | geo_point |
source.geo.name | User-defined description of a location, at the level of granularity they care about. Could be the name of their data centers, the floor number, if this describes a local physical entity, city names. Not typically used in automated geolocation. | keyword |
source.geo.region_iso_code | Region ISO code. | keyword |
source.geo.region_name | Region name. | keyword |
source.ip | IP address of the source (IPv4 or IPv6). | ip |
tags | List of keywords used to tag each event. | keyword |
user.domain | Name of the directory the user is a member of. For example, an LDAP or Active Directory domain name. | keyword |
user.full_name | User's full name, if available. | keyword |
user.full_name.text | Multi-field of user.full_name . | match_only_text |
user.id | Unique identifier of the user. | keyword |
user.name | Short name or login of the user. | keyword |
user.name.text | Multi-field of user.name . | match_only_text |
Provisioning logs
Retrieves Azure Active Directory Provisioning logs. The Azure AD Provisioning service syncs AD users and groups to and from external enterprise applications. For example, you can configure the provisioning service to replicate all existing AD users and groups to an external Dropbox Business account or vice-versa.
The Provisioning Logs contain a lot of details about a inbound/outbound sync activity, like:
- User or group details.
- Source and target systems (e.g., from Azure AD to Dropbox).
- Provisioning status.
- Provisioning steps (with details for each step).
An example event for provisioning
looks as following:
{
"@timestamp": "2022-08-23T13:36:50.353Z",
"azure": {
"correlation_id": "54416401-eef2-461c-8de7-385dde2b3cba",
"provisioning": {
"category": "ProvisioningLogs",
"identity": "d6cbb0bd-c3ec-6455-bd3e-4282141ce369",
"level": 4,
"operation_name": "Provisioning activity",
"operation_version": "1.0",
"properties": {
"action": "Create",
"activity_datetime": "2022-08-23T13:36:50.3538931Z",
"change_id": "54416401-eef2-461c-8de7-385dde2b3cba",
"cycle_id": "cc305635-a28e-4139-a056-42b5102933fe",
"duration_ms": 828,
"id": "d6cbb0bd-c3ec-6455-bd3e-4282141ce369",
"initiated_by": {
"id": "",
"name": "Azure AD Provisioning Service",
"type": "system"
},
"job_id": "DropboxSCIMOutDelta.5611623b9128461e9d7fa0d9c270ead2.d6163622-bdf8-4b26-976f-7d573c638e2a",
"modified_properties": [],
"provisioning_action": "create",
"provisioning_status_info": {
"status": "skipped"
},
"provisioning_steps": [
{
"description": "Received User 'ellie@contoso.onmicrosoft.com' change of type (Add) from Azure Active Directory",
"details": {
"IsSoftDeleted": "False",
"accountEnabled": "True",
"appRoleAssignments": "User",
"displayName": "Ellie",
"givenName": "Ellie",
"mailNickname": "ellie",
"objectId": "7383d412-41f2-478f-a317-7396cc32ce9e",
"userPrincipalName": "ellie@contoso.onmicrosoft.com"
},
"name": "EntryImportAdd",
"provisioning_step_type": 0,
"status": 0
},
{
"description": "Determine if User in scope by evaluating against each scoping filter",
"details": {
"Active in the source system": "True",
"Assigned to the application": "True",
"ScopeEvaluationResult": "{}",
"Scoping filter evaluation passed": "True",
"User has the required role": "True"
},
"name": "EntrySynchronizationScoping",
"provisioning_step_type": 1,
"status": 0
},
{
"description": "User 'ellie@contoso.onmicrosoft.com' will be created in Dropbox (User is active and assigned in Azure Active Directory, but no matching User was found in Dropbox)",
"details": {},
"name": "EntrySynchronizationAdd",
"provisioning_step_type": 2,
"status": 0
},
{
"description": "urn:ietf:params:scim:schemas:core:2.0:User 'ellie@contoso.onmicrosoft.com' will be skipped because the value of the property name.familyName is missing or invalid. Please update the value of the property name.familyName on the object in the source system.",
"details": {
"PropertyName": "name.familyName",
"ReportableIdentifier": "ellie@contoso.onmicrosoft.com",
"SkipReason": "AttributeValidationFailed"
},
"name": "EntrySynchronizationSkip",
"provisioning_step_type": 3,
"status": 2
}
],
"service_principal": {
"id": "74866461-3754-40ed-a743-9c88ff29643e",
"name": "Dropbox Business"
},
"source_identity": {
"details": {
"display_name": "Ellie",
"id": "7383d412-41f2-478f-a317-7396cc32ce9e",
"odatatype": "User",
"user_principal_name": "ellie@contoso.onmicrosoft.com"
},
"id": "7383d412-41f2-478f-a317-7396cc32ce9e",
"identity_type": "User",
"name": "Ellie"
},
"source_system": {
"details": {},
"id": "bab3751f-8f21-4657-8fce-698f7391dbdd",
"name": "Azure Active Directory"
},
"target_identity": {
"details": {},
"id": "",
"identity_type": "urn:ietf:params:scim:schemas:core:2.0:User",
"name": ""
},
"target_system": {
"details": {
"application_id": "97e0a159-74ec-4db1-918a-c03a9c3b6b81",
"dervice_principal_display_name": "Dropbox Business",
