Log Detection Rules

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Overview

To create a log detection rule in Datadog, navigate to the Detection Rules page and click New Rule.

Rule Type

For Cloud SIEM (Security Information and Event Management), select Log Detection to analyze ingested logs in real-time.

Detection methods

Threshold

Define when events exceed a user-defined threshold. For example, if you create a trigger with a threshold of >10, a security signal occurs when the condition is met.

New value

Detect when an attribute changes to a new value. For example, if you create a trigger based on a specific attribute, such as country or IP address, a security signal will be generated whenever a new value is seen which has not been seen before.

Anomaly

When configuring a specific threshold isn’t an option, you can define an anomaly detection rule instead. With anomaly detection, a dynamic threshold is automatically derived from the past observations of the events.

Impossible Travel

Impossible travel detects access from different locations whose distance is greater than the distance a human can travel in the time between the two access events.

Third Party

Third Party allows you to forward alerts from an outside vendor or application. You can update the rule with suppression queries and who to notify when a signal is generated.

Define a search query

Search query

Define the search query

Construct a search query using the same logic as a Log Explorer search.

Optionally, define a unique count and signal grouping. Count the number of unique values observed for an attribute in a given time frame. The defined Group By generates a signal for each group by value. Typically, the group by is an entity (like user, or IP). The Group By is also used to join the queries together.

Click Add Query to add additional queries.

Note: The query applies to all ingested logs.

Joining queries

Joining together logs that span a timeframe can increase the confidence or severity of the Security Signal. For example, to detect a successful brute force attack, both successful and unsuccessful authentication logs must be correlated for a user.

Define search queries

The Detection Rules join the logs together using a group by value. The group by values are typically entities (for example, IP address or user), but can be any attribute.

Search query

Define the search query

Construct a search query using the same logic as a Log Explorer search. Each query has a label, which is a lowercase ASCII letter. The query name can be changed from an ASCII letter by clicking the pencil icon.

Note: The query applies to all ingested logs.

Learned value

Select the value or values to detect, the learning duration, and, optionally, define a signal grouping. The defined group-by generates a signal for each group-by value. Typically, the group-by is an entity (like user or IP).

For example, create a query for successful user authentication and set Detect new value to country and group by to user. Set a learning duration of 7 days. Once configured, logs coming in over the next 7 days are evaluated with the set values. If a log comes in with a new value after the learning duration, a signal is generated, and the new value is learned to prevent future signals with this value.

You can also identify users and entities using multiple values in a single query. For example, if you want to detect when a user signs in from a new device and from a country that they’ve never signed in from before, add device_id and country_name to Detect new value.

Search query

Construct a search query using the same logic as a Log Explorer search.

Optionally, define a unique count and signal grouping. Count the number of unique values observed for an attribute in a given timeframe. The defined group-by generates a signal for each group by value. Typically, the group by is an entity (like user, or IP).

Anomaly detection inspects how the group by attribute has behaved in the past. If a group by attribute is seen for the first time (for example, the first time an IP is communicating with your system) and is anomalous, it does not generate a security signal because the anomaly detection algorithm has no historical data to base its decision on.

Note: The query applies to all ingested logs.

Search query

Construct a search query using the same logic as a Log Explorer search. All logs matching this query are analyzed for a potential impossible travel. You can use the preview section to see which logs are matched by the current query.

User attribute

For the user attribute, select the field in the analyzed log that contains the user ID. This can be an identifier like an email address, user name, or account identifier.

Location attribute

The location attribute specifies which field holds the geographic information for a log. The only supported value is @network.client.geoip, which is enriched by the GeoIP parser to give a log location information based on the client’s IP address.

Baseline user locations

Click the checkbox if you’d like Datadog to learn regular access locations before triggering a signal.

When selected, signals are suppressed for the first 24 hours. In that time, Datadog learns the user’s regular access locations. This can be helpful to reduce noise and infer VPN usage or credentialed API access.

Do not click the checkbox if you want Datadog to detect all impossible travel behavior.

Root query

Construct a search query using the same logic as a Log Explorer search. The trigger defined for each new attribute generates a signal for each new value of that attribute over a 24-hour roll-up period.

Click Add Query to add additional queries.

Note: The query applies to all ingested logs.

Filter logs based on Reference Tables

Reference Tables are in beta. Reference Tables containing over 40,000 rows cannot be used to filter logs. See Add Custom Metadata with Reference Tables for more information on how to create and manage Reference Tables.

