Current ThreatQ Version Filter
 

Darktrace Connector

The web format of this guide reflects the most current release.  Guides for older iterations are available in PDF format.  

Integration Details

ThreatQuotient provides the following details for this integration:

Introduction

The Darktrace Connector ingests alerts from Darktrace into ThreatQ as AI Analyst and Model Breach Events with devices as related indicators and assets. It also takes a comma-separated list of Threat Library collections in as a parameter and exports the collections' FQDN and IP Address indicators into Darktrace.

Prerequisites

Review the following requirements before attempting to install the connector.  

Time Zone

The time zone steps are for ThreatQ v5 only.  You can skip these steps if you are on a ThreatQ v6 instance.  

You should ensure all ThreatQ devices are set to the correct time, time zone, and date (UTC is recommended), and using a clock source available to all.

To identify which time zone is closest to your present location, use the timedatectl command with the list-timezones command line option.

For example, enter the following command to list all available time zones in Europe:

timedatectl list-timezones | grep Europe 
Europe/Amsterdam 
Europe/Athens 
Europe/Belgrade 
Europe/Berlin

Enter the following command, as root, to change the time zone to UTC:

timedatectl set-timezone UTC

Integration Dependencies

The integration must be installed in a python 3.6 environment.

The following is a list of required dependencies for the integration.  These dependencies are downloaded and installed during the installation process.  If you are an Air Gapped Data Sync (AGDS) user, or run an instance that cannot connect to network services outside of your infrastructure, you will need to download and install these dependencies separately as the integration will not be able to download them during the install process.

Items listed in bold are pinned to a specific version.  In these cases, you should download the version specified to ensure proper function of the integration.

Dependency Version Notes
threatqsdk >=1.8.1 N/A
threatqcc >=1.4.2 N/A
python-dateutil N/A N/A

Installation

Upgrading Users - Review the Change Log for updates to configuration parameters before updating.  If there are changes to the configuration file (new/removed parameters), you must first delete the previous version's configuration file before proceeding with the install steps listed below.  Failure to delete the previous configuration file will result in the connector failing.

  1. Download the connector integration file from the ThreatQ Marketplace.  
  2. Transfer the connector whl file to the /tmp/ directory on your instance.
  3. SSH into your instance.
  4. Move the connector whl file from its /tmp/ location to the following directory: /opt/tqvenv
  5. Navigate to the custom connector container:
    kubectl exec -n threatq -it deployments/custom-connectors -- /bin/bash

  6. Create your python 3 virtual environment:
    python3.6 -m venv /opt/tqvenv/<environment_name>

  7. Active the new environment:
    source /opt/tqvenv/<environment_name>/bin/activate

  8. Run the pip upgrade command:
    pip install --upgrade pip

  9. Install the required dependencies:
    pip install setuptools==59.6.0 threatqsdk threatqcc python-dateutil

  10. Install the connector:
    pip install /opt/tqvenv/tq_conn_darktrace-<version>-py3-none-any.whl

  11. Perform an initial run of the connector:
    /opt/tqvenv/<environment_name>/bin/tq-conn-darktrace --cron="0 */2 * * *"

    The --cron argument above is used to generate a cron job for the connector.  After running the command above, the cronjob will be created under the /etc/cron.d/ directory.  This entry will initially be commented out upon creation - see the CRON chapter for more details.  

  12. Enter the following parameters when prompted:
    Parameter Description
    ThreatQ Host Leave this field blank as it will be set dynamically.  
    ThreatQ Client ID This is the OAuth id that can be found at Settings Gear → User Management → API details within the user’s details. 
    ThreatQ Username This is the Email Address of the user in the ThreatQ System for integrations. 
    ThreatQ Password The password for the above ThreatQ account. 
    Status This is the default status for objects that are created by this Integration. 