"service_principal_id": "74866461-3754-40ed-a743-9c88ff29643e"
},
"id": "011a448f-1441-4336-8c20-e2d2cef9c410",
"name": "Dropbox"
},
"tenant_id": "5611623b-9128-461e-9d7f-a0d9c270ead2"
},
"result_type": "Skipped"
},
"resource": {
"id": "/tenants/5611623b-9128-461e-9d7f-a0d9c270ead2/providers/Microsoft.aadiam",
"provider": "Microsoft.aadiam"
},
"tenant_id": "5611623b-9128-461e-9d7f-a0d9c270ead2"
},
"cloud": {
"provider": "azure"
},
"ecs": {
"version": "8.5.0"
},
"event": {
"action": "Provisioning activity",
"duration": 828000000,
"kind": "event"
}
}
Exported fields
Field | Description | Type |
---|---|---|
@timestamp | Event timestamp. | date |
azure.correlation_id | Correlation ID | keyword |
azure.provisioning.category | Category | keyword |
azure.provisioning.identity | Describes the identity of the user or application that performed the operation | keyword |
azure.provisioning.level | The severity level of the event | long |
azure.provisioning.operation_name | Operation name | keyword |
azure.provisioning.operation_version | Operation version | keyword |
azure.provisioning.properties.action | Indicates the activity name or the operation name. | keyword |
azure.provisioning.properties.activity_datetime | Indicates the date and time the activity was performed. The Timestamp type represents date and time information using ISO 8601 format and is always in UTC time. For example, midnight UTC on Jan 1, 2014 would look like this: '2014-01-01T00:00:00Z' | date |
azure.provisioning.properties.change_id | Unique ID of this change in this cycle | keyword |
azure.provisioning.properties.cycle_id | Unique ID per job iteration | keyword |
azure.provisioning.properties.duration_ms | Indicates how long this provisioning action took to finish. Measured in milliseconds. | long |
azure.provisioning.properties.id | Indicates the unique ID for the activity | keyword |
azure.provisioning.properties.initiated_by.id | Uniquely identifies the person or service that initiated the provisioning event. | keyword |
azure.provisioning.properties.initiated_by.name | Name of the person or service that initiated the provisioning event. | keyword |
azure.provisioning.properties.initiated_by.type | Type of initiator. Possible values are: user, application, system, unknownFutureValue. | keyword |
azure.provisioning.properties.job_id | The unique ID for the whole provisioning job. | keyword |
azure.provisioning.properties.modified_properties | Details of each property that was modified in this provisioning action on this object. | flattened |
azure.provisioning.properties.provisioning_action | Indicates the activity name or the operation name. Possible values are: create, update, delete, stageddelete, disable, other and unknownFutureValue. For a list of activities logged, refer to Azure AD activity list. | keyword |
azure.provisioning.properties.provisioning_status_info.error_information.additional_details | Additional details in case of error. | keyword |
azure.provisioning.properties.provisioning_status_info.error_information.error_category | Categorizes the error code. Possible values are failure, nonServiceFailure, success, unknownFutureValue. | keyword |
azure.provisioning.properties.provisioning_status_info.error_information.error_code | Unique error code if any occurred. To learn more, visit https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/active-directory/reports-monitoring/concept-provisioning-logs#error-codes | keyword |
azure.provisioning.properties.provisioning_status_info.error_information.reason | Summarizes the status and describes why the status happened. | keyword |
azure.provisioning.properties.provisioning_status_info.error_information.recommended_action | Provides the resolution for the corresponding error. | keyword |
azure.provisioning.properties.provisioning_status_info.status | Possible values are: success, warning, failure, skipped, unknownFutureValue. | keyword |
azure.provisioning.properties.provisioning_steps.description | Summary of what occurred during the step. | keyword |
azure.provisioning.properties.provisioning_steps.details | Details of what occurred during the step. | flattened |
azure.provisioning.properties.provisioning_steps.name | Name of the step. | keyword |
azure.provisioning.properties.provisioning_steps.provisioning_step_type | Type of step. | long |
azure.provisioning.properties.provisioning_steps.status | Status of the step. | long |
azure.provisioning.properties.service_principal.id | Uniquely identifies the servicePrincipal used for provisioning. | keyword |
azure.provisioning.properties.service_principal.name | Customer-defined name for the servicePrincipal. | keyword |
azure.provisioning.properties.source_identity.details | Details of the identity. | flattened |
azure.provisioning.properties.source_identity.id | Uniquely identifies the identity. | keyword |
