Content Pack for Monitoring Phantom as a Service

Content Pack for Monitoring Phantom as a Service

Acrobat logo Download manual as PDF


The Content Pack for SOAR System Logs replaces the Content Pack for Monitoring Phantom as a Service, which is now a legacy product. Splunk Phantom 4.10.7 is the final release of Splunk's Security Orchestration, Automation, and Response (SOAR) system to be called Splunk Phantom. All later versions are named Splunk SOAR (On-premises). For more information, see the Splunk SOAR (On-premises) documentation.
Acrobat logo Download topic as PDF

Data requirements for the Content Pack for Monitoring Phantom as a Service

The Content Pack for Monitoring Phantom as a Service requires that you install the Splunk Add-on for Unix and Linux and configure it to collect and send data to your deployment.

Step 1: Install a universal forwarder on each Phantom server

The universal forwarder collects data from a data source or another forwarder and sends it to a forwarder or a Splunk deployment. You must install a universal forwarder on each Phantom server you plan to monitor.

  1. Install a universal forwarder on each Phantom server you plan to monitor. For instructions, see Install the universal forwarder software.

    Because each Phantom server already includes an embedded copy of Splunk Enterprise, the universal forwarder detects a port conflict during the initial startup. This can adversely affect automated installation scripts. When you install manually, you're prompted to enter an alternate port. The alternate port is stored in $SPLUNK_HOME/etc/system/local/web.conf.

    Checking prerequisites...
            Checking mgmt port [8089]: not available
    ERROR: mgmt port [8089] - port is already bound.  Splunk needs to use this port.
    Would you like to change ports? [y/n]: y
    Enter a new mgmt port: 8189
    Setting mgmt to port: 8189
    The server's splunkd port has been changed.
            Checking mgmt port [8189]: open
    
  2. Configure forwarding on each Phantom server with outputs.conf. For more information, see Configure forwarding with outputs.conf.

See About forwarding and receiving in the Splunk Enterprise Forwarding Data manual to learn how to install and configure universal forwarders.

Step 2: Deploy Splunk Add-on for Phantom to indexing and search head tiers

The the Splunk Add-on for Phantom version 1.0.2 from Splunkbase. The add-on contains the following configurations that you must install on the indexing tier and search head:

  • Search time extractions and macros in props.conf and macros.conf
  • Index time extractions and linebreaking rules in props.conf

You need to create a Splunk index for Phantom data before the universal forwarder can send data to them. On your indexer tier, create an index called phantom. For more information about creating indexes, see Create custom indexes in the Splunk Enterprise Managing Indexers and Clusters of Indexers manual.

Install the Splunk Add-on for Phantom to the following locations:

  • The ITSI search head
  • Indexers
  • Any heavy forwarders that the Phantom server's universal forwarders might send data to
  • (Optional) Universal forwarders that you installed in step 1. See the next section for instructions to configure Phantom inputs for universal forwarders.

Step 3: Configure Phantom inputs for universal forwarders

After you install the Splunk Add-on for Phantom on the universal forwarders on your Phantom instances, make the following changes to enable data collection:

  1. Copy the contents of the inputs.conf.template file from $SPLUNK_HOME/etc/apps/Splunk_TA_Phantom/default/ to $SPLUNK_HOME/etc/apps/Splunk_TA_Phantom/local/inputs.conf.
  2. Set the appropriate index if it's different than the default phantom index
  3. Optionally, disable any inputs you don't want to collect

Alternatively, if you don't want to deploy the Splunk Add-on for Phantom to your universal forwarders, you can create your own inputs.conf file using the inputs.conf.template stanzas from the add-on and placing the resulting inputs.conf file in an appropriate location on your universal forwarder. See the following example file:

Sample inputs.conf

# Phantom Daemon Logs
[monitor:///var/log/phantom/clusterd.log]
index = phantom
sourcetype = phantom:daemon
disabled = false

