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Last updated: Apr 10th, 2023

Proofpoint TAP

Collect logs from Proofpoint TAP with Elastic Agent.

What is an Elastic integration?

This integration is powered by Elastic Agent. Elastic Agent is a single, unified way to add monitoring for logs, metrics, and other types of data to a host. It can also protect hosts from security threats, query data from operating systems, forward data from remote services or hardware, and more. Refer to our documentation for a detailed comparison between Beats and Elastic Agent.

Prefer to use Beats for this use case? See Filebeat modules for logs or Metricbeat modules for metrics.

The Proofpoint TAP integration collects and parses data from the Proofpoint TAP REST APIs.

Compatibility

This module has been tested against SIEM API v2.

Configurations

The service principal and secret are used to authenticate to the SIEM API. To generate TAP Service Credentials please follow the following steps.

  1. Log in to the TAP dashboard.
  2. Navigate to Settings > Connected Applications.
  3. Click Create New Credential.
  4. Name the new credential set and click Generate.
  5. Copy the Service Principal and Secret and save them for later use.
    For the more information on generating TAP credentials please follow the steps mentioned in the link Generate TAP Service Credentials.

Logs

Clicks Blocked

This is the clicks_blocked dataset.

NOTE: For the clicks_blocked dataset, source.ip corresponds to the Proofpoint senderIP — the IP of the email sender — and destination.ip corresponds to clickIP — the IP of the click destination.

An example event for clicks_blocked looks as following:

{
    "@timestamp": "2022-03-30T10:11:12.000Z",
    "agent": {
        "ephemeral_id": "e1f6ec70-06b8-4d4b-829f-03000950c530",
        "id": "19f05486-b68d-449a-9bdd-1493d2f3b55d",
        "name": "docker-fleet-agent",
        "type": "filebeat",
        "version": "8.4.0"
    },
    "data_stream": {
        "dataset": "proofpoint_tap.clicks_blocked",
        "namespace": "ep",
        "type": "logs"
    },
    "destination": {
        "as": {
            "number": 29518,
            "organization": {
                "name": "Bredband2 AB"
            }
        },
        "geo": {
            "city_name": "Linköping",
            "continent_name": "Europe",
            "country_iso_code": "SE",
            "country_name": "Sweden",
            "location": {
                "lat": 58.4167,
                "lon": 15.6167
            },
            "region_iso_code": "SE-E",
            "region_name": "Östergötland County"
        },
        "ip": "89.160.20.112"
    },
    "ecs": {
        "version": "8.7.0"
    },
    "elastic_agent": {
        "id": "19f05486-b68d-449a-9bdd-1493d2f3b55d",
        "snapshot": false,
        "version": "8.4.0"
    },
    "email": {
        "from": {
            "address": "abc123@example.com"
        },
        "message_id": "12345678912345.12345.mail@example.com",
        "to": {
            "address": "9c52aa64228824247c48df69b066e5a7@example.com"
        }
    },
    "event": {
        "agent_id_status": "verified",
        "category": [
            "email"
        ],
        "created": "2022-11-04T13:46:30.114Z",
        "dataset": "proofpoint_tap.clicks_blocked",
        "id": "a5c9f8bb-1234-1234-1234-dx9xxx2xx9xxx",
        "ingested": "2022-11-04T13:46:33Z",
        "kind": "event",
        "original": "{\"GUID\":\"ZcxxxxVxyxFxyxLxxxDxVxx4xxxxx\",\"campaignId\":\"46x01x8x-x899-404x-xxx9-111xx393d1x7\",\"classification\":\"malware\",\"clickIP\":\"89.160.20.112\",\"clickTime\":\"2022-03-30T10:11:12.000Z\",\"id\":\"a5c9f8bb-1234-1234-1234-dx9xxx2xx9xxx\",\"messageID\":\"12345678912345.12345.mail@example.com\",\"recipient\":\"9c52aa64228824247c48df69b066e5a7@example.com\",\"sender\":\"abc123@example.com\",\"senderIP\":\"81.2.69.143\",\"threatID\":\"502b7xxxx0x5x1x3xb6xcxexbxxxxxxxcxxexc6xbxxxxxxdx7fxcx6x9xxxx9xdxxxxxxxx5f\",\"threatStatus\":\"active\",\"threatTime\":\"2022-03-21T14:40:31.000Z\",\"threatURL\":\"https://threatinsight.proofpoint.com/a2abc123-1234-1234-1234-babcded1234/threat/email/502xxxxxxxxxcebxxxxxxxxxxa04277xxxxx5dxc6xxxxxxxxx5f\",\"url\":\"https://www.example.com/abcdabcd123?query=0\",\"userAgent\":\"Mozilla/5.0 (iPhone; CPU iPhone OS 14_6 like Mac OS X) AppleWebKit/605.1.15 (KHTML, like Gecko) GSA/199.0.427504638 Mobile/15E148 Safari/604.1\"}",
        "type": [
            "denied"
        ]
    },
    "input": {
        "type": "httpjson"
    },
    "proofpoint_tap": {
        "clicks_blocked": {
            "campaign_id": "46x01x8x-x899-404x-xxx9-111xx393d1x7",
            "classification": "malware",
            "threat": {
                "id": "502b7xxxx0x5x1x3xb6xcxexbxxxxxxxcxxexc6xbxxxxxxdx7fxcx6x9xxxx9xdxxxxxxxx5f",
                "status": "active",
                "time": "2022-03-21T14:40:31.000Z",
                "url": "https://threatinsight.proofpoint.com/a2abc123-1234-1234-1234-babcded1234/threat/email/502xxxxxxxxxcebxxxxxxxxxxa04277xxxxx5dxc6xxxxxxxxx5f"
            }
        },
        "guid": "ZcxxxxVxyxFxyxLxxxDxVxx4xxxxx"
    },
    "related": {
        "ip": [
            "81.2.69.143",
            "89.160.20.112"
        ]
    },
    "source": {
        "ip": "81.2.69.143"
    },
    "tags": [
        "preserve_original_event",
        "forwarded",
        "proofpoint_tap-clicks_blocked"
    ],
    "url": {
        "domain": "www.example.com",
        "full": "https://www.example.com/abcdabcd123?query=0",
        "path": "/abcdabcd123",
        "query": "query=0",
        "scheme": "https"
    },
    "user_agent": {
        "device": {
            "name": "iPhone"
        },
        "name": "Google",
        "original": "Mozilla/5.0 (iPhone; CPU iPhone OS 14_6 like Mac OS X) AppleWebKit/605.1.15 (KHTML, like Gecko) GSA/199.0.427504638 Mobile/15E148 Safari/604.1",
        "os": {
            "full": "iOS 14.6",
            "name": "iOS",
            "version": "14.6"
        },
        "version": "199.0.427504638"
    }
}