azure.provisioning.properties.source_identity.identity_type | Type of identity that has been provisioned, such as 'user' or 'group'. | keyword |
azure.provisioning.properties.source_identity.name | Display name of the identity. | keyword |
azure.provisioning.properties.source_system.details.application_id | keyword | |
azure.provisioning.properties.source_system.details.dervice_principal_display_name | keyword | |
azure.provisioning.properties.source_system.details.service_principal_id | keyword | |
azure.provisioning.properties.source_system.id | Identifier of the system that a user was provisioned to or from. | keyword |
azure.provisioning.properties.source_system.name | Name of the system that a user was provisioned to or from. | keyword |
azure.provisioning.properties.target_identity.details | Details of the identity. | flattened |
azure.provisioning.properties.target_identity.id | Uniquely identifies the identity. | keyword |
azure.provisioning.properties.target_identity.identity_type | Type of identity that has been provisioned, such as 'user' or 'group'. | keyword |
azure.provisioning.properties.target_identity.name | Display name of the identity. | keyword |
azure.provisioning.properties.target_system.details.application_id | keyword | |
azure.provisioning.properties.target_system.details.dervice_principal_display_name | keyword | |
azure.provisioning.properties.target_system.details.service_principal_id | keyword | |
azure.provisioning.properties.target_system.id | Identifier of the system that a user was provisioned to or from. | keyword |
azure.provisioning.properties.target_system.name | Name of the system that a user was provisioned to or from. | keyword |
azure.provisioning.properties.tenant_id | Unique Azure AD tenant ID | keyword |
azure.provisioning.result_signature | Result signature | keyword |
azure.provisioning.result_type | Result type | keyword |
azure.provisioning.tenant_id | Unique Azure AD tenant ID | keyword |
azure.resource.group | Resource group | keyword |
azure.resource.id | Resource ID | keyword |
azure.resource.name | Name | keyword |
azure.resource.namespace | Resource type/namespace | keyword |
azure.resource.provider | Resource type/namespace | keyword |
azure.subscription_id | Azure subscription ID | keyword |
azure.tenant_id | tenant ID | 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, resource, or service is located. | 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 | The cloud project identifier. Examples: Google Cloud Project id, Azure Project id. | keyword |
cloud.provider | Name of the cloud provider. Example values are aws, azure, gcp, or digitalocean. | keyword |
cloud.region | Region in which this host, resource, or service is located. | 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 name. | constant_keyword |
data_stream.namespace | Data stream namespace. | constant_keyword |
data_stream.type | Data stream type. | constant_keyword |
destination.address | Some event destination addresses are defined ambiguously. The event will sometimes list an IP, a domain or a unix socket. You should always store the raw address in the .address field. Then it should be duplicated to .ip or .domain , depending on which one it is. | keyword |
destination.as.number | Unique number allocated to the autonomous system. The autonomous system number (ASN) uniquely identifies each network on the Internet. | long |
destination.as.organization.name | Organization name. | keyword |
destination.as.organization.name.text | Multi-field of destination.as.organization.name . | match_only_text |
destination.geo.city_name | City name. | keyword |
destination.geo.continent_name | Name of the continent. | keyword |
destination.geo.country_iso_code | Country ISO code. | keyword |
destination.geo.country_name | Country name. | keyword |
destination.geo.location | Longitude and latitude. | geo_point |
destination.geo.name | User-defined description of a location, at the level of granularity they care about. Could be the name of their data centers, the floor number, if this describes a local physical entity, city names. Not typically used in automated geolocation. | keyword |
destination.geo.region_iso_code | Region ISO code. | keyword |
destination.geo.region_name | Region name. | keyword |
destination.ip | IP address of the destination (IPv4 or IPv6). | ip |
destination.port | Port of the destination. | long |
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.duration | Duration of the event in nanoseconds. If event.start and event.end are known this value should be the difference between the end and start time. | long |
event.id | Unique ID to describe the event. | keyword |
