An extendable tool to extract and aggregate IOCs from threat feeds.
Integrates out-of-the-box with ThreatKB and MISP, and can fit seamlessly into any existing workflow with SQS, Beanstalk, and custom plugins.
Currently used by InQuest Labs IOC-DB: https://labs.inquest.net/iocdb
ThreatIngestor can be configured to watch Twitter, RSS feeds, sitemap (XML) feeds, or other sources, and extract meaningful information such as malicious IPs/domains and YARA signatures, and send that information to another system for analysis.
Try it out now with this quick walkthrough, read more ThreatIngestor walkthroughs on the InQuest blog, and check out labs.inquest.net/iocdb, an IOC aggregation and querying tool powered by ThreatIngestor.
ThreatIngestor requires Python 3.6+, with development headers.
Install ThreatIngestor from PyPI:
pip install threatingestor
Install optional dependencies for using some plugins, as needed:
pip install threatingestor[all]
View the full installation instructions for more information.
Create a new config.yml
file, and configure each source and operator module you want to use. (See config.example.yml
for layout.) Then run the script:
threatingestor config.yml
By default, it will run forever, polling each configured source every 15 minutes.
If you'd like to run the image extraction source, or include the image extraction functionality for other sources, you will need to be running Python 3.7 >= due to the dependencies:
pip install opencv-python pytesseract numpy
View the full ThreatIngestor documentation for more information.
ThreatIngestor uses a plugin architecture with "source" (input) and "operator" (output) plugins. The currently supported integrations are:
View the full ThreatIngestor documentation for more information on included plugins, and how to create your own.
Looking for some threat intel sources to get started? InQuest has a Twitter List with several accounts that post C2 domains and IPs: https://twitter.com/InQuest/lists/ioc-feed. Note that you will need to apply for a Twitter developer account to use the ThreatIngestor Twitter Source. Take a look at config.example.yml
to see how to set this list up as a source.
For quicker setup, RSS feeds can be a great source of intelligence. Check out this example RSS config file for a few pre-configured security blogs.
If you need help getting set up, or run into any issues, feel free to open an issue. You can also reach out to @InQuest on Twitter or read more about us on the web at https://www.inquest.net.
We'd love to hear any feedback you have on ThreatIngestor, its documentation, or how you're putting it to work for you!
Issues and pull requests are welcomed. Please keep Python code PEP8 compliant. By submitting a pull request you agree to release your submissions under the terms of the LICENSE.
A Dockerfile
is available for running ThreatIngestor within a Docker container.
First, you'll need to build the container:
docker build . -t threatingestor
After that, you can mount the container by using this command:
docker run -it --mount type=bind,source=/,target=/dock threatingestor /bin/bash
After you've mounted the container and you're inside the /bin/bash
shell, you can run ThreatIngestor like normal:
threatingestor config.yml
There is also a Dockerfile.dev for building a development version of ThreatIngestor. All you need is an available .whl file, which can be generated with the following command:
python3 -m build
After you've built the project, you can build the container:
docker build . -t threatingestor -f Dockerfile.dev
NOTE: If you run into any issues while building the development environment or running ThreatIngestor within the container, you may need to comment out the following lines in Dockerfile.dev
to work properly:
FROM ubuntu:18.04
...
# RUN apt-get install tesseract-ocr -y
...
# RUN pip3 install opencv-python pytesseract numpy
...
Some scripts are now provided to help with your local configuration of ThreatIngestor.
A README.md with additional information is available here.