Exported fields

FieldDescriptionType
@timestamp
Event timestamp.
date
cloud.account.id
The cloud account or organization ID used to identify different entities in a multi-tenant environment. Examples: AWS account ID, Google Cloud ORG ID, or other unique identifier.
keyword
cloud.availability_zone
Availability zone in which this host is running.
keyword
cloud.image.id
Image ID for the cloud instance.
keyword
cloud.instance.id
Instance ID of the host machine.
keyword
cloud.instance.name
Instance name of the host machine.
keyword
cloud.machine.type
Machine type of the host machine.
keyword
cloud.project.id
Name of the project in Google Cloud.
keyword
cloud.provider
Name of the cloud provider. Example values are aws, azure, gcp, or digitalocean.
keyword
cloud.region
Region in which this host is running.
keyword
container.id
Unique container ID.
keyword
container.image.name
Name of the image the container was built on.
keyword
container.labels
Image labels.
object
container.name
Container name.
keyword
data_stream.dataset
Data stream dataset.
constant_keyword
data_stream.namespace
Data stream namespace.
constant_keyword
data_stream.type
Data stream type.
constant_keyword
destination.as.number
Unique number allocated to the autonomous system. The autonomous system number (ASN) uniquely identifies each network on the Internet.
long
destination.as.organization.name
Organization name.
keyword
destination.as.organization.name.text
Multi-field of destination.as.organization.name.
match_only_text
destination.geo.city_name
City name.
keyword
destination.geo.continent_name
Name of the continent.
keyword
destination.geo.country_iso_code
Country ISO code.
keyword
destination.geo.country_name
Country name.
keyword
destination.geo.location
Longitude and latitude.
geo_point
destination.geo.region_iso_code
Region ISO code.
keyword
destination.geo.region_name
Region name.
keyword
destination.ip
IP address of the destination (IPv4 or IPv6).
ip
ecs.version
ECS version this event conforms to. ecs.version is a required field and must exist in all events. When querying across multiple indices -- which may conform to slightly different ECS versions -- this field lets integrations adjust to the schema version of the events.
keyword
email.from.address
The email address of the sender, typically from the RFC 5322 From: header field.
keyword
email.message_id
Identifier from the RFC 5322 Message-ID: email header that refers to a particular email message.
wildcard
email.to.address
The email address of recipient
keyword
event.category
This is one of four ECS Categorization Fields, and indicates the second level in the ECS category hierarchy. event.category represents the "big buckets" of ECS categories. For example, filtering on event.category:process yields all events relating to process activity. This field is closely related to event.type, which is used as a subcategory. This field is an array. This will allow proper categorization of some events that fall in multiple categories.
keyword
event.created
event.created contains the date/time when the event was first read by an agent, or by your pipeline. This field is distinct from @timestamp in that @timestamp typically contain the time extracted from the original event. In most situations, these two timestamps will be slightly different. The difference can be used to calculate the delay between your source generating an event, and the time when your agent first processed it. This can be used to monitor your agent's or pipeline's ability to keep up with your event source. In case the two timestamps are identical, @timestamp should be used.
date
event.dataset
Event dataset.
constant_keyword
event.id
Unique ID to describe the event.
keyword
event.kind
This is one of four ECS Categorization Fields, and indicates the highest level in the ECS category hierarchy. event.kind gives high-level information about what type of information the event contains, without being specific to the contents of the event. For example, values of this field distinguish alert events from metric events. The value of this field can be used to inform how these kinds of events should be handled. They may warrant different retention, different access control, it may also help understand whether the data coming in at a regular interval or not.
keyword
event.module
Event module.
constant_keyword
event.original
Raw text message of entire event. Used to demonstrate log integrity or where the full log message (before splitting it up in multiple parts) may be required, e.g. for reindex. This field is not indexed and doc_values are disabled. It cannot be searched, but it can be retrieved from _source. If users wish to override this and index this field, please see Field data types in the Elasticsearch Reference.
keyword
event.type
This is one of four ECS Categorization Fields, and indicates the third level in the ECS category hierarchy. event.type represents a categorization "sub-bucket" that, when used along with the event.category field values, enables filtering events down to a level appropriate for single visualization. This field is an array. This will allow proper categorization of some events that fall in multiple event types.
keyword
host.architecture
Operating system architecture.
keyword
host.containerized
If the host is a container.
boolean
host.domain
Name of the domain of which the host is a member. For example, on Windows this could be the host's Active Directory domain or NetBIOS domain name. For Linux this could be the domain of the host's LDAP provider.
keyword
host.hostname
Hostname of the host. It normally contains what the hostname command returns on the host machine.
keyword
host.id
Unique host ID. As hostname is not always unique, use values that are meaningful in your environment. Example: The current usage of beat.name.
keyword
host.ip
Host IP addresses.
ip
host.mac
Host mac addresses.
keyword
host.name
Name of the host. It can contain what hostname returns on Unix systems, the fully qualified domain name, or a name specified by the user. The sender decides which value to use.
keyword
host.os.build
OS build information.
keyword
host.os.codename
OS codename, if any.
keyword
host.os.family
OS family (such as redhat, debian, freebsd, windows).
keyword
host.os.kernel
Operating system kernel version as a raw string.
keyword
host.os.name
Operating system name, without the version.
keyword
host.os.name.text
Multi-field of host.os.name.
text
host.os.platform
Operating system platform (such centos, ubuntu, windows).
keyword
host.os.version
Operating system version as a raw string.
keyword
host.type
Type of host. For Cloud providers this can be the machine type like t2.medium. If vm, this could be the container, for example, or other information meaningful in your environment.
keyword
input.type
Input type
keyword
log.offset
Log offset
long
proofpoint_tap.clicks_blocked.campaign_id
An identifier for the campaign of which the threat is a member, if available at the time of the query. Threats can be linked to campaigns even after these events are retrieved.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.clicks_blocked.classification
The threat category of the malicious URL.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.clicks_blocked.sender_ip
The IP address of the sender.
ip
proofpoint_tap.clicks_blocked.threat.id
The unique identifier associated with this threat. It can be used to query the forensics and campaign endpoints.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.clicks_blocked.threat.status
The current state of the threat.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.clicks_blocked.threat.time
Proofpoint identified the URL as a threat at this time.
date
proofpoint_tap.clicks_blocked.threat.url
A link to the entry on the TAP Dashboard for the particular threat.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.guid
The ID of the message within PPS. It can be used to identify the message in PPS and is guaranteed to be unique.
keyword
related.ip
All of the IPs seen on your event.
ip
source.ip
IP address of the source (IPv4 or IPv6).
ip
tags
List of keywords used to tag each event.
keyword
url.domain
Domain of the url, such as "www.elastic.co". In some cases a URL may refer to an IP and/or port directly, without a domain name. In this case, the IP address would go to the domain field. If the URL contains a literal IPv6 address enclosed by [ and ] (IETF RFC 2732), the [ and ] characters should also be captured in the domain field.
keyword
url.extension
The field contains the file extension from the original request url, excluding the leading dot. The file extension is only set if it exists, as not every url has a file extension. The leading period must not be included. For example, the value must be "png", not ".png". Note that when the file name has multiple extensions (example.tar.gz), only the last one should be captured ("gz", not "tar.gz").
keyword
url.fragment
Portion of the url after the #, such as "top". The # is not part of the fragment.
keyword
url.full
If full URLs are important to your use case, they should be stored in url.full, whether this field is reconstructed or present in the event source.
wildcard
url.full.text
Multi-field of url.full.
match_only_text
url.original
Unmodified original url as seen in the event source. Note that in network monitoring, the observed URL may be a full URL, whereas in access logs, the URL is often just represented as a path. This field is meant to represent the URL as it was observed, complete or not.
wildcard
url.original.text
Multi-field of url.original.
match_only_text
url.password
Password of the request.
keyword
url.path
Path of the request, such as "/search".
wildcard
url.port
Port of the request, such as 443.
long
url.query
The query field describes the query string of the request, such as "q=elasticsearch". The ? is excluded from the query string. If a URL contains no ?, there is no query field. If there is a ? but no query, the query field exists with an empty string. The exists query can be used to differentiate between the two cases.
keyword
url.scheme
Scheme of the request, such as "https". Note: The : is not part of the scheme.
keyword
url.username
Username of the request.
keyword
user_agent.device.name
Name of the device.
keyword
user_agent.name
Name of the user agent.
keyword
user_agent.original
Unparsed user_agent string.
keyword
user_agent.original.text
Multi-field of user_agent.original.
match_only_text
user_agent.os.full
Operating system name, including the version or code name.
keyword
user_agent.os.full.text
Multi-field of user_agent.os.full.
match_only_text
user_agent.os.name
Operating system name, without the version.
keyword
user_agent.os.name.text
Multi-field of user_agent.os.name.
match_only_text
user_agent.os.version
Operating system version as a raw string.
keyword
user_agent.version
Version of the user agent.
keyword

