Detection rules › Splunk

Kubernetes Anomalous Outbound Network Activity from Process

Status
experimental
Severity
low
Group by
"k8s.cluster.name", "source.process.name", "source.workload.name", key
Author
Matthew Moore, Splunk
Source
github.com/splunk/security_content

The following analytic identifies anomalously high outbound network activity from processes running within containerized workloads in a Kubernetes environment. It leverages Network Performance Monitoring metrics collected via an OTEL collector and pulled from Splunk Observability Cloud. The detection compares recent network metrics (tcp.bytes, tcp.new_sockets, tcp.packets, udp.bytes, udp.packets) over the last hour with the average metrics over the past 30 days. This activity is significant as it may indicate data exfiltration, process modification, or container compromise. If confirmed malicious, it could lead to unauthorized data exfiltration, communication with malicious entities, or further attacks within the containerized environment.

MITRE ATT&CK coverage

TacticTechniques
ExecutionT1204 User Execution

Rule body splunk

name: Kubernetes Anomalous Outbound Network Activity from Process
id: dd6afee6-e0a3-4028-a089-f47dd2842c22
version: 9
creation_date: '2024-01-30'
modification_date: '2026-05-13'
author: Matthew Moore, Splunk
status: experimental
type: Anomaly
description: The following analytic identifies anomalously high outbound network activity from processes running within containerized workloads in a Kubernetes environment. It leverages Network Performance Monitoring metrics collected via an OTEL collector and pulled from Splunk Observability Cloud. The detection compares recent network metrics (tcp.bytes, tcp.new_sockets, tcp.packets, udp.bytes, udp.packets) over the last hour with the average metrics over the past 30 days. This activity is significant as it may indicate data exfiltration, process modification, or container compromise. If confirmed malicious, it could lead to unauthorized data exfiltration, communication with malicious entities, or further attacks within the containerized environment.
data_source: []
search: "| mstats avg(tcp.*) as tcp.* avg(udp.*) as udp.* where `kubernetes_metrics` AND earliest=-1h by k8s.cluster.name source.workload.name source.process.name  span=10s | eval key='source.workload.name' + \":\" + 'source.process.name' | join type=left key [ mstats avg(tcp.*) as avg_tcp.* avg(udp.*) as avg_udp.* stdev(tcp.*) as stdev_tcp.* avg(udp.*) as stdev_udp.* where `kubernetes_metrics` AND earliest=-30d latest=-1h by source.workload.name source.process.name | eval key='source.workload.name' + \":\" + 'source.process.name' ] | eval anomalies = \"\" | foreach stdev_* [ eval anomalies =if( '<<MATCHSTR>>' > ('avg_<<MATCHSTR>>' + 3 * 'stdev_<<MATCHSTR>>'), anomalies + \"<<MATCHSTR>> higher than average by \" + tostring(round(('<<MATCHSTR>>' - 'avg_<<MATCHSTR>>')/'stdev_<<MATCHSTR>>' ,2)) + \" Standard Deviations. <<MATCHSTR>>=\" + tostring('<<MATCHSTR>>') + \" avg_<<MATCHSTR>>=\" + tostring('avg_<<MATCHSTR>>') + \" 'stdev_<<MATCHSTR>>'=\" + tostring('stdev_<<MATCHSTR>>') + \", \" , anomalies) ] | fillnull | eval anomalies = split(replace(anomalies, \",\\s$$$$\", \"\") ,\", \") | where anomalies!=\"\" | stats count(anomalies) as count values(anomalies) as anomalies by k8s.cluster.name source.workload.name source.process.name | where count > 5 | rename k8s.cluster.name as host | `kubernetes_anomalous_outbound_network_activity_from_process_filter`"
how_to_implement: "To gather NPM metrics the Open Telemetry to the Kubernetes Cluster and enable Network Performance Monitoring according to instructions found in Splunk Docs https://help.splunk.com/en/splunk-observability-cloud/monitor-infrastructure/network-explorer/set-up-network-explorer-in-kubernetes#network-explorer-setup In order to access those metrics from within Splunk Enterprise and ES, the Splunk Infrastructure Monitoring add-on must be installed and configured on a Splunk Search Head.  Once installed, first configure the add-on with your O11y Cloud Org ID and Access Token. Lastly set up the add-on to ingest metrics from O11y cloud using the following settings, and any other settings left at default:\n* Name sim_npm_metrics_to_metrics_index\n * Metric Resolution 10000"
known_false_positives: No false positives have been identified at this time.
references:
    - https://github.com/signalfx/splunk-otel-collector-chart
intermediate_findings:
    entities:
        - field: host
          type: system
          score: 20
          message: Kubernetes Anomalous Outbound Network Activity from Process in kubernetes cluster $host$
analytic_story:
    - Abnormal Kubernetes Behavior using Splunk Infrastructure Monitoring
asset_type: Kubernetes
mitre_attack_id:
    - T1204
product:
    - Splunk Enterprise
    - Splunk Enterprise Security
    - Splunk Cloud
category: cloud
security_domain: network