event.ingested | Timestamp when an event arrived in the central data store. This is different from @timestamp , which is when the event originally occurred. It's also different from event.created , which is meant to capture the first time an agent saw the event. In normal conditions, assuming no tampering, the timestamps should chronologically look like this: @timestamp < event.created < event.ingested . | date |
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 coming in at a regular interval or not. | keyword |
event.module | Event module | constant_keyword |
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.mime_type | MIME type should identify the format of the file or stream of bytes using https://www.iana.org/assignments/media-types/media-types.xhtml\[IANA official types], where possible. When more than one type is applicable, the most specific type should be used. | keyword |
file.size | File size in bytes. Only relevant when file.type is "file". | long |
geo.city_name | City name. | keyword |
geo.continent_name | Name of the continent. | keyword |
geo.country_iso_code | Country ISO code. | keyword |
geo.country_name | Country name. | keyword |
geo.location | Longitude and latitude. | geo_point |
geo.name | User-defined description of a location, at the level of granularity they care about. Could be the name of their data centers, the floor number, if this describes a local physical entity, city names. Not typically used in automated geolocation. | keyword |
geo.region_iso_code | Region ISO code. | keyword |
geo.region_name | Region name. | 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.hostname | Hostname of the host. It normally contains what the hostname command returns on the host machine. | 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.ip | Host ip addresses. | ip |
host.mac | Host MAC addresses. The notation format from RFC 7042 is suggested: Each octet (that is, 8-bit byte) is represented by two [uppercase] hexadecimal digits giving the value of the octet as an unsigned integer. Successive octets are separated by a hyphen. | 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 . | match_only_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 |
log.level | Original log level of the log event. If the source of the event provides a log level or textual severity, this is the one that goes in log.level . If your source doesn't specify one, you may put your event transport's severity here (e.g. Syslog severity). Some examples are warn , err , i , informational . | 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.community_id | A hash of source and destination IPs and ports, as well as the protocol used in a communication. This is a tool-agnostic standard to identify flows. Learn more at https://github.com/corelight/community-id-spec. | 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 |
source.address | Some event source addresses are defined ambiguously. The event will sometimes list an IP, a domain or a unix socket. You should always store the raw address in the .address field. Then it should be duplicated to .ip or .domain , depending on which one it is. | keyword |
source.as.number | Unique number allocated to the autonomous system. The autonomous system number (ASN) uniquely identifies each network on the Internet. | long |
source.as.organization.name | Organization name. | keyword |
source.as.organization.name.text | Multi-field of source.as.organization.name . | match_only_text |
source.geo.city_name | City name. | keyword |
source.geo.continent_name | Name of the continent. | keyword |
source.geo.country_iso_code | Country ISO code. | keyword |
source.geo.country_name | Country name. | keyword |
source.geo.location | Longitude and latitude. | geo_point |
source.geo.name | User-defined description of a location, at the level of granularity they care about. Could be the name of their data centers, the floor number, if this describes a local physical entity, city names. Not typically used in automated geolocation. | keyword |
source.geo.region_iso_code | Region ISO code. | keyword |
source.geo.region_name | Region name. | keyword |
source.ip | IP address of the source (IPv4 or IPv6). | ip |
tags | List of keywords used to tag each event. | keyword |
user.domain | Name of the directory the user is a member of. For example, an LDAP or Active Directory domain name. | keyword |
user.full_name | User's full name, if available. | keyword |
user.full_name.text | Multi-field of user.full_name . | match_only_text |
user.id | Unique identifier of the user. | keyword |
user.name | Short name or login of the user. | keyword |
user.name.text | Multi-field of user.name . | match_only_text |
Audit logs
Retrieves Azure Active Directory audit logs. The audit logs provide traceability through logs for all changes done by various features within Azure AD. Examples of audit logs include changes made to any resources within Azure AD like adding or removing users, apps, groups, roles and policies.
