If you get value out of RITA and would like to go a step further with hunting automation, futuristic visualizations, and data enrichment, then take a look at AC-Hunter.
Sponsored by Active Countermeasures.
RITA is an open source framework for network traffic analysis.
The framework ingests Zeek Logs in TSV or JSON format, and currently supports the following major features:
- Beaconing Detection: Search for signs of beaconing behavior in and out of your network
- Long Connection Detection: Easily see connections that have communicated for long periods of time
- DNS Tunneling Detection: Search for signs of DNS based covert channels
- Threat Intel Feed Checking: Query threat intel feeds to search for suspicious domains and hosts
Please see our recommended System Requirements.
-
Download the RITA Installer for the desired version.
-
Uncompress the installer tarfile.
tar -xf rita-<version>-installer.tar.gz
-
Run the install script.
./rita-<version>-installer/install_rita.sh <hosts to install on>
To install RITA on the local system, pass
localhost
to the installer. To install RITA on one or more remote systems, pass a comma separated list of IPs oruser@ip
or FQDNs to the installer. For example:./rita-<version>-installer/install_rita.sh "root@4.4.4.4,8.8.8.8,mydomain.com"
- ✅: Official Support
⚠️ : Unofficial Support- ❌: Unsupported
OS | Versions | Platform | Status |
---|---|---|---|
CentOS | 9 Stream |
amd64 |
✅ |
Rocky | 9 |
amd64 |
✅ |
Ubuntu | 24.04 |
amd64 |
✅ |
Windows | ❌ |
If you do not already have Zeek installed, it can be installed from docker-zeek.
sudo wget -O /usr/local/bin/zeek https://raw.githubusercontent.com/activecm/docker-zeek/master/zeek
sudo chmod +x /usr/local/bin/zeek
zeek start
Import data into RITA using the import
command:
rita import --database=mydatabase --logs=~/mylogs
database
is what you would like to name the dataset
logs
is the path to the Zeek logs you wish to import
For datasets that should accumulate data over time, with the logs containing network info that is current (less than 24 hours old), use the --rolling
flag during creation and each subsequent import into the dataset. The most common use case for this is importing logs from the a Zeek sensor on a cron job each hour.
Note: For datasets that contain over 24 hours of logs, but are over 24 hours old, simply import the top-level directory of the set of logs without the --rolling
flag. Importing these logs with the --rolling
flag may result in incorrect results.
To destroy and recreate a dataset, use the --rebuild
flag.
See Configuration for details on adjusting scoring.
RITA follows a GitHub-style search syntax. Each field follows the <field>:<value>
format, with each search criteria separated by a space.
For example:
src:192.168.88.2 dst:165.227.88.15 beacon:>=90 sort:duration-desc
Column | Field | Operators | Data Type |
---|---|---|---|
Severity | severity |
critical|high|medium|low |
|
Source | src |
IP address | |
Destination | dst |
IP address, FQDN | |
Beacon Score | beacon |
>, >=, <, <= |
whole number |
Duration | duration |
>, >=, <, <= |
string, ex:(2h45m ) |
Subdomains | subdomains |
>, >=, <, <= |
whole number |
Threat Intel | threat_intel |
true|false |
The sort syntax is sort:<column>-<sort direction>
, with the sort direction being asc
for ascending or desc
for descending.
Supported Columns:
- severity
- beacon
- duration
- subdomains
To output the results to CSV instead of viewing them within the terminal UI, pass the --stdout
or -o
flag to the view
command:
The flag must be before the name of the dataset.
rita view --stdout mydataset
The terminal UI (TUI) supports colorful output by default. It does not need to be enabled.
Check the value of the "$TERM"
variable, this should be xterm-256color
. If it is not, please set this variable in your OS's version of a ~/.bash_profile
, ~/.profile
, etc.
Depending on the color theme of your terminal, the TUI will adjust to either a light mode or a dark mode.
If you're really fancy and like pretty colors, consider using the Catpuccin theme!