    Example Output

    /opt/tqvenv/<environment_name>/bin/tq-conn-darktrace --cron="0 */2 * * *"
    ThreatQ Host:  
    ThreatQ Client ID: <ClientID> 
    ThreatQ Username: <EMAIL ADDRESS> 
    ThreatQ Password: <PASSWORD>
    Status: Review 
    Connector configured. Set information in UI

You will still need to configure and then enable the connector

  1. Navigate to the ThreatQ Marketplace and download the .whl file for the integration.
  2. Create the following directory:
    mkdir /opt/tqvenv/

  3. Install python 3.6:
    sudo yum install -y python36 python36-libs python36-devel python36-pip

  4. Create a virtual environment:
    python3.6 -m venv /opt/tqvenv/<environment_name>

  5. Activate the virtual environment:
    source /opt/tqvenv/<environment_name>/bin/activate

  6. Run the pip upgrade command:
    pip install --upgrade pip

  7. Install the required dependencies: 
    pip install threatqsdk threatqcc setuptools==59.6.0 python-dateutil

  8. Transfer the whl file to the /tmp directory on your ThreatQ instance.  
  9. Install the connector on your ThreatQ instance:
    pip install /tmp/tq_conn_darktrace-<version>-py3-none-any.whl 

    A driver called tq-conn-darktrace will be installed.   After installing, a script stub will appear in /opt/tqvenv/<environment_name>/bin/tq-conn-darktrace.

  10. Once the application has been installed, a directory structure must be created for all configuration, logs and files, using the mkdir -p command. Use the commands below to create the required directories:
    mkdir -p /etc/tq_labs/ mkdir -p /var/log/tq_labs/

  11. Perform an initial run using the following command:
    /opt/tqvenv/<environment_name>/bin/tq-conn-darktrace -ll /var/log/tq_labs/ -c /etc/tq_labs/ -v3

  12. Enter the following parameters when prompted:
    Parameter Description
    ThreatQ Host This is the host of the ThreatQ instance, either the IP Address or Hostname as resolvable by ThreatQ. 
    ThreatQ Client ID This is the OAuth id that can be found at Settings Gear → User Management → API details within the user’s details. 
    ThreatQ Username This is the Email Address of the user in the ThreatQ System for integrations. 
    ThreatQ Password The password for the above ThreatQ account. 
    Status This is the default status for objects that are created by this Integration. 

    Example Output

    /opt/tqvenv/<environment_name>/bin/tq-conn-darktrace -ll /var/log/tq_labs/ -c /etc/tq_labs/ -v3
    ThreatQ Host: <ThreatQ Host IP or Hostname> 
    ThreatQ Client ID: <ClientID> 
    ThreatQ Username: <EMAIL ADDRESS> 
    ThreatQ Password: <PASSWORD> 
    Status: Review
    Connector configured. Set information in UI

You will still need to configure and then enable the connector.

Configuration

ThreatQuotient does not issue API keys for third-party vendors. Contact the specific vendor to obtain API keys and other integration-related credentials.

To configure the integration:

  1. Navigate to your integrations management page in ThreatQ.
  2. Select the Labs option from the Category dropdown (optional).
  3. Click on the integration entry to open its details page.
  4. Enter the following parameters under the Configuration tab:
    Parameter Description
    Darktrace Host The hostname or IP Address of your Darktrace instance.
    Darktrace Public Token The public token for your Darktrace instance.
    Darktrace Private Token The private token for your Darktrace instance.
    Name(s) of the Threat Library collections to parse indicators from Enter a comma-separated list of Threat Library collections from which to export FQDN and IP Address indicators into Darktrace.
    Source Name The name of the source to give indicators that are sent to Darktrace.  The default value is ThreatQ.
    Days to Expiration The number of days until the indicators should be expired in Darktrace.  You can enter 0 for no expiration.
  5. Review any additional settings, make any changes if needed, and click on Save.
  6. Click on the toggle switch, located above the Additional Information section, to enable it.

Usage

Use the following command to execute the driver:

/opt/tqvenv/<environment_name>/bin/tq-conn-darktrace

/opt/tqvenv/<environment_name>/bin/tq-conn-darktrace -v3 -ll /var/log/tq_labs/ -c /etc/tq_labs/

Command Line Arguments

This connector supports the following custom command line arguments:

Argument Description
-h, --help  Shows this help message and exits. 
-ll LOGLOCATION, --loglocation LOGLOCATION  Sets the logging location for the connector. The location should exist and be writable by the current. A special value of 'stdout' means to log to the console (this happens by default). 
-c CONFIG, --config CONFIG This is the location of the configuration file for the connector. This location must be readable and writable by the current user. If no config file path is given, the current directory will be used. This file is also where some information from each run of the connector may be put (last run time, private oauth, etc.)
-v {1,2,3}, --verbosity {1,2,3}  This is the logging verbosity level where 3 means everything.  The default setting is 1 (Warning).
-ep, --external-proxy Optional - This enables a proxy to be used to contac the internet for the data required by this connector. This specifies an internet facing proxy, NOT a proxy to the TQ instance.
-d, --no-differential Optional - If exports are used in this connector, this will turn 'off' the differential flag for the execution. This allows debugging and testing to be done on export endpoints without having to rebuild the exports after the test. THIS SHOULD NEVER BE USED IN PRODUCTION.
-ds, --disable-ssl Optional - Disable SSL verification.
-hist HISTORICAL, --HISTORICAL Optional - The number of past days of Darktrace data to load. The default setting is 5.
-n NAME, --name NAME This sets the name for this connector. In some cases, it is useful to have multiple connectors of the same type executing against a single TQ instance. For example, the Syslog Exporter can be run against multiple target and multiple exports, each with their own name and configuration. 
--cron ThreatQ v6 Only - creates a CRON entry for the connector based on a pre-loaded ThreatQ template.  See the CRON section for more details. 

Accessing Connector Logs

ThreatQ version 6 aggregates the logs for all custom connectors to its output container.  You can access the container's log using the following command:

kubectl logs -n threatq deployments/custom-connectors

The connector log directory was created in 10 of the installation process and is identified using the -ll argument flag when executing the driver.

Accessing Connector Configuration

The custom connector configuration file can be found in the following directory: /etc/tq_labs/.  

The custom connector configuration file was created in step 10 of the install process and identified using the -c argument flag when executing the driver. 

CRON

The addition of the --cron argument in the initial run of connector, performed during the install process, resulted in the creation of a cron job file for the connector in the following directory: /etc/cron.d/.  The contents of the file will resemble the following structure:

#{schedule} root /bin/bash -c "source /etc/env-vars.sh; {venv_path}/bin/{executable} --config=/etc/tq_labs > /proc/1/fd/1 2>/proc/1/fd/2" 

The {schedule} will be replaced with the cron settings you entered with the --cron flag and the {executable} will be replaced for with the connector's driver command.

You will also see a # at the beginning of the file.  This comments out the job.  This allows you to configure the custom connector in the ThreatQ UI first.  After you have configured the connector in ThreatQ, you can remove the # from the file content's in order to activate the cron job.

To summarize this process:

  1. Install the connector and perform an initial run using the --cron argument to create the cron job.
  2. Complete the connector's configuration settings in the ThreatQ UI.
  3. Access the connector's cron file in the /etc/cron.d/ directory and remove the # from the beginning of the file.  

Automatic CRON configuration has been removed from this script. To run this script on a recurring basis, use CRON or some other jobs scheduler. The argument in the CRON script must specify the config and log locations.

Add an entry to your Linux crontab to execute the connector at a recurring interval. Depending on how quickly you need updates, this can be run multiple times a day (no more than once an hour) or a few times a week.

In the example below, the command will execute the connector every two hours.

  1. Log into your ThreatQ host via a CLI terminal session.
  2. Enter the following command:
    crontab -e

    This will enable the editing of the crontab, using vi. Depending on how often you wish the cronjob to run, you will need to adjust the time to suit the environment.

  3. Enter the commands below:

    Every 2 Hours Example

    0 */2 * * * /opt/tqvenv/<environment_name>/bin/tq-conn-darktrace -c /etc/tq_labs/ -ll /var/log/tq_labs/ -v3  

  4. Save and exit CRON.

Change Log

  • Version 1.1.1 rev-a
    • Guide Update - Added ThreatQ v6 installation steps.
  • Version 1.1.1
    • Fixed a timeout bug encountered when exporting large data collections to Darktrace.
  • Version 1.1.0
    • Added two new configuration options: Source Name and Days to Expiration.
    • Resolved an ValueError: Circular reference detected error.  
  • Version 1.0.0
    • Initial release

PDF Guides

Document ThreatQ Version
Darktrace Connector Guide v1.1.1 5.10.0 or Greater
Darktrace Connector Guide v1.1.0 4.58.1 or Greater
Darktrace Connector Guide v1.0.0 4.55 or Greater