An example event for auditlogs
looks as following:
{
"log": {
"level": "Information"
},
"cloud": {
"provider": "azure"
},
"@timestamp": "2020-11-02T08:51:36.997Z",
"ecs": {
"version": "1.5.0"
},
"data_stream": {
"namespace": "default",
"type": "logs",
"dataset": "azure.auditlogs"
},
"event": {
"duration": 0,
"ingested": "2020-10-30T20:47:48.123859400Z",
"kind": "event",
"action": "MICROSOFT.RESOURCES/DEPLOYMENTS/WRITE",
"dataset": "azure.auditlogs",
"outcome": "success"
},
"azure.correlation_id": "8a4de8b5-095c-47d0-a96f-a75130c61d53",
"azure.resource.id": "/tenants/8a4de8b5-095c-47d0-a96f-a75130c61d53/providers/Microsoft.aadiam",
"azure.resource.provider": "Microsoft.aadiam",
"azure.tenant_id": "8a4de8b5-095c-47d0-a96f-a75130c61d53",
"azure.auditlogs.category": "AuditLogs",
"azure.auditlogs.identity": "Device Registration Service",
"azure.auditlogs.operation_name": "Update device",
"azure.auditlogs.operation_version": "1.0",
"azure.auditlogs.properties.activity_datetime": "2019-10-18T15:30:51.0273716+00:00",
"azure.auditlogs.properties.activity_display_name": "Update device",
"azure.auditlogs.properties.category": "Device",
"azure.auditlogs.properties.correlation_id": "8a4de8b5-095c-47d0-a96f-a75130c61d53",
"azure.auditlogs.properties.id": "Directory_ESQ",
"azure.auditlogs.properties.initiated_by.app.displayName": "Device Registration Service",
"azure.auditlogs.properties.initiated_by.app.servicePrincipalId": "8a4de8b5-095c-47d0-a96f-a75130c61d53",
"azure.auditlogs.properties.logged_by_service": "Core Directory",
"azure.auditlogs.properties.operation_type": "Update",
"azure.auditlogs.properties.result_reason": "",
"azure.auditlogs.properties.target_resources.0.display_name": "LAPTOP-12",
"azure.auditlogs.properties.target_resources.0.id": "8a4de8b5-095c-47d0-a96f-a75130c61d53",
"azure.auditlogs.properties.target_resources.0.modified_properties.0.new_value": "\"\"",
"azure.auditlogs.properties.target_resources.0.type": "Device",
"azure.auditlogs.result_signature": "None"
}
Exported fields
Field | Description | Type |
---|---|---|
@timestamp | Event timestamp. | date |
azure.auditlogs.category | The category of the operation. Currently, Audit is the only supported value. | keyword |
azure.auditlogs.identity | Identity | keyword |
azure.auditlogs.level | Value for level. | float |
azure.auditlogs.operation_name | The operation name | keyword |
azure.auditlogs.operation_version | The operation version | keyword |
azure.auditlogs.properties.activity_datetime | Activity timestamp | date |
azure.auditlogs.properties.activity_display_name | Activity display name | keyword |
azure.auditlogs.properties.additional_details.key | Additional details key | keyword |
azure.auditlogs.properties.additional_details.user_agent | User agent name. | keyword |
azure.auditlogs.properties.additional_details.value | Additional details value | keyword |
azure.auditlogs.properties.authentication_protocol | Authentication protocol type. | keyword |
azure.auditlogs.properties.category | category | keyword |
azure.auditlogs.properties.correlation_id | Correlation ID | keyword |
azure.auditlogs.properties.id | ID | keyword |
azure.auditlogs.properties.initiated_by.app.appId | App ID | keyword |
azure.auditlogs.properties.initiated_by.app.displayName | Display name | keyword |
azure.auditlogs.properties.initiated_by.app.servicePrincipalId | Service principal ID | keyword |
azure.auditlogs.properties.initiated_by.app.servicePrincipalName | Service principal name | keyword |
azure.auditlogs.properties.initiated_by.user.displayName | Display name | keyword |
azure.auditlogs.properties.initiated_by.user.id | ID | keyword |
azure.auditlogs.properties.initiated_by.user.ipAddress | ip Address | keyword |
azure.auditlogs.properties.initiated_by.user.userPrincipalName | User principal name | keyword |
azure.auditlogs.properties.logged_by_service | Logged by service | keyword |
azure.auditlogs.properties.operation_type | Operation type | keyword |
azure.auditlogs.properties.result | Log result | keyword |
azure.auditlogs.properties.result_reason | Reason for the log result | keyword |
azure.auditlogs.properties.target_resources.*.display_name | Display name | keyword |
azure.auditlogs.properties.target_resources.*.id | ID | keyword |
