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[Deprecated] SonicWall Firewall connector for Microsoft Sentinel

Important

Log collection from many appliances and devices is now supported by the Common Event Format (CEF) via AMA, Syslog via AMA, or Custom Logs via AMA data connector in Microsoft Sentinel. For more information, see Find your Microsoft Sentinel data connector.

Common Event Format (CEF) is an industry standard format on top of Syslog messages, used by SonicWall to allow event interoperability among different platforms. By connecting your CEF logs to Microsoft Sentinel, you can take advantage of search & correlation, alerting, and threat intelligence enrichment for each log.

This is autogenerated content. For changes, contact the solution provider.

Connector attributes

Connector attribute Description
Log Analytics table(s) CommonSecurityLog (SonicWall)
Data collection rules support Workspace transform DCR
Supported by SonicWall

Query samples

All logs

CommonSecurityLog
| where DeviceVendor == "SonicWall"
| sort by TimeGenerated desc

Summarize by destination IP and port

CommonSecurityLog
| where DeviceVendor == "SonicWall"
| summarize count() by DestinationIP, DestinationPort, TimeGenerated
| sort by TimeGenerated desc

Show all dropped traffic from the SonicWall Firewall

CommonSecurityLog
| where DeviceVendor == "SonicWall"
| where AdditionalExtensions contains "fw_action='drop'"

Vendor installation instructions

  1. Linux Syslog agent configuration

Install and configure the Linux agent to collect your Common Event Format (CEF) Syslog messages and forward them to Microsoft Sentinel.

Notice that the data from all regions will be stored in the selected workspace 1.1 Select or create a Linux machine.

Select or create a Linux machine that Microsoft Sentinel will use as the proxy between your security solution and Microsoft Sentinel this machine can be on your on-prem environment, Azure or other clouds.

1.2 Install the CEF collector on the Linux machine

Install the Microsoft Monitoring Agent on your Linux machine and configure the machine to listen on the necessary port and forward messages to your Microsoft Sentinel workspace. The CEF collector collects CEF messages on port 514 TCP.

  1. Make sure that you have Python on your machine using the following command: python -version.

  2. You must have elevated permissions (sudo) on your machine. Run the following command to install and apply the CEF collector:

    sudo wget -O cef_installer.py https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Azure/Azure-Sentinel/master/DataConnectors/CEF/cef_installer.py&&sudo python cef_installer.py [Workspace ID] [Workspace Primary Key]

  3. Forward SonicWall Firewall Common Event Format (CEF) logs to Syslog agent

    Set your SonicWall Firewall to send Syslog messages in CEF format to the proxy machine. Make sure you send the logs to port 514 TCP on the machine's IP address.

    Follow Instructions. Then Make sure you select local use 4 as the facility. Then select ArcSight as the Syslog format.

  4. Validate connection

Follow the instructions to validate your connectivity:

Open Log Analytics to check if the logs are received using the CommonSecurityLog schema.

It may take about 20 minutes until the connection streams data to your workspace. If the logs are not received, run the following connectivity validation script:

  1. Make sure that you have Python on your machine using the following command: python -version

  2. You must have elevated permissions (sudo) on your machine Run the following command to validate your connectivity:

    sudo wget -O cef_troubleshoot.py https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Azure/Azure-Sentinel/master/DataConnectors/CEF/cef_troubleshoot.py&&sudo python cef_troubleshoot.py [Workspace ID]

  3. Secure your machine

Make sure to configure the machine's security according to your organization's security policy.

Learn more >

Next steps

For more information, go to the related solution in the Azure Marketplace.