Clicks Permitted

This is the clicks_permitted dataset.

NOTE: For the clicks_permitted dataset, source.ip corresponds to the Proofpoint senderIP — the IP of the email sender — and destination.ip corresponds to clickIP — the IP of the click destination.

An example event for clicks_permitted looks as following:

{
    "@timestamp": "2022-03-21T20:39:37.000Z",
    "agent": {
        "ephemeral_id": "166b43f0-6109-4a08-b5e2-df035102378b",
        "id": "19f05486-b68d-449a-9bdd-1493d2f3b55d",
        "name": "docker-fleet-agent",
        "type": "filebeat",
        "version": "8.4.0"
    },
    "data_stream": {
        "dataset": "proofpoint_tap.clicks_permitted",
        "namespace": "ep",
        "type": "logs"
    },
    "destination": {
        "as": {
            "number": 29518,
            "organization": {
                "name": "Bredband2 AB"
            }
        },
        "geo": {
            "city_name": "Linköping",
            "continent_name": "Europe",
            "country_iso_code": "SE",
            "country_name": "Sweden",
            "location": {
                "lat": 58.4167,
                "lon": 15.6167
            },
            "region_iso_code": "SE-E",
            "region_name": "Östergötland County"
        },
        "ip": "89.160.20.112"
    },
    "ecs": {
        "version": "8.7.0"
    },
    "elastic_agent": {
        "id": "19f05486-b68d-449a-9bdd-1493d2f3b55d",
        "snapshot": false,
        "version": "8.4.0"
    },
    "email": {
        "from": {
            "address": "abc123@example.com"
        },
        "message_id": "12345678912345.12345.mail@example.com",
        "to": {
            "address": "abc@example.com"
        }
    },
    "event": {
        "agent_id_status": "verified",
        "category": [
            "email"
        ],
        "created": "2022-11-04T13:47:53.521Z",
        "dataset": "proofpoint_tap.clicks_permitted",
        "id": "de7eef56-1234-1234-1234-5xxfx7xxxdxxxx",
        "ingested": "2022-11-04T13:47:57Z",
        "kind": "event",
        "original": "{\"GUID\":\"cTxxxxxxzx7xxxxxxxxxx8x4xwxx\",\"campaignId\":\"46x01x8x-x899-404x-xxx9-111xx393d1x7\",\"classification\":\"phish\",\"clickIP\":\"89.160.20.112\",\"clickTime\":\"2022-03-21T20:39:37.000Z\",\"id\":\"de7eef56-1234-1234-1234-5xxfx7xxxdxxxx\",\"messageID\":\"12345678912345.12345.mail@example.com\",\"recipient\":\"abc@example.com\",\"sender\":\"abc123@example.com\",\"senderIP\":\"81.2.69.143\",\"threatID\":\"92c17aaxxxxxxxxxx07xx7xxxx9xexcx3x3xxxxxx8xx3xxxx\",\"threatStatus\":\"active\",\"threatTime\":\"2022-03-30T10:05:57.000Z\",\"threatURL\":\"https://threatinsight.proofpoint.com/a2abc123-1234-1234-1234-babcded1234/threat/email/92c17aaxxxxxxxxxx07xx7xxxx9xexcx3x3xxxxxx8xx3xxxx\",\"url\":\"https://example.com/collab/?id=x4x3x6xsx1xxxx8xEdxexnxxxaxX\",\"userAgent\":\"Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/99.0.4844.74 Safari/537.36 Edg/99.0.1150.46\"}",
        "type": [
            "allowed"
        ]
    },
    "input": {
        "type": "httpjson"
    },
    "proofpoint_tap": {
        "clicks_permitted": {
            "campaign_id": "46x01x8x-x899-404x-xxx9-111xx393d1x7",
            "classification": "phish",
            "threat": {
                "id": "92c17aaxxxxxxxxxx07xx7xxxx9xexcx3x3xxxxxx8xx3xxxx",
                "status": "active",
                "time": "2022-03-30T10:05:57.000Z",
                "url": "https://threatinsight.proofpoint.com/a2abc123-1234-1234-1234-babcded1234/threat/email/92c17aaxxxxxxxxxx07xx7xxxx9xexcx3x3xxxxxx8xx3xxxx"
            }
        },
        "guid": "cTxxxxxxzx7xxxxxxxxxx8x4xwxx"
    },
    "related": {
        "ip": [
            "81.2.69.143",
            "89.160.20.112"
        ]
    },
    "source": {
        "ip": "81.2.69.143"
    },
    "tags": [
        "preserve_original_event",
        "forwarded",
        "proofpoint_tap-clicks_permitted"
    ],
    "url": {
        "domain": "example.com",
        "full": "https://example.com/collab/?id=x4x3x6xsx1xxxx8xEdxexnxxxaxX",
        "path": "/collab/",
        "query": "id=x4x3x6xsx1xxxx8xEdxexnxxxaxX",
        "scheme": "https"
    },
    "user_agent": {
        "device": {
            "name": "Other"
        },
        "name": "Edge",
        "original": "Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/99.0.4844.74 Safari/537.36 Edg/99.0.1150.46",
        "os": {
            "full": "Windows 10",
            "name": "Windows",
            "version": "10"
        },
        "version": "99.0.1150.46"
    }
}