Reference Tables allow you to combine metadata with logs, providing more information to resolve application issues. Add a query filter based on a Reference Table to perform lookup queries. For more information on creating and managing this feature, see the Reference Tables guide.

To apply a query filter with Reference Tables:

  1. Click the Add button next to the query editor, and then select Join with Reference Table.
  2. Select your reference table in the dropdown menu.
  3. Select the log field you want to look for in the reference table.
  4. Select the IN or NOT IN operator depending on whether you want to find the field value in the specific column.

In the following example, the Reference Table query filter is used to search all recent logs that include a malicious IP address from a threat intel reference table:

The log detection rule query editor with the reference table search options highlighted

Unit testing

Use unit testing to test your rules against sample logs and make sure the detection rule is working as expected. Specifically, this can be helpful when you are creating a detection rule for an event that hasn’t happened yet, so you don’t have actual logs for it. For example: You have logs with a login_attempt field and want to detect logs with login_attempt:failed, but you only have logs with login_attempt:success. To test the rule, you can construct a sample log by copying a log with login_attempt:success and changing the login_attempt field to failed.

To use unit testing:

  1. After entering the rule query, click Unit Test to test your query against a sample log.
  2. To construct a sample log, you can:
    a. Navigate to Log Explorer.
    b. Enter the same detection rule query in the search bar.
    c. Select one of the logs.
    d. Click the export button at the top right side of the log side panel, and then select Copy.
  3. Navigate back to the Unit Test modal, and then paste the log into the text box. Edit the sample as needed for your use case.
  4. Toggle the switch for Query is expected to match based on the example event to fit your use case.
  5. Click Run Query Test.

Set a rule case

Trigger

The set rule case section showing the default settings

Enable Create rules cases with the Then operator if you want to trigger a signal for the example: If query A occurs and then query B occurs. The then operator can only be used on a single rule case.

All rule cases are evaluated as case statements. Thus, the order of the cases affects which notifications are sent because the first case to match generates the signal. Click and drag your rule cases to change their ordering.

A rule case contains logical operations (>, >=, &&, ||) to determine if a signal should be generated based on the event counts in the previously defined queries. The ASCII lowercase query labels are referenced in this section. An example rule case for query a is a > 3.

Note: The query label must precede the operator. For example, a > 3 is allowed; 3 < a is not allowed.

Provide a name, for example “Case 1”, for each rule case. This name is appended to the rule name when a signal is generated.

Example

If you have a failed_login and a successful_login query:

Define search queries

and a rule case that triggers when failed_login > 5 && successful_login>0:

The set rule cases section set to trigger a high severity signal when failed_login is greater than five and successful_login is greater than zero

The rule case joins these queries together based on their group by value. The group by attribute is typically the same attribute because the value must be the same for the case to be met. If a group by value doesn’t exist, the case will never be met. A Security Signal is generated for each unique group by value when a case is matched.

In this example, when there are more than five failed logins and at least one successful login for the same User Name, the first case is matched, and a Security Signal is generated.

Severity and notification

In the Set severity to dropdown menu, select the appropriate severity level (INFO, LOW, MEDIUM, HIGH, CRITICAL).

In the Notify section, optionally, configure notification targets for each rule case.

You can also create notification rules to avoid manual edits to notification preferences for individual detection rules.

Time windows

An evaluation window is specified to match when at least one of the cases matches true. This is a sliding window and evaluates cases in real time.

After a signal is generated, the signal remains “open” if a case is matched at least once within the keep alive window. Each time a new event matches any of the cases, the last updated timestamp is updated for the signal.

A signal closes once the time exceeds the maximum signal duration, regardless of the query being matched. This time is calculated from the first seen timestamp.

Click Add Case to add additional cases.

Note: The evaluation window must be less than or equal to the keep alive and maximum signal duration.

Define the rule case

Severity and notification

In the Set severity to dropdown menu, select the appropriate severity level (INFO, LOW, MEDIUM, HIGH, CRITICAL).

In the Notify section, optionally, configure notification targets for each rule case.

You can also create notification rules to avoid manual edits to notification preferences for individual detection rules.

Forget value

To forget a value if it is not seen over a period of time, select an option from the dropdown menu.

Update the same signal

Set a maximum duration to keep updating a signal if new values are detected within a set time frame. For example, the same signal will update if any new value is detected within 1 hour, for a maximum duration of 24 hours.

Note: If a unique signal is required for every new value, configure this value to 0 minutes.

