Splunk® SOAR (Cloud)

REST API Reference for Splunk SOAR (Cloud)

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REST CEF

uses the Common Event Format (CEF). CEF is a system of key:value pairs for key pieces of information about an artifact. The value is often referred to as the contains as shorthand.

/rest/cef

Get a list of available CEF.

Syntax

https://<username>:<password>@<host>/rest/cef

Usage details
Use parameters to get additional pages or sorting. All default CEFs have a type of "default." Custom CEFs have the type "custom." Only custom CEFs are mutable. CEFs with the type "default" cannot be modified.

GET

Get a list of available CEF.

Example request
Get a list of available CEF.

curl -k -u username:password https://localhost/rest/cef -G -X GET

Example response
A successful GET will return back a JSON formatted list of key names and their contains data.

{
        "count": 151,
        "data": [
            {
                "type": "default",
                "id": 1,
                "data_type": [
                    "mac address"
                ],
                "name": "dmac"
            },
            …
            {
                "type": "custom",
                "id": 566,
                "data_type": ["myIp"],
                "name": "myDestination"
            }
        ],
        "num_pages": 16
    }

POST

Add a custom CEF.

Example request
You can add a custom CEF by supplying a JSON formatted body.

curl -k -u username:password https://localhost/rest/cef \
-d '{
        "name":"docs-test-cef",
        "data_type":["test"]
    }'

Example response
A successful response includes the numeric Id given to the CEF.

{
        "id": 151,
        "success": true
}

/rest/cef filters

You can use operators to sort or filter the results.

_filter_type optional string Either "custom" or "default". Custom returns only custom CEFs, while default returns a list of all default CEFs.
_filter_name optional string A quoted name for the CEF you want information about.

/rest/cef?_filter_type="custom"

Look up information about a CEF

Syntax

https://<username>:<password>@<host>/rest/cef?_filter_type="custom"

GET

Get a list of all custom CEFs defined on the system.

Example request
Get a list of available CEF.

curl -k -u username:password https://localhost/rest/cef?_filter_type="custom" -G -X GET

Example response
A successful GET will return back a JSON formatted list of key names and their contains data.

{
    "count": 1,
    "data": [
        {
            "type": "custom",
            "id": 151,
            "data_type": [
                "test"
            ],
            "name": "docs-test-cef"
        }
    ],
    "num_pages": 1
}

/rest/cef?custom=true&page_size=3&page=0

Get a paginated list of all custom CEFs

Syntax

https://<username>:<password>@<host>/rest/cef?_filter_type="custom"

Usage
You can set the page size to any valid integer.

GET

Get a list of all custom CEFs defined on the system, organized into pages.

Example request
Get a list of available CEF.

curl -k -u username:password https://localhost/rest/cef?custom=true&page_size=3&page=0 -G -X GET

Example response
A successful GET will return back a JSON formatted list of key names and their contains data.

{
    "count": 151,
    "data": [
        {
            "type": "default",
            "id": 1,
            "data_type": [
                "mac address"
            ],
            "name": "dmac"
        },
        {
            "type": "default",
            "id": 2,
            "data_type": [],
            "name": "act"
        },
        {
            "type": "default",
            "id": 3,
            "data_type": [
                "host name"
            ],
            "name": "dhost"
        },
        {
            "type": "default",
            "id": 4,
            "data_type": [],
            "name": "app"
        },
        {
            "type": "default",
            "id": 5,
            "data_type": [],
            "name": "deviceCustomDate2Label"
        },
        {
            "type": "default",
            "id": 6,
            "data_type": [],
            "name": "applicationProtocol"
        },
        {
            "type": "default",
            "id": 7,
            "data_type": [],
            "name": "deviceDirection"
        },
        {
            "type": "default",
            "id": 8,
            "data_type": [],
            "name": "baseEventCount"
        },
        {
            "type": "default",
            "id": 9,
            "data_type": [
                "domain"
            ],
            "name": "dntdom"
        },
        {
            "type": "default",
            "id": 10,
            "data_type": [],
            "name": "bytesIn"
        }
    ],
    "num_pages": 16
}

rest/cef?_filter_name="<name>"

Get information about a single CEF, by name.

Syntax

https://<username>:<password>@<host>rest/cef?_filter_name="<name>"

GET

Get information about a single CEF, by name.

Example request
Get a list of CEF called docs-test-cef.

curl -k -u username:password https://localhost/rest/cef?_filter_name="docs-test-cef" -G -X GET

Example response
A successful GET will return back a JSON formatted list of key names and their contains data.

{
    "count": 1,
    "data": [
        {
            "type": "custom",
            "id": 151,
            "data_type": [
                "test"
            ],
            "name": "docs-test-cef"
        }
    ],
    "num_pages": 1
}  

/rest/cef/<id>

Update a custom CEF.

Syntax

https://<username>:<password>@<host>/rest/cef/<id>

POST

Update a custom CEF by supplying the CEF Id and a JSON formatted body of the updates.

Example request
Update the custom CEF called docs-example-cef

curl -k -u username:password https://localhost/rest/cef/<id> \
-d '{
        "name":"docs-example-cef",
        "data_type":["example"]
    }
'

Example response
A successful response includes the numeric Id given to the CEF.

{
        "id": 151,
        "success": true
}

DELETE

Delete a custom CEF by supplying the CEF Id.

Example request
Delete the custom CEF with Id 151.

curl -k -u username:password https://localhost/rest/cef/151 -X DELETE

Example response
A successful response includes a success message.

{
        "success": true
}
Last modified on 18 September, 2024
REST Automation Broker   REST Containers

This documentation applies to the following versions of Splunk® SOAR (Cloud): current


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