Exported fields

FieldDescriptionType
@timestamp
Event timestamp.
date
cloud.account.id
The cloud account or organization ID used to identify different entities in a multi-tenant environment. Examples: AWS account ID, Google Cloud ORG ID, or other unique identifier.
keyword
cloud.availability_zone
Availability zone in which this host is running.
keyword
cloud.image.id
Image ID for the cloud instance.
keyword
cloud.instance.id
Instance ID of the host machine.
keyword
cloud.instance.name
Instance name of the host machine.
keyword
cloud.machine.type
Machine type of the host machine.
keyword
cloud.project.id
Name of the project in Google Cloud.
keyword
cloud.provider
Name of the cloud provider. Example values are aws, azure, gcp, or digitalocean.
keyword
cloud.region
Region in which this host is running.
keyword
container.id
Unique container ID.
keyword
container.image.name
Name of the image the container was built on.
keyword
container.labels
Image labels.
object
container.name
Container name.
keyword
data_stream.dataset
Data stream dataset.
constant_keyword
data_stream.namespace
Data stream namespace.
constant_keyword
data_stream.type
Data stream type.
constant_keyword
destination.as.number
Unique number allocated to the autonomous system. The autonomous system number (ASN) uniquely identifies each network on the Internet.
long
destination.as.organization.name
Organization name.
keyword
destination.as.organization.name.text
Multi-field of destination.as.organization.name.
match_only_text
destination.geo.city_name
City name.
keyword
destination.geo.continent_name
Name of the continent.
keyword
destination.geo.country_iso_code
Country ISO code.
keyword
destination.geo.country_name
Country name.
keyword
destination.geo.location
Longitude and latitude.
geo_point
destination.geo.region_iso_code
Region ISO code.
keyword
destination.geo.region_name
Region name.
keyword
destination.ip
IP address of the destination (IPv4 or IPv6).
ip
ecs.version
ECS version this event conforms to. ecs.version is a required field and must exist in all events. When querying across multiple indices -- which may conform to slightly different ECS versions -- this field lets integrations adjust to the schema version of the events.
keyword
email.from.address
The email address of the sender, typically from the RFC 5322 From: header field.
keyword
email.message_id
Identifier from the RFC 5322 Message-ID: email header that refers to a particular email message.
wildcard
email.to.address
The email address of recipient
keyword
event.category
This is one of four ECS Categorization Fields, and indicates the second level in the ECS category hierarchy. event.category represents the "big buckets" of ECS categories. For example, filtering on event.category:process yields all events relating to process activity. This field is closely related to event.type, which is used as a subcategory. This field is an array. This will allow proper categorization of some events that fall in multiple categories.
keyword
event.created
event.created contains the date/time when the event was first read by an agent, or by your pipeline. This field is distinct from @timestamp in that @timestamp typically contain the time extracted from the original event. In most situations, these two timestamps will be slightly different. The difference can be used to calculate the delay between your source generating an event, and the time when your agent first processed it. This can be used to monitor your agent's or pipeline's ability to keep up with your event source. In case the two timestamps are identical, @timestamp should be used.
date
event.dataset
Event dataset.
constant_keyword
event.id
Unique ID to describe the event.
keyword
event.kind
This is one of four ECS Categorization Fields, and indicates the highest level in the ECS category hierarchy. event.kind gives high-level information about what type of information the event contains, without being specific to the contents of the event. For example, values of this field distinguish alert events from metric events. The value of this field can be used to inform how these kinds of events should be handled. They may warrant different retention, different access control, it may also help understand whether the data coming in at a regular interval or not.
keyword
event.module
Event module.
constant_keyword
event.original
Raw text message of entire event. Used to demonstrate log integrity or where the full log message (before splitting it up in multiple parts) may be required, e.g. for reindex. This field is not indexed and doc_values are disabled. It cannot be searched, but it can be retrieved from _source. If users wish to override this and index this field, please see Field data types in the Elasticsearch Reference.
keyword
event.type
This is one of four ECS Categorization Fields, and indicates the third level in the ECS category hierarchy. event.type represents a categorization "sub-bucket" that, when used along with the event.category field values, enables filtering events down to a level appropriate for single visualization. This field is an array. This will allow proper categorization of some events that fall in multiple event types.
keyword
host.architecture
Operating system architecture.
keyword
host.containerized
If the host is a container.
boolean
host.domain
Name of the domain of which the host is a member. For example, on Windows this could be the host's Active Directory domain or NetBIOS domain name. For Linux this could be the domain of the host's LDAP provider.
keyword
host.hostname
Hostname of the host. It normally contains what the hostname command returns on the host machine.
keyword
host.id
Unique host ID. As hostname is not always unique, use values that are meaningful in your environment. Example: The current usage of beat.name.
keyword
host.ip
Host IP addresses.
ip
host.mac
Host mac addresses.
keyword
host.name
Name of the host. It can contain what hostname returns on Unix systems, the fully qualified domain name, or a name specified by the user. The sender decides which value to use.
keyword
host.os.build
OS build information.
keyword
host.os.codename
OS codename, if any.
keyword
host.os.family
OS family (such as redhat, debian, freebsd, windows).
keyword
host.os.kernel
Operating system kernel version as a raw string.
keyword
host.os.name
Operating system name, without the version.
keyword
host.os.name.text
Multi-field of host.os.name.
text
host.os.platform
Operating system platform (such centos, ubuntu, windows).
keyword
host.os.version
Operating system version as a raw string.
keyword
host.type
Type of host. For Cloud providers this can be the machine type like t2.medium. If vm, this could be the container, for example, or other information meaningful in your environment.
keyword
input.type
Input type
keyword
log.offset
Log offset
long
proofpoint_tap.clicks_permitted.campaign_id
An identifier for the campaign of which the threat is a member, if available at the time of the query. Threats can be linked to campaigns even after these events are retrieved.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.clicks_permitted.classification
The threat category of the malicious URL.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.clicks_permitted.sender_ip
The IP address of the sender.
ip
proofpoint_tap.clicks_permitted.threat.id
The unique identifier associated with this threat. It can be used to query the forensics and campaign endpoints.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.clicks_permitted.threat.status
The current state of the threat.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.clicks_permitted.threat.time
Proofpoint identified the URL as a threat at this time.
date
proofpoint_tap.clicks_permitted.threat.url
A link to the entry on the TAP Dashboard for the particular threat.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.guid
The ID of the message within PPS. It can be used to identify the message in PPS and is guaranteed to be unique.
keyword
related.ip
All of the IPs seen on your event.
ip
source.ip
IP address of the source (IPv4 or IPv6).
ip
tags
List of keywords used to tag each event.
keyword
url.domain
Domain of the url, such as "www.elastic.co". In some cases a URL may refer to an IP and/or port directly, without a domain name. In this case, the IP address would go to the domain field. If the URL contains a literal IPv6 address enclosed by [ and ] (IETF RFC 2732), the [ and ] characters should also be captured in the domain field.
keyword
url.extension
The field contains the file extension from the original request url, excluding the leading dot. The file extension is only set if it exists, as not every url has a file extension. The leading period must not be included. For example, the value must be "png", not ".png". Note that when the file name has multiple extensions (example.tar.gz), only the last one should be captured ("gz", not "tar.gz").
keyword
url.fragment
Portion of the url after the #, such as "top". The # is not part of the fragment.
keyword
url.full
If full URLs are important to your use case, they should be stored in url.full, whether this field is reconstructed or present in the event source.
wildcard
url.full.text
Multi-field of url.full.
match_only_text
url.original
Unmodified original url as seen in the event source. Note that in network monitoring, the observed URL may be a full URL, whereas in access logs, the URL is often just represented as a path. This field is meant to represent the URL as it was observed, complete or not.
wildcard
url.original.text
Multi-field of url.original.
match_only_text
url.password
Password of the request.
keyword
url.path
Path of the request, such as "/search".
wildcard
url.port
Port of the request, such as 443.
long
url.query
The query field describes the query string of the request, such as "q=elasticsearch". The ? is excluded from the query string. If a URL contains no ?, there is no query field. If there is a ? but no query, the query field exists with an empty string. The exists query can be used to differentiate between the two cases.
keyword
url.scheme
Scheme of the request, such as "https". Note: The : is not part of the scheme.
keyword
url.username
Username of the request.
keyword
user_agent.device.name
Name of the device.
keyword
user_agent.name
Name of the user agent.
keyword
user_agent.original
Unparsed user_agent string.
keyword
user_agent.original.text
Multi-field of user_agent.original.
match_only_text
user_agent.os.full
Operating system name, including the version or code name.
keyword
user_agent.os.full.text
Multi-field of user_agent.os.full.
match_only_text
user_agent.os.name
Operating system name, without the version.
keyword
user_agent.os.name.text
Multi-field of user_agent.os.name.
match_only_text
user_agent.os.version
Operating system version as a raw string.
keyword
user_agent.version
Version of the user agent.
keyword

Message Blocked

This is the message_blocked dataset.

An example event for message_blocked looks as following:

{
    "@timestamp": "2021-11-25T09:10:00.050Z",
    "agent": {
        "ephemeral_id": "1579c7ca-be80-484e-b548-3980ec85934f",
        "id": "19f05486-b68d-449a-9bdd-1493d2f3b55d",
        "name": "docker-fleet-agent",
        "type": "filebeat",
        "version": "8.4.0"
    },
    "data_stream": {
        "dataset": "proofpoint_tap.message_blocked",
        "namespace": "ep",
        "type": "logs"
    },
    "ecs": {
        "version": "8.7.0"
    },
    "elastic_agent": {
        "id": "19f05486-b68d-449a-9bdd-1493d2f3b55d",
        "snapshot": false,
        "version": "8.4.0"
    },
    "email": {
        "attachments": [
            {
                "file": {
                    "hash": {
                        "md5": "b10a8db164e0754105b7a99be72e3fe5",
                        "sha256": "a591a6d40bf420404a011733cfb7b190d62c65bf0bcda32b57b277d9ad9f146e"
                    },
                    "mime_type": "text/plain",
                    "name": "text.txt"
                }
            },
            {
                "file": {
                    "hash": {
                        "md5": "b10a8db164e0754105b7a99be72e3fe5",
                        "sha256": "a591a6d40bf420404a011733cfb7b190d62c65bf0bcda32b57b277d9ad9f146e"
                    },
                    "mime_type": "application/pdf",
                    "name": "text.pdf"
                }
            }
        ],
        "cc": {
            "address": [
                "abc@example.com"
            ]
        },
        "delivery_timestamp": "2021-11-25T09:10:00.050Z",
        "from": {
            "address": "abc@example.com"
        },
        "message_id": "12345678912345.12345.mail@example.com",
        "sender": {
            "address": "x99x7x5580193x6x51x597xx2x0210@example.com"
        },
        "subject": "Please find a totally safe invoice attached.",
        "to": {
            "address": [
                "example.abc@example.com",
                "hey.hello@example.com"
            ]
        },
        "x_mailer": "Spambot v2.5"
    },
    "event": {
        "agent_id_status": "verified",
        "category": [
            "email"
        ],
        "created": "2022-11-04T13:49:23.293Z",
        "dataset": "proofpoint_tap.message_blocked",
        "ingested": "2022-11-04T13:49:26Z",
        "kind": "event",
        "original": "{\"GUID\":\"x11xxxx1-12f9-111x-x12x-1x1x123456xx\",\"QID\":\"x2XXxXXX111111\",\"ccAddresses\":[\"abc@example.com\"],\"clusterId\":\"pharmtech_hosted\",\"completelyRewritten\":\"true\",\"fromAddress\":\"abc@example.com\",\"headerCC\":\"\\\"Example Abc\\\" \\u003cabc@example.com\\u003e\",\"headerFrom\":\"\\\"A. Bc\\\" \\u003cabc@example.com\\u003e\",\"headerReplyTo\":null,\"headerTo\":\"\\\"Aa Bb\\\" \\u003caa.bb@example.com\\u003e; \\\"Hey Hello\\\" \\u003chey.hello@example.com\\u003e\",\"impostorScore\":0,\"malwareScore\":100,\"messageID\":\"12345678912345.12345.mail@example.com\",\"messageParts\":[{\"contentType\":\"text/plain\",\"disposition\":\"inline\",\"filename\":\"text.txt\",\"md5\":\"b10a8db164e0754105b7a99be72e3fe5\",\"oContentType\":\"text/plain\",\"sandboxStatus\":\"unsupported\",\"sha256\":\"a591a6d40bf420404a011733cfb7b190d62c65bf0bcda32b57b277d9ad9f146e\"},{\"contentType\":\"application/pdf\",\"disposition\":\"attached\",\"filename\":\"text.pdf\",\"md5\":\"b10a8db164e0754105b7a99be72e3fe5\",\"oContentType\":\"application/pdf\",\"sandboxStatus\":\"threat\",\"sha256\":\"a591a6d40bf420404a011733cfb7b190d62c65bf0bcda32b57b277d9ad9f146e\"}],\"messageTime\":\"2021-11-25T09:10:00.050Z\",\"modulesRun\":[\"pdr\",\"sandbox\",\"spam\",\"urldefense\"],\"phishScore\":46,\"policyRoutes\":[\"default_inbound\",\"executives\"],\"quarantineFolder\":\"Attachment Defense\",\"quarantineRule\":\"module.sandbox.threat\",\"recipient\":[\"example.abc@example.com\",\"hey.hello@example.com\"],\"replyToAddress\":null,\"sender\":\"x99x7x5580193x6x51x597xx2x0210@example.com\",\"senderIP\":\"175.16.199.1\",\"spamScore\":4,\"subject\":\"Please find a totally safe invoice attached.\",\"threatsInfoMap\":[{\"campaignId\":\"46x01x8x-x899-404x-xxx9-111xx393d1x7\",\"classification\":\"MALWARE\",\"threat\":\"a591a6d40bf420404a011733cfb7b190d62c65bf0bcda32b57b277d9ad9f146e\",\"threatId\":\"2xxx740f143fc1aa4c1cd0146d334x5593b1428x6x062b2c406e5efe8xxx95xx\",\"threatStatus\":\"active\",\"threatTime\":\"2021-11-25T09:10:00.050Z\",\"threatType\":\"ATTACHMENT\",\"threatUrl\":\"https://www.example.com/?name=john\"},{\"campaignId\":\"46x01x8x-x899-404x-xxx9-111xx393d1x7\",\"classification\":\"MALWARE\",\"threat\":\"example.com\",\"threatId\":\"3xx97xx852c66a7xx761450xxxxxx9f4ffab74715b591294f78b5e37a76481xx\",\"threatTime\":\"2021-07-20T05:00:00.050Z\",\"threatType\":\"URL\",\"threatUrl\":\"https://www.example.com/?name=john\"}],\"toAddresses\":[\"example.abc@example.com\",\"hey.hello@example.com\"],\"xmailer\":\"Spambot v2.5\"}",
