Managing Lookup Tables and Enrichment Providers with the Panther Analysis Tool
Manage Custom Lookup Tables and Enrichment Providers using PAT
Overview
You can manage Custom Lookup Table and Enrichment Provider (also known as Panther-managed Lookup Table) schemas and mappings through the Panther Analysis Tool (PAT).
This guide will walk you through the following:
Creating and uploading a custom schema for a Custom Lookup Table using the
pantherlog
tool.Modifying the
Selectors
andLogTypes
in the Lookup Table/Enrichment Provider YAML configuration file.Uploading the Lookup Table/Enrichment Provider YAML configuration file via PAT.
Testing the enrichment in the Panther Console.
If your team uses CLI workflows, it's recommended to use PAT and CI/CD to manage your Enrichment, instead of doing so via Detection Packs in the Console.
If you choose to manage Lookup Tables through PAT after enabling them in the Panther Console, you must first disable the Detection Packs in the Panther Console. Simultaneous use of both the Panther Console and PAT to manage Lookup Tables is not supported.
This guide applies to all Enrichment Providers except for Anomali ThreatStream, which cannot be enabled in the CLI workflow using PAT.
Custom Lookup Tables vs. Enrichment Providers
In Panther, there is a distinction between Custom Lookup Tables and Enrichment Providers (also known as Panther-managed Lookup Tables):
Custom Lookup Tables are user-managed. You'll need to create and upload a schema, then upload the Lookup Table's YAML configuration file.
Enrichment Providers are Panther-managed Lookup Tables. Their schemas are Panther-defined, and their YAML configuration files (which you can modify to your needs) can be found in the panther-analysis repo in GitHub.
How to manage Custom Lookup Tables and Enrichment Providers with PAT
Prerequisites
A YAML configuration file. You must create the YAML configuration file yourself.
A data sample (if you need to create a new schema) or an existing YAML schema created in Panther.
Step 1: Create and upload a schema
Custom Lookup Tables must be associated with a schema you have created and uploaded to Panther. If you have already created a schema in Panther that you want associate to your Lookup Table, you can skip this step.
Create the schema using your sample log data.
You can use
pantherlog
to infer a schema from a sample set of data. To generate a schema from a sample JSON log file, use theinfer
command:Remember to review the inferred schema and make any necessary adjustments before uploading it to Panther. For more information about this process, see the pantherlog documentation.
Upload the schema.
Once you have created the schema, you can upload it to Panther by following the Uploading log schemas with the Panther Analysis Tool instructions.
Step 2: Create the YAML configuration file
For custom Lookup Tables, you must create the YAML configuration file from scratch. Reference the Lookup Table Specification Reference to see which keys this file must include.
Step 3: Upload the Lookup Table via PAT
Once you have created your custom Lookup Table configuration file, you can upload it to Panther using the Panther Analysis Tool's upload command:
You will need to provide an API token and host with --api-token
and --api-host
, respectively, for the upload to occur. Other options include filtering, minimum tests, and more.
Ensure you've uploaded the corresponding schema before uploading the YAML configuration file.
Step 4: Test the Lookup Table
There are several methods to test if your Lookup Table has been set up correctly.
Method 1: Enriching test data in the Panther Console or CLI
In the Panther Console's detection editor, click Enrich Test Data to verify if your Lookup Table is working correctly. This allows you to input test data and see the output of the enrichment process within your unit test.
For Enrich Test Data to work, the unit test must have a p_log_type
identifying the correct log type. This serves as the basis for Panther's enrichment logic.
Method 2: Checking the panther_rule_matches
database
panther_rule_matches
databaseYou can verify that your changes have taken effect by checking the panther_rule_matches
database for the p_enrichment
field. Ensure that the field includes the Lookup Table details you would expect to see.
Method 3: Using SQL queries
You can also perform a LEFT JOIN
between event logs and the lookup table in SQL. Ensure that the selector is defined in the query. This allows you to verify if the data from your logs is being correctly matched with the data in your Lookup Table.
For example, this query will attempt to match event data to the Lookup Table using a custom selector (which should be the same as the selector you've defined in the YAML configuration file):
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