scanner
  • About Scanner
  • When to use it
  • Architecture
  • Getting Started
  • Playground Guide
    • Overview
    • Part 1: Search and Analysis
    • Part 2: Detection Rules
    • Wrapping Up
  • Log Data Sources
    • Overview
    • List
      • AWS
        • AWS Aurora
        • AWS CloudTrail
        • AWS CloudWatch
        • AWS ECS
        • AWS EKS
        • AWS GuardDuty
        • AWS Lambda
        • AWS Route53 Resolver
        • AWS VPC Flow
        • AWS VPC Transit Gateway Flow
        • AWS WAF
      • Cloudflare
        • Audit Logs
        • Firewall Events
        • HTTP Requests
        • Other Datasets
      • Crowdstrike
      • Custom via Fluentd
      • Fastly
      • GitHub
      • Jamf
      • Lacework
      • Osquery
      • OSSEC
      • Sophos
      • Sublime Security
      • Suricata
      • Syslog
      • Teleport
      • Windows Defender
      • Windows Sysmon
      • Zeek
  • Indexing Your Logs in S3
    • Linking AWS Accounts
      • Manual setup
        • AWS CloudShell
      • Infra-as-code
        • AWS CloudFormation
        • Terraform
        • Pulumi
    • Creating S3 Import Rules
      • Configuration - Basic
      • Configuration - Optional Transformations
      • Previewing Imports
      • Regular Expressions in Import Rules
  • Using Scanner
    • Query Syntax
    • Aggregation Functions
      • avg()
      • count()
      • countdistinct()
      • eval()
      • groupbycount()
      • max()
      • min()
      • percentile()
      • rename()
      • stats()
      • sum()
      • table()
      • var()
      • where()
    • Detection Rules
      • Event Sinks
      • Out-of-the-Box Detection Rules
      • MITRE Tags
    • API
      • Ad hoc queries
      • Detection Rules
      • Event Sinks
      • Validating YAML files
    • Built-in Indexes
      • _audit
    • Role-Based Access Control (RBAC)
    • Beta features
      • Scanner for Splunk
        • Getting Started
        • Using Scanner Search Commands
        • Dashboards
        • Creating Custom Content in Splunk Security Essentials
      • Scanner for Grafana
        • Getting Started
      • Jupyter Notebooks
        • Getting Started with Jupyter Notebooks
        • Scanner Notebooks on Github
      • Detection Rules as Code
        • Getting Started
        • Writing Detection Rules
        • CLI
        • Managing Synced Detection Rules
      • Detection Alert Formatting
        • Customizing PagerDuty Alerts
      • Scalar Functions and Operators
        • coalesce()
        • if()
        • arr.join()
        • math.abs()
        • math.round()
        • str.uriencode()
  • Single Sign On (SSO)
    • Overview
    • Okta
      • Okta Workforce
      • SAML
  • Self-Hosted Scanner
    • Overview
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  1. Log Data Sources

Overview

Scanner integrates with many common log data sources. You are also welcome to bring your own custom logs.

This guide shows how to load common log data sources into S3, and then configure Scanner to integrate with these logs.

Note that Scanner can integrate with any logs in JSON, CSV, Parquet, or Plaintext format that are stored in an S3 bucket that Scanner is linked to.

If you don't see your log source in this guide, explore using tools like Fluentd or Cribl to fetch logs from your log source and push them to an S3 bucket where Scanner can see them.

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Last updated 7 months ago

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