        "type": [
            "denied"
        ]
    },
    "input": {
        "type": "httpjson"
    },
    "proofpoint_tap": {
        "guid": "x11xxxx1-12f9-111x-x12x-1x1x123456xx",
        "message_blocked": {
            "completely_rewritten": "true",
            "header": {
                "cc": "\"Example Abc\" \u003cabc@example.com\u003e",
                "from": "\"A. Bc\" abc@example.com",
                "to": "\"Aa Bb\" \u003caa.bb@example.com\u003e; \"Hey Hello\" \u003chey.hello@example.com\u003e"
            },
            "impostor_score": 0,
            "malware_score": 100,
            "message_parts": [
                {
                    "disposition": "inline",
                    "o_content_type": "text/plain",
                    "sandbox_status": "unsupported"
                },
                {
                    "disposition": "attached",
                    "o_content_type": "application/pdf",
                    "sandbox_status": "threat"
                }
            ],
            "modules_run": [
                "pdr",
                "sandbox",
                "spam",
                "urldefense"
            ],
            "phish_score": 46,
            "policy_routes": [
                "default_inbound",
                "executives"
            ],
            "qid": "x2XXxXXX111111",
            "quarantine": {
                "folder": "Attachment Defense",
                "rule": "module.sandbox.threat"
            },
            "recipient": [
                "example.abc@example.com",
                "hey.hello@example.com"
            ],
            "spam_score": 4,
            "threat_info_map": [
                {
                    "campaign_id": "46x01x8x-x899-404x-xxx9-111xx393d1x7",
                    "classification": "MALWARE",
                    "threat": {
                        "artifact": "a591a6d40bf420404a011733cfb7b190d62c65bf0bcda32b57b277d9ad9f146e",
                        "status": "active",
                        "time": "2021-11-25T09:10:00.050Z",
                        "type": "ATTACHMENT",
                        "url": "https://www.example.com/?name=john"
                    },
                    "threatId": "2xxx740f143fc1aa4c1cd0146d334x5593b1428x6x062b2c406e5efe8xxx95xx"
                },
                {
                    "campaign_id": "46x01x8x-x899-404x-xxx9-111xx393d1x7",
                    "classification": "MALWARE",
                    "threat": {
                        "artifact": "example.com",
                        "time": "2021-07-20T05:00:00.050Z",
                        "type": "URL",
                        "url": "https://www.example.com/?name=john"
                    },
                    "threatId": "3xx97xx852c66a7xx761450xxxxxx9f4ffab74715b591294f78b5e37a76481xx"
                }
            ],
            "to_addresses": [
                "example.abc@example.com",
                "hey.hello@example.com"
            ]
        }
    },
    "related": {
        "hash": [
            "b10a8db164e0754105b7a99be72e3fe5",
            "a591a6d40bf420404a011733cfb7b190d62c65bf0bcda32b57b277d9ad9f146e"
        ],
        "ip": [
            "175.16.199.1"
        ]
    },
    "source": {
        "geo": {
            "city_name": "Changchun",
            "continent_name": "Asia",
            "country_iso_code": "CN",
            "country_name": "China",
            "location": {
                "lat": 43.88,
                "lon": 125.3228
            },
            "region_iso_code": "CN-22",
            "region_name": "Jilin Sheng"
        },
        "ip": "175.16.199.1"
    },
    "tags": [
        "preserve_original_event",
        "forwarded",
        "proofpoint_tap-message_blocked"
    ]
}