azure.auditlogs.properties.target_resources.*.ip_address | ip Address | keyword |
azure.auditlogs.properties.target_resources.*.modified_properties.*.display_name | Display value | keyword |
azure.auditlogs.properties.target_resources.*.modified_properties.*.new_value | New value | keyword |
azure.auditlogs.properties.target_resources.*.modified_properties.*.old_value | Old value | keyword |
azure.auditlogs.properties.target_resources.*.type | Type | keyword |
azure.auditlogs.properties.target_resources.*.user_principal_name | User principal name | keyword |
azure.auditlogs.result_signature | Result signature | keyword |
azure.auditlogs.tenant_id | Tenant ID | keyword |
azure.correlation_id | Correlation ID | keyword |
azure.resource.authorization_rule | Authorization rule | keyword |
azure.resource.group | Resource group | keyword |
azure.resource.id | Resource ID | keyword |
azure.resource.name | Name | keyword |
azure.resource.namespace | Resource type/namespace | keyword |
azure.resource.provider | Resource type/namespace | keyword |
azure.subscription_id | Azure subscription ID | keyword |
azure.tenant_id | tenant ID | 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, resource, or service is located. | 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 | The cloud project identifier. Examples: Google Cloud Project id, Azure Project id. | keyword |
cloud.provider | Name of the cloud provider. Example values are aws, azure, gcp, or digitalocean. | keyword |
cloud.region | Region in which this host, resource, or service is located. | 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 name. | constant_keyword |
data_stream.namespace | Data stream namespace. | constant_keyword |
data_stream.type | Data stream type. | constant_keyword |
destination.address | Some event destination addresses are defined ambiguously. The event will sometimes list an IP, a domain or a unix socket. You should always store the raw address in the .address field. Then it should be duplicated to .ip or .domain , depending on which one it is. | keyword |
destination.as.number | Unique number allocated to the autonomous system. The autonomous system number (ASN) uniquely identifies each network on the Internet. | long |
destination.as.organization.name | Organization name. | keyword |
destination.as.organization.name.text | Multi-field of destination.as.organization.name . | match_only_text |
destination.geo.city_name | City name. | keyword |
destination.geo.continent_name | Name of the continent. | keyword |
destination.geo.country_iso_code | Country ISO code. | keyword |
destination.geo.country_name | Country name. | keyword |
destination.geo.location | Longitude and latitude. | geo_point |
destination.geo.name | User-defined description of a location, at the level of granularity they care about. Could be the name of their data centers, the floor number, if this describes a local physical entity, city names. Not typically used in automated geolocation. | keyword |
destination.geo.region_iso_code | Region ISO code. | keyword |
destination.geo.region_name | Region name. | keyword |
destination.ip | IP address of the destination (IPv4 or IPv6). | ip |
destination.port | Port of the destination. | long |
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.duration | Duration of the event in nanoseconds. If event.start and event.end are known this value should be the difference between the end and start time. | long |
event.id | Unique ID to describe the event. | keyword |
event.ingested | Timestamp when an event arrived in the central data store. This is different from @timestamp , which is when the event originally occurred. It's also different from event.created , which is meant to capture the first time an agent saw the event. In normal conditions, assuming no tampering, the timestamps should chronologically look like this: @timestamp < event.created < event.ingested . | date |
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 coming in at a regular interval or not. | keyword |
event.module | Event module | constant_keyword |
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.mime_type | MIME type should identify the format of the file or stream of bytes using https://www.iana.org/assignments/media-types/media-types.xhtml\[IANA official types], where possible. When more than one type is applicable, the most specific type should be used. | keyword |
