67c3311672 | ||
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stix2 | ||
.gitignore | ||
README.md | ||
requirements.txt | ||
setup.py |
README.md
stix2
Create, parse, and interact with STIX 2 JSON content.
Installation
Install with pip
:
pip install stix2
Usage
Creating STIX Domain Objects
To create a STIX object, provide keyword arguments to the type's constructor:
from stix2 import Indicator
indicator = Indicator(name="File hash for malware variant",
labels=['malicious-activity'],
pattern='file:hashes.md5 = "d41d8cd98f00b204e9800998ecf8427e"')
Certain required attributes of all objects will be set automatically if not provided as keyword arguments:
-
If not provided,
type
will be set automatically to the correct type. You can also provide the type explicitly, but this is not necessary:indicator = Indicator(type='indicator', ...)
Passing a value for
type
that does not match the class being constructed will cause an error:>>> indicator = Indicator(type='xxx', ...) ValueError: Indicators must have type='indicator'
-
If not provided,
id
will be generated randomly. If you provide anid
argument, it must begin with the correct prefix:>>> indicator = Indicator(id="campaign--63ce9068-b5ab-47fa-a2cf-a602ea01f21a") ValueError: Indicator id values must begin with 'indicator--'
-
If not provided,
created
andmodified
will be set to the (same) current time.
For indicators, labels
and pattern
are required and cannot be set
automatically. Trying to create an indicator that is missing one of these fields
will result in an error:
>>> indicator = Indicator()
ValueError: Missing required field for Indicator: 'labels'
However, the required valid_from
attribute on Indicators will be set to the
current time if not provided as a keyword argument.
Once created, the object acts like a frozen dictionary. Properties can be accessed using the standard Python dictionary syntax:
>>> indicator['name']
'File hash for malware variant'
TBD: Should we allow property access using the standard Python attribute syntax?
>>> indicator.name
'File hash for malware variant'
Attempting to modify any attributes will raise an error:
>>>indicator['name'] = "This is a revised name"
ValueError: Cannot modify properties after creation.
To update the properties of an object, see Versioning below.
Creating a Malware object follows the same pattern:
from stix2 import Malware
malware = Malware(name="Poison Ivy",
labels=['remote-access-trojan'])
As with indicators, the type
, id
, created
, and modified
properties will
be set automatically if not provided. For Malware objects, the labels
and
name
properties must be provided.
Creating Relationships
STIX 2 Relationships are separate objects, not properties of the object on
either side of the relationship. They are constructed similarly to other STIX
objects. The type
, id
, created
, and modified
properties are added
automatically if not provided. Callers must provide the relationship_type
,
source_ref
, and target_ref
properties.
from stix2 import Relationship
relationship = Relationship(relationship_type='indicates',
source_ref=indicator.id,
target_ref=malware.id)
The source_ref
and target_ref
properties can be either the ID's of other
STIX objects, or the STIX objects themselves. For readability, Relationship
objects can also be constructed with the source_ref
, relationship_type
, and
target_ref
as positional (non-keyword) arguments:
relationship = Relationship(indicator, 'indicates', malware)
Creating Bundles
STIX Bundles can be created by passing objects as arguments to the Bundle
constructor. All required properties (type
, id
, and spec_version
) will be
set automatically if not provided, or can be provided as keyword arguments:
from stix2 import bundle
bundle = Bundle(indicator, malware, relationship)
Serializing STIX objects
The string representation of all STIX classes is a valid STIX JSON object.
indicator = Indicator(...)
print(str(indicator))
Versioning
TBD