Exported fields

FieldDescriptionType
@timestamp
Event timestamp.
date
cloud.account.id
The cloud account or organization ID used to identify different entities in a multi-tenant environment. Examples: AWS account ID, Google Cloud ORG ID, or other unique identifier.
keyword
cloud.availability_zone
Availability zone in which this host is running.
keyword
cloud.image.id
Image ID for the cloud instance.
keyword
cloud.instance.id
Instance ID of the host machine.
keyword
cloud.instance.name
Instance name of the host machine.
keyword
cloud.machine.type
Machine type of the host machine.
keyword
cloud.project.id
Name of the project in Google Cloud.
keyword
cloud.provider
Name of the cloud provider. Example values are aws, azure, gcp, or digitalocean.
keyword
cloud.region
Region in which this host is running.
keyword
container.id
Unique container ID.
keyword
container.image.name
Name of the image the container was built on.
keyword
container.labels
Image labels.
object
container.name
Container name.
keyword
data_stream.dataset
Data stream dataset.
constant_keyword
data_stream.namespace
Data stream namespace.
constant_keyword
data_stream.type
Data stream type.
constant_keyword
ecs.version
ECS version this event conforms to. ecs.version is a required field and must exist in all events. When querying across multiple indices -- which may conform to slightly different ECS versions -- this field lets integrations adjust to the schema version of the events.
keyword
email.attachments
A list of objects describing the attachment files sent along with an email message.
nested
email.attachments.file.hash.md5
MD5 hash.
keyword
email.attachments.file.hash.sha256
SHA256 hash.
keyword
email.attachments.file.name
Name of the attachment file including the file extension.
keyword
email.cc.address
The email address of CC recipient
keyword
email.content_type
Information about how the message is to be displayed. Typically a MIME type.
keyword
email.delivery_timestamp
The date and time when the email message was received by the service or client.
date
email.from.address
The email address of the sender, typically from the RFC 5322 From: header field.
keyword
email.message_id
Identifier from the RFC 5322 Message-ID: email header that refers to a particular email message.
wildcard
email.reply_to.address
The address that replies should be delivered to based on the value in the RFC 5322 Reply-To: header.
keyword
email.sender.address
Per RFC 5322, specifies the address responsible for the actual transmission of the message.
keyword
email.subject
A brief summary of the topic of the message.
keyword
email.subject.text
Multi-field of email.subject.
match_only_text
email.to.address
The email address of recipient
keyword
email.x_mailer
The name of the application that was used to draft and send the original email message.
keyword
event.category
This is one of four ECS Categorization Fields, and indicates the second level in the ECS category hierarchy. event.category represents the "big buckets" of ECS categories. For example, filtering on event.category:process yields all events relating to process activity. This field is closely related to event.type, which is used as a subcategory. This field is an array. This will allow proper categorization of some events that fall in multiple categories.
keyword
event.created
event.created contains the date/time when the event was first read by an agent, or by your pipeline. This field is distinct from @timestamp in that @timestamp typically contain the time extracted from the original event. In most situations, these two timestamps will be slightly different. The difference can be used to calculate the delay between your source generating an event, and the time when your agent first processed it. This can be used to monitor your agent's or pipeline's ability to keep up with your event source. In case the two timestamps are identical, @timestamp should be used.
date
event.dataset
Event dataset.
constant_keyword
event.id
Unique ID to describe the event.
keyword
event.kind
This is one of four ECS Categorization Fields, and indicates the highest level in the ECS category hierarchy. event.kind gives high-level information about what type of information the event contains, without being specific to the contents of the event. For example, values of this field distinguish alert events from metric events. The value of this field can be used to inform how these kinds of events should be handled. They may warrant different retention, different access control, it may also help understand whether the data coming in at a regular interval or not.
keyword
event.module
Event module.
constant_keyword
event.original
Raw text message of entire event. Used to demonstrate log integrity or where the full log message (before splitting it up in multiple parts) may be required, e.g. for reindex. This field is not indexed and doc_values are disabled. It cannot be searched, but it can be retrieved from _source. If users wish to override this and index this field, please see Field data types in the Elasticsearch Reference.
keyword
event.type
This is one of four ECS Categorization Fields, and indicates the third level in the ECS category hierarchy. event.type represents a categorization "sub-bucket" that, when used along with the event.category field values, enables filtering events down to a level appropriate for single visualization. This field is an array. This will allow proper categorization of some events that fall in multiple event types.
keyword
host.architecture
Operating system architecture.
keyword
host.containerized
If the host is a container.
boolean
host.domain
Name of the domain of which the host is a member. For example, on Windows this could be the host's Active Directory domain or NetBIOS domain name. For Linux this could be the domain of the host's LDAP provider.
keyword
host.hostname
Hostname of the host. It normally contains what the hostname command returns on the host machine.
keyword
host.id
Unique host ID. As hostname is not always unique, use values that are meaningful in your environment. Example: The current usage of beat.name.
keyword
host.ip
Host IP addresses.
ip
host.mac
Host mac addresses.
keyword
host.name
Name of the host. It can contain what hostname returns on Unix systems, the fully qualified domain name, or a name specified by the user. The sender decides which value to use.
keyword
host.os.build
OS build information.
keyword
host.os.codename
OS codename, if any.
keyword
host.os.family
OS family (such as redhat, debian, freebsd, windows).
keyword
host.os.kernel
Operating system kernel version as a raw string.
keyword
host.os.name
Operating system name, without the version.
keyword
host.os.name.text
Multi-field of host.os.name.
text
host.os.platform
