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pySigma-plugin-directory

Directory of pySigma backend, processing pipeline and validator projects.

Purpose

pySigma is a library for handling and conversion of Sigma rules. It is extensible by design and support for particular target query languages (so-called backends) and processing pipelines that transform Sigma rules between data models are implemented as separate projects to keep the pySigma core as small as possible. In addition, Sigma rule validators can be also implemented as separate projects and should be if the implemented checks have a special purpose or a backend-specific.

Usage

The directory is contained in pySigma-plugins-v1.json. Generation of a human readable directory is planned. Use it for finding the backend you need or for your own Sigma frontend. Sigma CLI will use it for installation of additional components as plugins instead of being a bloated monolithic project that brings all backends with it while you only need few of them.

Versioning

The v1 in the file name refers to the format version like APIs do. Versions from 1 will be always backwards compatible and contain only additions. Breaking changes will increase the version number.

Format

The JSON file containing the plugin directory contains a map at its top level that contains two elements:

  • plugins is a map from UUIDs to plugin descriptions.
  • an optional item note that can contain information intended for consumers of the directory, e.g. deprecation notes etc. These should be displayed to the users of such frontend applications.
{
    "note": "...",
    "plugins": { ... },
}

Each of these sections is another map that maps an identifier to the plugin specification:

"UUID": {
    "id": "plugin-identifier",
    "type": "backend",
    "description": "xxx backend converting into yyy queries ...",
    "package": "pySigma-backend-...",
    "project-url": "https://github.com/SigmaHQ/pySigma-backend-...",
    "report-issue-url": "https://github.com/SigmaHQ/pySigma-backend-.../issues/new",
    "state": "stable",
    "pysigma-version": "^0.8.1"
}
  • UUID is a RFC 4122-compliant unique identifier that is used as primary key for identification and reference of plugins. This UUID is intended to be used internally by tools to keep a link between local usage and the plugin directory. User interfaces should use the more user-friendly id identifier described below.

  • id is a short identifier that can be used by other tools to refer to plugins for installation etc. It should be as short as possible and ideally only contain the target system name, e.g. splunk. In cases where multiple implementations of a plugin for the same backend exist, all backend identifiers are extended by a publisher or maintainer identifier: target-publisher. Because the identifier can change in the life of a plugin it shouldn't be used to refer to it technically. The plugin UUID is intended for this purpose.

  • type contains the type of the plugin:

    • a backend plugin might contain the backend itself as well as supporting processing pipelines and validators.
    • a pipeline plugin only contains processing pieplines without a backend.
    • a validator plugin only contains rule validation classes.
  • description is a short description of the plugin that should include the full name of the target system, most important output formats and other useful information. It should fit into not more than 120 characters, such that it should be possible to display it in one line in many working conditions.

  • package is a pip package specifier. Most useful are PyPI package names like pySigma-backend-splunk and git+https URLs that contain a Git repository URL with a branch specifier. A PyPI package should be preferred because plugins only available via Git repositories have certain restricitons that can make the integration of a plugin into a script impossible.

  • project-url is a URL to a project package. If the plugin source code is hosted on GitHub it is a good choice for this attribute.

  • report-issue-url is a URL for reporting issues for the plugin. For projects hosted on GitHub or similar platforms this should be the link to the issue creation page of the project. Another possibility is a mailto: URL with an e-mail address, subject etc.

  • state describes the state of the plugin:

    • stable if the plugin is in a working state.
    • testing if the plugin is working but might have some issues because it is not yet finished.
    • devel if the plugin is under development and important functionality is missing.
    • broken if the plugin is in a dysfunctional state but still maintained. Broken plugins are not covered by tests and shouldn't be displayed to users in user interfaces.
    • orphaned is a state that described that the plugin is not maintained anymore. Such plugins shouldn't normally be displayed to the users.
  • capabilities describes the capabilities implemented by the backend:

    • event_count_correlation_conversion: backend supports conversion of event count correlation rules.
    • value_count_correlation_conversion: backend supports conversion of value count correlation rules.
    • temporal_correlation_conversion: backend supports conversion of temporal correlation rules.
    • ordered_temporal_correlation_conversion: backend supports conversion of ordered temporal correlation rules.
  • pysigma-version defines the required pySigma version in PEP 440 version specifier. This information can be used by other tools to verify compatibility of a plugin with their used version of pySigma.

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