Stages and Predicates

Stage 1: search

| mstats avg(tcp.*) as tcp.* avg(udp.*) as udp.* where `kubernetes_metrics` AND earliest=-1h by k8s.cluster.name source.workload.name source.process.name  span=10s

Stage 2: eval

| eval key='source.workload.name' + ":" + 'source.process.name'

Stage 3: join

| join type=left key [ mstats avg(tcp.*) as avg_tcp.* avg(udp.*) as avg_udp.* stdev(tcp.*) as stdev_tcp.* avg(udp.*) as stdev_udp.* where `kubernetes_metrics` AND earliest=-30d latest=-1h by source.workload.name source.process.name | eval key='source.workload.name' + ":" + 'source.process.name' ]

Stage 4: eval

| eval anomalies = ""

Stage 5: search

| foreach stdev_* [ eval anomalies =if( '<<MATCHSTR>>' > ('avg_<<MATCHSTR>>' + 3 * 'stdev_<<MATCHSTR>>'), anomalies + "<<MATCHSTR>> higher than average by " + tostring(round(('<<MATCHSTR>>' - 'avg_<<MATCHSTR>>')/'stdev_<<MATCHSTR>>' ,2)) + " Standard Deviations. <<MATCHSTR>>=" + tostring('<<MATCHSTR>>') + " avg_<<MATCHSTR>>=" + tostring('avg_<<MATCHSTR>>') + " 'stdev_<<MATCHSTR>>'=" + tostring('stdev_<<MATCHSTR>>') + ", " , anomalies) ]

Stage 6: fillnull

| fillnull

Stage 7: eval

| eval anomalies = split(replace(anomalies, ",\s$$$$", "") ,", ")

Stage 8: where

| where anomalies!=""

Stage 9: stats

| stats count(anomalies) as count values(anomalies) as anomalies by k8s.cluster.name source.workload.name source.process.name

Stage 10: where

| where count > 5

Stage 11: rename

| rename k8s.cluster.name as host

Stage 12: search

| `kubernetes_anomalous_outbound_network_activity_from_process_filter`

Indicators

Each row is a field, operator, and value that the rule matches. The corpus column counts how many other rules in the catalog look for the same combination: high numbers point to widely-used, community-vetted indicators. Blank or 1 shows that the indicator is specific to this rule.

FieldKindValues
anomaliesne
  • ""
countgt
  • 5
spaneq
  • 10s

Search terms

Bare-string tokens in the SPL search body. Splunk matches each token against _raw (the untyped raw event text) anywhere it appears, not against a specific field. These don't surface in the Indicators table because they aren't predicates on a known field.

StageTerm
1mstats
1avg
1tcp.*
1as
1tcp.*
1avg
1udp.*
1as
1udp.*
1where
1by
1source.process.name
1k8s.cluster.name
1source.workload.name
5foreach
5stdev_*