Wazuh

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Wazuh - The Open Source Security Platform. Unified XDR and SIEM protection for endpoints and cloud workloads.

Security

security
compliance
log-analysis
vulnerability-detection

Wazuh

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Wazuh is a free and open source platform used for threat prevention, detection, and response. It is capable of protecting workloads across on-premises, virtualized, containerized, and cloud-based environments.

Wazuh solution consists of an endpoint security agent, deployed to the monitored systems, and a management server, which collects and analyzes data gathered by the agents. Besides, Wazuh has been fully integrated with the Elastic Stack, providing a search engine and data visualization tool that allows users to navigate through their security alerts.

Wazuh capabilities

A brief presentation of some of the more common use cases of the Wazuh solution.

Intrusion detection

Wazuh agents scan the monitored systems looking for malware, rootkits and suspicious anomalies. They can detect hidden files, cloaked processes or unregistered network listeners, as well as inconsistencies in system call responses.

In addition to agent capabilities, the server component uses a signature-based approach to intrusion detection, using its regular expression engine to analyze collected log data and look for indicators of compromise.

Log data analysis

Wazuh agents read operating system and application logs, and securely forward them to a central manager for rule-based analysis and storage. When no agent is deployed, the server can also receive data via syslog from network devices or applications.

The Wazuh rules help make you aware of application or system errors, misconfigurations, attempted and/or successful malicious activities, policy violations and a variety of other security and operational issues.

File integrity monitoring

Wazuh monitors the file system, identifying changes in content, permissions, ownership, and attributes of files that you need to keep an eye on. In addition, it natively identifies users and applications used to create or modify files.

File integrity monitoring capabilities can be used in combination with threat intelligence to identify threats or compromised hosts. In addition, several regulatory compliance standards, such as PCI DSS, require it.

Vulnerability detection

Wazuh agents pull software inventory data and send this information to the server, where it is correlated with continuously updated CVE (Common Vulnerabilities and Exposure) databases, in order to identify well-known vulnerable software.

Automated vulnerability assessment helps you find the weak spots in your critical assets and take corrective action before attackers exploit them to sabotage your business or steal confidential data.

Configuration assessment

Wazuh monitors system and application configuration settings to ensure they are compliant with your security policies, standards and/or hardening guides. Agents perform periodic scans to detect applications that are known to be vulnerable, unpatched, or insecurely configured.

Additionally, configuration checks can be customized, tailoring them to properly align with your organization. Alerts include recommendations for better configuration, references and mapping with regulatory compliance.

Incident response

Wazuh provides out-of-the-box active responses to perform various countermeasures to address active threats, such as blocking access to a system from the threat source when certain criteria are met.

In addition, Wazuh can be used to remotely run commands or system queries, identifying indicators of compromise (IOCs) and helping perform other live forensics or incident response tasks.

Regulatory compliance

Wazuh provides some of the necessary security controls to become compliant with industry standards and regulations. These features, combined with its scalability and multi-platform support help organizations meet technical compliance requirements.

Wazuh is widely used by payment processing companies and financial institutions to meet PCI DSS (Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard) requirements. Its web user interface provides reports and dashboards that can help with this and other regulations (e.g. GPG13 or GDPR).

Cloud security

Wazuh helps monitoring cloud infrastructure at an API level, using integration modules that are able to pull security data from well known cloud providers, such as Amazon AWS, Azure or Google Cloud. In addition, Wazuh provides rules to assess the configuration of your cloud environment, easily spotting weaknesses.

In addition, Wazuh light-weight and multi-platform agents are commonly used to monitor cloud environments at the instance level.

Containers security

Wazuh provides security visibility into your Docker hosts and containers, monitoring their behavior and detecting threats, vulnerabilities and anomalies. The Wazuh agent has native integration with the Docker engine allowing users to monitor images, volumes, network settings, and running containers.

Wazuh continuously collects and analyzes detailed runtime information. For example, alerting for containers running in privileged mode, vulnerable applications, a shell running in a container, changes to persistent volumes or images, and other possible threats.

WUI

The Wazuh WUI provides a powerful user interface for data visualization and analysis. This interface can also be used to manage Wazuh configuration and to monitor its status.

Modules overview

Modules overview

Security events

Overview

Integrity monitoring

Overview

Vulnerability detection

Overview

Regulatory compliance

Overview

Agents overview

Overview

Agent summary

Overview

Orchestration

Here you can find all the automation tools maintained by the Wazuh team.

Branches

  • main branch contains the latest code, be aware of possible bugs on this branch.
  • stable branch on correspond to the last Wazuh stable version.

Software and libraries used

SoftwareVersionAuthorLicense
bzip21.0.8Julian SewardBSD License
cJSON1.7.12Dave GambleMIT License
cPython3.10.13Guido van RossumPython Software Foundation License version 2
cURL8.11.1Daniel StenbergMIT License
Flatbuffers23.5.26Google Inc.Apache 2.0 License
GoogleTest1.11.0Google Inc.3-Clause "New" BSD License
jemalloc5.2.1Jason Evans2-Clause "Simplified" BSD License
Lua5.3.6PUC-RioMIT License
libarchive3.7.2Tim Kientzle3-Clause "New" BSD License
libdb18.1.40Oracle CorporationAffero GPL v3
libffi3.2.1Anthony GreenMIT License
libpcre210.42.0Philip HazelBSD License
libplist2.2.0Aaron Burghardt et al.GNU Lesser General Public License version 2.1
libYAML0.1.7Kirill SimonovMIT License
liblzma5.4.2Lasse Collin, Jia Tan et al.GNU Public License version 3
Linux Audit userspace2.8.4Rik FaithLGPL (copyleft)
msgpack3.1.1Sadayuki FuruhashiBoost Software License version 1.0
nlohmann3.7.3Niels LohmannMIT License
OpenSSL3.0.12OpenSSL Software FoundationApache 2.0 License
pacman5.2.2Judd VinetGNU Public License version 2 (copyleft)
popt1.16Jeff Johnson & Erik TroanMIT License
procps2.8.3Brian Edmonds et al.LGPL (copyleft)
RocksDB8.3.2Facebook Inc.Apache 2.0 License
rpm4.18.2Marc Ewing & Erik TroanGNU Public License version 2 (copyleft)
sqlite3.45.0D. Richard HippPublic Domain (no restrictions)
zlib1.3.1Jean-loup Gailly & Mark Adlerzlib/libpng License

Documentation

Get involved

Become part of the Wazuh's community to learn from other users, participate in discussions, talk to our developers and contribute to the project.

If you want to contribute to our project please don’t hesitate to make pull-requests, submit issues or send commits, we will review all your questions.

You can also join our Slack community channel and mailing list by sending an email to wazuh+subscribe@googlegroups.com, to ask questions and participate in discussions.

Stay up to date on news, releases, engineering articles and more.

Authors

Wazuh Copyright (C) 2015-2023 Wazuh Inc. (License GPLv2)

Based on the OSSEC project started by Daniel Cid.