From 350297b65149adfff5e0a6f995af7e242486b02d Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Ruben Groenewoud <78494512+Aegrah@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Mon, 16 Dec 2024 15:22:00 +0100 Subject: [PATCH] [New Rule] Unusual Preload Environment Variable Process Execution --- ...ense_evasion_unusual_preload_env_vars.toml | 116 ++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 116 insertions(+) create mode 100644 rules/linux/defense_evasion_unusual_preload_env_vars.toml diff --git a/rules/linux/defense_evasion_unusual_preload_env_vars.toml b/rules/linux/defense_evasion_unusual_preload_env_vars.toml new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..06cc415ae7d --- /dev/null +++ b/rules/linux/defense_evasion_unusual_preload_env_vars.toml @@ -0,0 +1,116 @@ +[metadata] +creation_date = "2024/12/16" +integration = ["endpoint"] +maturity = "production" +updated_date = "2024/12/16" + +[rule] +author = ["Elastic"] +description = """ +This rule detects processes that are executed with environment variables that are not commonly used. This could indicate +an attacker is attempting to hijack the execution flow of a process by loading malicious libraries or binaries into the +process memory space. +""" +from = "now-9m" +index = ["logs-endpoint.events.process*"] +language = "kuery" +license = "Elastic License v2" +name = "Unusual Preload Environment Variable Process Execution" +risk_score = 21 +rule_id = "a22b8486-5c4b-4e05-ad16-28de550b1ccc" +setup = """## Setup + +This rule requires data coming in from Elastic Defend. + +### Elastic Defend Integration Setup +Elastic Defend is integrated into the Elastic Agent using Fleet. Upon configuration, the integration allows the Elastic Agent to monitor events on your host and send data to the Elastic Security app. + +#### Prerequisite Requirements: +- Fleet is required for Elastic Defend. +- To configure Fleet Server refer to the [documentation](https://www.elastic.co/guide/en/fleet/current/fleet-server.html). + +#### The following steps should be executed in order to add the Elastic Defend integration on a Linux System: +- Go to the Kibana home page and click "Add integrations". +- In the query bar, search for "Elastic Defend" and select the integration to see more details about it. +- Click "Add Elastic Defend". +- Configure the integration name and optionally add a description. +- Select the type of environment you want to protect, either "Traditional Endpoints" or "Cloud Workloads". +- Select a configuration preset. Each preset comes with different default settings for Elastic Agent, you can further customize these later by configuring the Elastic Defend integration policy. [Helper guide](https://www.elastic.co/guide/en/security/current/configure-endpoint-integration-policy.html). +- We suggest selecting "Complete EDR (Endpoint Detection and Response)" as a configuration setting, that provides "All events; all preventions" +- Enter a name for the agent policy in "New agent policy name". If other agent policies already exist, you can click the "Existing hosts" tab and select an existing policy instead. +For more details on Elastic Agent configuration settings, refer to the [helper guide](https://www.elastic.co/guide/en/fleet/8.10/agent-policy.html). +- Click "Save and Continue". +- To complete the integration, select "Add Elastic Agent to your hosts" and continue to the next section to install the Elastic Agent on your hosts. +For more details on Elastic Defend refer to the [helper guide](https://www.elastic.co/guide/en/security/current/install-endpoint.html). + +Elastic Defend integration does not collect environment variable logging by default. +In order to capture this behavior, this rule requires a specific configuration option set within the advanced settings of the Elastic Defend integration. + #### To set up environment variable capture for an Elastic Agent policy: +- Go to “Security → Manage → Policies”. +- Select an “Elastic Agent policy”. +- Click “Show advanced settings”. +- Scroll down or search for “linux.advanced.capture_env_vars”. +- Enter the names of environment variables you want to capture, separated by commas. +- For this rule the linux.advanced.capture_env_vars variable should be set to "LD_PRELOAD,LD_LIBRARY_PATH". +- Click “Save”. +After saving the integration change, the Elastic Agents running this policy will be updated and the rule will function properly. +For more information on capturing environment variables refer to the [helper guide](https://www.elastic.co/guide/en/security/current/environment-variable-capture.html). +""" +severity = "low" +tags = [ + "Domain: Endpoint", + "OS: Linux", + "Use Case: Threat Detection", + "Tactic: Defense Evasion", + "Tactic: Persistence", + "Data Source: Elastic Defend", +] +timestamp_override = "event.ingested" +type = "new_terms" +query = ''' +event.category:process and host.os.type:linux and event.type:start and event.action:exec and process.env_vars:* +''' + +[[rule.threat]] +framework = "MITRE ATT&CK" + +[[rule.threat.technique]] +id = "T1574" +name = "Hijack Execution Flow" +reference = "https://attack.mitre.org/techniques/T1574/" + +[[rule.threat.technique.subtechnique]] +id = "T1574.006" +name = "Dynamic Linker Hijacking" +reference = "https://attack.mitre.org/techniques/T1574/006/" + +[rule.threat.tactic] +id = "TA0005" +name = "Defense Evasion" +reference = "https://attack.mitre.org/tactics/TA0005/" + +[[rule.threat]] +framework = "MITRE ATT&CK" + +[[rule.threat.technique]] +id = "T1574" +name = "Hijack Execution Flow" +reference = "https://attack.mitre.org/techniques/T1574/" + +[[rule.threat.technique.subtechnique]] +id = "T1574.006" +name = "Dynamic Linker Hijacking" +reference = "https://attack.mitre.org/techniques/T1574/006/" + +[rule.threat.tactic] +id = "TA0003" +name = "Persistence" +reference = "https://attack.mitre.org/tactics/TA0003/" + +[rule.new_terms] +field = "new_terms_fields" +value = ["process.env_vars"] + +[[rule.new_terms.history_window_start]] +field = "history_window_start" +value = "now-14d"