Severity and notification

In the Set severity to dropdown menu, select the appropriate severity level (INFO, LOW, MEDIUM, HIGH, CRITICAL).

In the Notify section, optionally, configure notification targets for each rule case.

You can also create notification rules to avoid manual edits to notification preferences for individual detection rules.

Time windows

Datadog automatically detects the seasonality of the data and generates a security signal when the data is determined to be anomalous.

Once a signal is generated, the signal remains “open” if the data remains anomalous and the last updated timestamp is updated for the anomalous duration.

A signal “closes” once the time exceeds the maximum signal duration, regardless of whether or not the anomaly is still anomalous. This time is calculated from the first seen timestamp.

The impossible travel detection method does not require setting a rule case.

Severity and notification

In the Set severity to dropdown menu, select the appropriate severity level (INFO, LOW, MEDIUM, HIGH, CRITICAL).

In the Notify section, optionally, configure notification targets for each rule case.

You can also create notification rules to avoid manual edits to notification preferences for individual detection rules.

Time windows

An evaluation window is specified to match when at least one of the cases matches true. This is a sliding window and evaluates cases in real time.

After a signal is generated, the signal remains “open” if a case is matched at least once within the keep alive window. Each time a new event matches any of the cases, the last updated timestamp is updated for the signal.

A signal closes once the time exceeds the maximum signal duration, regardless of the query being matched. This time is calculated from the first seen timestamp.

Trigger

All rule cases are evaluated as case statements. Thus, the order of the cases affects which notifications are sent because the first case to match generates the signal. Click and drag your rule cases to change their ordering.

A rule case contains logical operations (>, >=, &&, ||) to determine if a signal should be generated based on the event counts in the previously defined queries. The ASCII lowercase query labels are referenced in this section. An example rule case for query a is a > 3.

Note: The query label must precede the operator. For example, a > 3 is allowed; 3 < a is not allowed.

Severity and notification

In the Set severity to dropdown menu, select the appropriate severity level (INFO, LOW, MEDIUM, HIGH, CRITICAL).

In the Notify section, optionally, configure notification targets for each rule case.

You can also create notification rules to avoid manual edits to notification preferences for individual detection rules.

Click Add Case to add additional cases.

Decreasing non-production severity

One way to decrease signal noise is to prioritize production environment signals over non-production environment signals. Select the Decrease severity for non-production environments checkbox to decrease the severity of signals in non-production environments by one level from what is defined by the rule case.

Signal Severity in Production EnvironmentSignal Severity in Non-production Environment
CriticalHigh
HighMedium
MediumInfo
InfoInfo

The severity decrement is applied to signals with an environment tag starting with staging, test, or dev.

Say what’s happening

Add a Rule name to configure the rule name that appears in the detection rules list view and the title of the Security Signal.

In the Rule message section, use notification variables and Markdown to customize the notifications sent when a signal is generated. Specifically, use template variables in the notification to inject dynamic context from triggered logs directly into a security signal and its associated notifications. See the Notification Variables documentation for more information and examples.

Use the Tag resulting signals dropdown menu to add tags to your signals. For example, security:attack or technique:T1110-brute-force.

Note: the tag security is special. This tag is used to classify the security signal. The recommended options are: attack, threat-intel, compliance, anomaly, and data-leak.

Suppression rules

Optionally, add a suppression rule to prevent a signal from getting generated. For example, if a user john.doe is triggering a signal, but their actions are benign and you do not want signals triggered from this user, add the following query into the Add a suppression query field: @user.username:john.doe.

Additionally, in the suppression rule, you can add a log exclusion query to exclude logs from being analyzed. These queries are based on log attributes. Note: The legacy suppression was based on log exclusion queries, but it is now included in the suppression rule’s Add a suppression query step.

Rule deprecation

Regular audits of all out-of-the-box detection rules are performed to maintain high fidelity signal quality. Deprecated rules are replaced with an improved rule.

The rule deprecation process is as follows:

  1. There is a warning with the deprecation date on the rule. In the UI, the warning is shown in the:
    • Signal side panel’s Rule Details > Playbook section
    • Rule editor for that specific rule
  2. Once the rule is deprecated, there is a 15 month period before the rule is deleted. This is due to the signal retention period of 15 months. During this time, you can re-enable the rule by cloning the rule in the UI.
  3. Once the rule is deleted, you can no longer clone and re-enable it.

Further Reading

PREVIEWING: piotr_wolski/update-dsm-docs