Threat-hunting tool for Linux
GPL-3.0 License
The goal behind this project is to bring relevant events to achieve various monitoring tasks ranging from security monitoring to Threat Hunting on Linux based systems. If you are familiar with Sysmon on Windows, you can think of Kunai as being a Sysmon equivalent for Linux.
All the kernel components of this project are running as eBPF programs (also called probes). Kunai embeds numbers of probes to monitor relevant information for security monitoring. When the job is done on eBPF side, information is passed on to a userland program which is responsible for various things, such as re-ordering, enriching and correlating events.
On the implementation side, Kunai is written for its majority in Rust, leveraging the awesome Aya library so everything you'll need to run is a standalone binary embedding both all the eBPF probes and the userland program.
Before going further, I have to remind you that there is a distribution agnostic (built with musl) pre-compiled version of kunai available in release page. So if you just want to give a try to kunai, you probably don't need to build the project yourself.
Before being able to build everything, you need to install a couple of tools.
rustup
clang
, libbpf-dev
and bpf-linker
Example of commands to install requirements on Ubuntu/Debian:
sudo apt update
sudo apt install -y clang libbpf-dev
# assuming you have rustup and cargo installed
cargo install bpf-linker
Once you have the requirements installed, you are good to go. You can now build the project with xtask, a cargo command (specific to this project) to make your life easier.
Building debug version
cargo xtask build
# find your executable in: ./target/x86_64-unknown-linux-musl/debug/kunai
Building release version (harder, better, faster, stronger)
cargo xtask build --release
# find your executable in: ./target/x86_64-unknown-linux-musl/release/kunai
rustup install target aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu
# example on ubuntu
sudo apt install gcc-aarch64-linux-gnu
# compile the project for with release profile
CC=aarch64-linux-gnu-gcc cargo xbuild --release --target aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu --linker aarch64-linux-gnu-gcc
./target/aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu/release/kunai
NB: specifying --linker
option is just a shortcut for setting appropriate RUSTFLAGS env variable when building userland
application.
If one believes Kunai has an issue with memory, here is a way to profile it.
# compile kunai with debug information for all packages
RUSTFLAGS="-g" cargo xbuild
# use heaptrack
sudo heaptrack kunai
Sysmon For Linux: https://github.com/Sysinternals/SysmonForLinux
The NGSOTI project is dedicated to training the next generation of Security Operation Center (SOC) operators, focusing on the human aspect of cybersecurity. It underscores the significance of providing SOC operators with the necessary skills and open-source tools to address challenges such as detection engineering, incident response, and threat intelligence analysis. Involving key partners such as CIRCL, Restena, Tenzir, and the University of Luxembourg, the project aims to establish a real operational infrastructure for practical training. This initiative integrates academic curricula with industry insights, offering hands-on experience in cyber ranges.
NGSOTI is co-funded under Digital Europe Programme (DEP) via the ECCC (European cybersecurity competence network and competence centre).