file.size | File size in bytes. Only relevant when file.type is "file". | long |
geo.city_name | City name. | keyword |
geo.continent_name | Name of the continent. | keyword |
geo.country_iso_code | Country ISO code. | keyword |
geo.country_name | Country name. | keyword |
geo.location | Longitude and latitude. | geo_point |
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.hostname | Hostname of the host. It normally contains what the hostname command returns on the host machine. | 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.ip | Host ip addresses. | ip |
host.mac | Host MAC addresses. The notation format from RFC 7042 is suggested: Each octet (that is, 8-bit byte) is represented by two [uppercase] hexadecimal digits giving the value of the octet as an unsigned integer. Successive octets are separated by a hyphen. | 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 . | match_only_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 |
log.level | Original log level of the log event. If the source of the event provides a log level or textual severity, this is the one that goes in log.level . If your source doesn't specify one, you may put your event transport's severity here (e.g. Syslog severity). Some examples are warn , err , i , informational . | 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.community_id | A hash of source and destination IPs and ports, as well as the protocol used in a communication. This is a tool-agnostic standard to identify flows. Learn more at https://github.com/corelight/community-id-spec. | 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 |
source.address | Some event source addresses are defined ambiguously. The event will sometimes list an IP, a domain or a unix socket. You should always store the raw address in the .address field. Then it should be duplicated to .ip or .domain , depending on which one it is. | keyword |
source.as.number | Unique number allocated to the autonomous system. The autonomous system number (ASN) uniquely identifies each network on the Internet. | long |
source.as.organization.name | Organization name. | keyword |
source.as.organization.name.text | Multi-field of source.as.organization.name . | match_only_text |
source.geo.city_name | City name. | keyword |
source.geo.continent_name | Name of the continent. | keyword |
source.geo.country_iso_code | Country ISO code. | keyword |
source.geo.country_name | Country name. | keyword |
source.geo.location | Longitude and latitude. | geo_point |
source.geo.name | User-defined description of a location, at the level of granularity they care about. Could be the name of their data centers, the floor number, if this describes a local physical entity, city names. Not typically used in automated geolocation. | keyword |
source.geo.region_iso_code | Region ISO code. | keyword |
source.geo.region_name | Region name. | keyword |
source.ip | IP address of the source (IPv4 or IPv6). | ip |
tags | List of keywords used to tag each event. | keyword |
user.domain | Name of the directory the user is a member of. For example, an LDAP or Active Directory domain name. | keyword |
user.full_name | User's full name, if available. | keyword |
user.full_name.text | Multi-field of user.full_name . | match_only_text |
user.id | Unique identifier of the user. | keyword |
user.name | Short name or login of the user. | keyword |
user.name.text | Multi-field of user.name . | match_only_text |
Changelog
Version | Details | Kibana version(s) |
---|---|---|
1.11.1 | Enhancement View pull request | 8.12.0 or higher |
1.11.0 | Enhancement View pull request | 8.12.0 or higher |
1.10.0 | Enhancement View pull request | 8.12.0 or higher |
1.9.2 | Enhancement View pull request | 8.12.0 or higher |
1.9.1 | Bug fix View pull request | 8.12.0 or higher |
1.9.0 | Enhancement View pull request | 8.12.0 or higher |
1.8.3 | Enhancement View pull request | 8.8.0 or higher |
1.8.2 | Enhancement View pull request | 8.8.0 or higher |
1.8.1 | Enhancement View pull request | 8.8.0 or higher |
1.8.0 | Enhancement View pull request | 8.8.0 or higher |
1.7.0 | Enhancement View pull request | 8.6.0 or higher |
