Network Working Group A. Dulaunoy
Internet-Draft A. Iklody
Intended status: Informational CIRCL
Expires: April 11, 2019 October 8, 2018

MISP query format
draft-dulaunoy-misp-core-format

Abstract

This document describes the MISP query format used to search MISP (Malware Information and threat Sharing Platform) [MISP-P] threat intelligence instances. MISP query format is a simple format used to query MISP instances over a REST (Representational State Transfer ) interface. The query format includes the JSON format to describe the query and the minimal API access to perform the query. The JSON format includes the overall structure along with the semantic associated for each respective key. The goal of the format is to query MISP threat intelligence instances can feed and integrate with network security devices (such as firewall, network intrusion detection system, routers, SIEMs), endpoint security devices or monitoring devices.

Status of This Memo

This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.

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This Internet-Draft will expire on April 11, 2019.

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Table of Contents

1. Introduction

Sharing threat information became a fundamental requirements in the Internet, security and intelligence community at large. Threat information can include indicators of compromise, malicious file indicators, financial fraud indicators or even detailed information about a threat actor. MISP [MISP-P] started as an open source project in late 2011 and the MISP format started to be widely used as an exchange format within the community in the past years. The core format is described in an Internet-Draft as misp-core-format [MISP-C] and contain the standard MISP JSON format used for threat intelligence.

The aim of this document is to describe the specification of the MISP query format and how the query can be perform against a REST interface.

1.1. Conventions and Terminology

The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119 [RFC2119].

2. Format

2.1. Overview

The MISP query format is in the JSON [RFC4627] format.

2.2. query format criteria

2.2.1. returnFormat

returnFormat MUST be present. returnFormat sets the type of output format. MISP allows multiple format (depending of the configuration):

value Description
json MISP JSON core format as described in [MISP-C]
xml MISP XML format
openioc OpenIOC format
suricata Suricata NIDS format
snort Snort NIDS format
csv CSV format
rpz Response policy zone format
text Raw value list format

2.2.2. limit

limit MAY be present. If present, the page parameter MUST also be supplied. limit sets the number of returned elements when paginating, depending on the scope of the request (x number of attributes or x number of events) as converted into the output format.

2.2.3. page

page MAY be present. If present, the page parameter MUST also be supplied. page generates the offset for the pagination and will return a result set consisting of a slice of the query results starting with offset (limit * page) + 1 and ending with (limit * (page+1)).

2.2.4. value

value MAY be present. If set, the returned data set will be filtered on the attribute value field. value MAY be a string or a sub-string, the latter of which start with, ends with or is encapsulated in wildcard (\%) characters.

2.2.5. type

type MAY be present. If set, the returned data set will be filtered on the attribute type field. type MAY be a string or a sub-string, the latter of which start with, ends with or is encapsulated in wildcard (\%) characters. The list of valid attribute types is described in the MISP core format [MISP-C] in the attribute type section.

2.2.6. category

category MAY be present. If set, the returned data set will be filtered on the attribute category field. category MAY be a string or a sub-string, the latter of which start with, ends with or is encapsulated in wildcard (\%) characters. The list of valid categories is described in the MISP core format [MISP-C] in the attribute type section.

A sample query to lookup for the last 30 days of indicators in the Financial fraud category and output in CSV format:

{
    "returnFormat": "csv",
    "last": "30d",
    "category": "Financial fraud"
}

3. Security Considerations

MISP threat intelligence instances might contain sensitive or confidential information. Adequate access control and encryption measures shall be implemented to ensure the confidentiality of the threat intelligence.

Adversaries might include malicious content in MISP queries. Implementation MUST consider the input of malicious inputs beside the standard threat information that might already include malicious intended inputs.

4. Acknowledgements

The authors wish to thank all the MISP community who are supporting the creation of open standards in threat intelligence sharing. A special thank to all the committees which triggered us to come with better and flexible format.

5. References

5.1. Normative References

[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997.
[RFC4627] Crockford, D., "The application/json Media Type for JavaScript Object Notation (JSON)", RFC 4627, DOI 10.17487/RFC4627, July 2006.

5.2. Informative References

[MISP-C] MISP, "MISP core format"
[MISP-P] MISP, "MISP Project - Malware Information Sharing Platform and Threat Sharing"

Authors' Addresses

Alexandre Dulaunoy Computer Incident Response Center Luxembourg 16, bd d'Avranches Luxembourg, L-1160 Luxembourg Phone: +352 247 88444 EMail: alexandre.dulaunoy@circl.lu
Andras Iklody Computer Incident Response Center Luxembourg 16, bd d'Avranches Luxembourg, L-1160 Luxembourg Phone: +352 247 88444 EMail: andras.iklody@circl.lu