[monitor:///var/log/phantom/actiond.log]
index = <name>
sourcetype = phantom:daemon
disabled = false

[monitor:///var/log/phantom/decided.log]
index = <name>
sourcetype = phantom:daemon
disabled = false

[monitor:///var/log/phantom/ingestd.log]
index = <name>
sourcetype = phantom:daemon:ingestd
disabled = false

[monitor:///var/log/phantom/watchdogd.log]
index = <name>
sourcetype = phantom:daemon
disabled = false

[monitor:///var/log/phantom/workflowd.log]
index = <name>
sourcetype = phantom:daemon
disabled = false

# supervisord has different format then other logs
[monitor:///var/log/phantom/supervisord.log]
index = <name>
sourcetype = phantom:supervisord
disabled = false

[monitor:///var/log/phantom/wsgi.log]
index = <name>
sourcetype = phantom:wsgi
disabled = false

# Other Phantom Logs
[monitor:///var/log/phantom/*.log]
index = <name>
sourcetype = phantom:logs
blacklist = (actiond\.log|decided\.log|ingestd\.log|watchdogd\.log|workflowd\.log|supervisord\.log|wsgi\.log)
disabled = false

# nginx web server - use nginx app on splunkbase for parsing https://splunkbase.splunk.com/app/3258/
[monitor:///var/log/nginx/access.log]
index = <name>
sourcetype = nginx:plus:access
disabled = false

[monitor:///var/log/nginx/error.log]
index = <name>
sourcetype = nginx:plus:error
disabled = false

# Postgres
[monitor:///opt/phantom/data/db/pg_log/*]
index = <name>
sourcetype = postgres
disabled = false

# Auditd - use TA-auditd for parsing https://splunkbase.splunk.com/app/4232/
[monitor:///var/log/audit/audit.log]
index = <name>
sourcetype = linux:audit
disabled = false

Step 4: Install the Phantom Remote Search add-on

The Phantom Remote Search add-on defines indexes and roles used by Phantom when Phantom is configured to use an external Splunk instance for search data. The Phantom Remote Search add-on is required in order to use the Content Pack for Monitoring Phantom as a Service.

The add-on creates various Phantom indexes using the format phantom_<name>. For example, it creates the index phantom_app_run which ITSI KPIs use.

Install the Phantom Remote Search add-on to the following locations:

  • Search heads
  • Indexers

Step 5: Install and configure the Content Pack for Monitoring Unix and Linux

The monitoring approaches in this content pack leverage the Splunk Add-on for Unix and Linux on the universal forwarder. This content pack also requires the full installation and configuration of the Content Pack for Monitoring Unix and Linux.

Before continuing to the next section, complete each of the following installation steps:

  1. Deploy the Splunk Add-on for Unix and Linux to indexers and your ITSI search head. For instructions, see Data requirements for the Content Pack for Monitoring Unix and Linux.
  2. Install and configure the Content Pack for Monitoring Unix and Linux. For instructions, see Install and configure the Content Pack for Monitoring Unix and Linux.
  3. Deploy the Splunk Add-on for Unix and Linux to the universal forwarder on each Phantom server. Configure an inputs.conf file with the recommended settings for the content pack. For instructions, see Data requirements for the Content Pack for Monitoring Unix and Linux.

Next steps

Now that you've completed the data collection requirements, continue to Install and configure the Content Pack for Monitoring Phantom as a Service

Last modified on 14 September, 2022
PREVIOUS
Release notes for the Content Pack for Monitoring Phantom as a Service
  NEXT
Install and configure the Content Pack for Monitoring Phantom as a Service

This documentation applies to the following versions of Content Pack for Monitoring Phantom as a Service: 1.0.1


Was this documentation topic helpful?


You must be logged into splunk.com in order to post comments. Log in now.

Please try to keep this discussion focused on the content covered in this documentation topic. If you have a more general question about Splunk functionality or are experiencing a difficulty with Splunk, consider posting a question to Splunkbase Answers.

0 out of 1000 Characters