1.6.0 | Enhancement View pull request | 8.6.0 or higher |
1.5.33 | Bug fix View pull request | 8.6.0 or higher |
1.5.32 | Bug fix View pull request | 8.6.0 or higher |
1.5.31 | Enhancement View pull request | 8.6.0 or higher |
1.5.30 | Enhancement View pull request | 8.6.0 or higher |
1.5.29 | Enhancement View pull request | 8.6.0 or higher |
1.5.28 | Enhancement View pull request | 8.6.0 or higher |
1.5.27 | Bug fix View pull request | 8.6.0 or higher |
1.5.26 | Bug fix View pull request | 8.6.0 or higher |
1.5.25 | Bug fix View pull request | 8.6.0 or higher |
1.5.24 | Bug fix View pull request | 8.6.0 or higher |
1.5.23 | Enhancement View pull request | 8.6.0 or higher |
1.5.22 | Enhancement View pull request | 8.6.0 or higher |
1.5.21 | Enhancement View pull request | 8.6.0 or higher |
1.5.20 | Enhancement View pull request | 8.6.0 or higher |
1.5.17 | Enhancement View pull request | 8.6.0 or higher |
1.5.16 | Enhancement View pull request | 8.6.0 or higher |
1.5.15 | Enhancement View pull request | 8.6.0 or higher |
1.5.14 | Enhancement View pull request | 8.6.0 or higher |
1.5.13 | Enhancement View pull request | 7.16.0 or higher |
1.5.12 | Enhancement View pull request | 7.16.0 or higher |
1.5.11 | Enhancement View pull request | 7.16.0 or higher |
1.5.10 | Bug fix View pull request | 7.16.0 or higher |
1.5.9 | Bug fix View pull request | 7.16.0 or higher |
1.5.8 | Bug fix View pull request | 7.16.0 or higher |
1.5.7 | Bug fix View pull request | 7.16.0 or higher |
1.5.6 | Bug fix View pull request | 7.16.0 or higher |
1.5.5 | Bug fix View pull request | 7.16.0 or higher |
1.5.4 | Enhancement View pull request | 7.16.0 or higher |
1.5.3 | Enhancement View pull request | 7.16.0 or higher |
1.5.2 | Bug fix View pull request | 7.16.0 or higher |
1.5.1 | Bug fix View pull request | 7.16.0 or higher |
1.5.0 | Enhancement View pull request | 7.16.0 or higher |
1.4.1 | Enhancement View pull request | 7.16.0 or higher |
1.4.0 | Enhancement View pull request | 7.16.0 or higher |
1.3.0 | Enhancement View pull request | 7.16.0 or higher |
1.2.3 | Enhancement View pull request | 7.16.0 or higher |
1.2.2 | Enhancement View pull request | 7.16.0 or higher |
1.2.1 | Bug fix View pull request | 7.16.0 or higher |
1.2.0 | Enhancement View pull request | — |
1.1.11 | Bug fix View pull request | — |
1.1.10 | Enhancement View pull request | 7.16.0 or higher |
1.1.9 | Bug fix View pull request | — |
1.1.8 | Enhancement View pull request | 7.16.0 or higher |
1.1.7 | Bug fix View pull request | 7.16.0 or higher |
1.1.6 | Bug fix View pull request | 7.16.0 or higher |
1.1.5 | Enhancement View pull request | — |
1.1.4 | Bug fix View pull request | — |
1.1.3 | Enhancement View pull request | — |
1.1.2 | Bug fix View pull request | 7.16.0 or higher |
1.1.1 | Bug fix View pull request | — |
1.1.0 | Enhancement View pull request | — |
1.0.1 | Enhancement View pull request | 7.16.0 or higher |
1.0.0 | Enhancement View pull request | 7.16.0 or higher |
0.12.3 | Enhancement View pull request | — |
0.12.2 | Bug fix View pull request | — |
0.12.1 | Bug fix View pull request | — |
0.12.0 | Enhancement View pull request | — |
0.11.0 | Enhancement View pull request | — |
0.10.1 | Enhancement View pull request | — |
0.10.0 | Enhancement View pull request | — |
0.9.2 | Bug fix View pull request | — |
0.9.1 | Bug fix View pull request | — |
0.9.0 | Enhancement View pull request | — |
0.8.6 | Bug fix View pull request | — |
0.8.5 | Enhancement View pull request | — |
0.8.4 | Enhancement View pull request | — |
0.8.3 | Enhancement View pull request | — |
0.8.2 | Enhancement View pull request | — |
0.8.1 | Enhancement View pull request | — |
0.8.0 | Enhancement View pull request | — |
0.7.0 | Enhancement View pull request | — |
0.6.2 | Enhancement View pull request | — |
0.6.1 | Enhancement View pull request | — |
0.6.0 | Enhancement View pull request | — |
0.5.1 | Enhancement View pull request | — |
0.5.0 | Enhancement View pull request | — |
0.4.0 | Enhancement View pull request | — |
0.3.1 | Enhancement View pull request | — |
0.3.0 | Enhancement View pull request | — |
0.2.3 | Enhancement View pull request | — |
0.2.2 | Bug fix View pull request | — |
0.2.1 | Bug fix View pull request | — |
0.2.0 | Enhancement View pull request | — |
0.0.1 | Enhancement View pull request | — |