Operating system platform (such centos, ubuntu, windows).
keyword
host.os.version
Operating system version as a raw string.
keyword
host.type
Type of host. For Cloud providers this can be the machine type like t2.medium. If vm, this could be the container, for example, or other information meaningful in your environment.
keyword
input.type
Input type
keyword
log.offset
Log offset
long
proofpoint_tap.guid
The ID of the message within PPS. It can be used to identify the message in PPS and is guaranteed to be unique.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.message_blocked.cluster
The name of the PPS cluster which processed the message.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.message_blocked.completely_rewritten
The rewrite status of the message. If value is 'true', all instances of URL threats within the message were successfully rewritten. If the value is 'false', at least one instance of the a threat URL was not rewritten. If the value is 'na', the message did not contain any URL-based threats.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.message_blocked.header.cc
keyword
proofpoint_tap.message_blocked.header.from
The full content of the From: header, including any friendly name.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.message_blocked.header.replyto
If present, the full content of the Reply-To: header, including any friendly names.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.message_blocked.header.to
keyword
proofpoint_tap.message_blocked.impostor_score
The impostor score of the message. Higher scores indicate higher certainty.
double
proofpoint_tap.message_blocked.malware_score
The malware score of the message. Higher scores indicate higher certainty.
long
proofpoint_tap.message_blocked.message_parts.disposition
If the value is 'inline,' the messagePart is a message body. If the value is 'attached,' the messagePart is an attachment.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.message_blocked.message_parts.o_content_type
The declared Content-Type of the messagePart.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.message_blocked.message_parts.sandbox_status
The verdict returned by the sandbox during the scanning process. If the value is 'unsupported', the messagePart is not supported by Attachment Defense and was not scanned. If the value is 'clean', the sandbox returned a clean verdict. If the value is 'threat', the sandbox returned a malicious verdict. If the value is 'prefilter', the messagePart contained no active content, and was therefore not sent to the sandboxing service. If the value is 'uploaded,' the message was uploaded by PPS to the sandboxing service, but did not yet have a verdict at the time the message was processed. If the value is 'inprogress,' the attachment had been uploaded and was awaiting scanning at the time the message was processed. If the verdict is 'uploaddisabled,' the attachment was eligible for scanning, but was not uploaded because of PPS policy.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.message_blocked.message_size
The size in bytes of the message, including headers and attachments.
long
proofpoint_tap.message_blocked.modules_run
The list of PPS modules which processed the message.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.message_blocked.phish_score
The phish score of the message. Higher scores indicate higher certainty.
long
proofpoint_tap.message_blocked.policy_routes
The policy routes that the message matched during processing by PPS.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.message_blocked.qid
The queue ID of the message within PPS. It can be used to identify the message in PPS and is not unique.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.message_blocked.quarantine.folder
The name of the folder which contains the quarantined message. This appears only for messagesBlocked.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.message_blocked.quarantine.rule
The name of the rule which quarantined the message. This appears only for messagesBlocked events.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.message_blocked.recipient
An array containing the email addresses of the SMTP (envelope) recipients.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.message_blocked.spam_score
The spam score of the message. Higher scores indicate higher certainty.
long
proofpoint_tap.message_blocked.threat_info_map.campaign_id
An identifier for the campaign of which the threat is a member, if available at the time of the query. Threats can be linked to campaigns even after these events are retrieved.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.message_blocked.threat_info_map.classification
The category of threat found in the message.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.message_blocked.threat_info_map.threat.artifact
The artifact which was condemned by Proofpoint. The malicious URL, hash of the attachment threat, or email address of the impostor sender.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.message_blocked.threat_info_map.threat.id
The unique identifier associated with this threat. It can be used to query the forensics and campaign endpoints.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.message_blocked.threat_info_map.threat.status
The current state of the threat.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.message_blocked.threat_info_map.threat.time
Proofpoint assigned the threatStatus at this time.
date
proofpoint_tap.message_blocked.threat_info_map.threat.type
Whether the threat was an attachment, URL, or message type.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.message_blocked.threat_info_map.threat.url
A link to the entry about the threat on the TAP Dashboard.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.message_blocked.to_addresses
A list of email addresses contained within the To: header, excluding friendly names.
keyword
related.hash
All the hashes seen on your event. Populating this field, then using it to search for hashes can help in situations where you're unsure what the hash algorithm is (and therefore which key name to search).
keyword
related.ip
All of the IPs seen on your event.
ip
source.as.number
Unique number allocated to the autonomous system. The autonomous system number (ASN) uniquely identifies each network on the Internet.
long
source.as.organization.name
Organization name.
keyword
source.as.organization.name.text
Multi-field of source.as.organization.name.
match_only_text
source.geo.city_name
City name.
keyword
source.geo.continent_name
Name of the continent.
keyword
source.geo.country_iso_code
Country ISO code.
keyword
source.geo.country_name
Country name.
keyword
source.geo.location
Longitude and latitude.
geo_point
source.geo.region_iso_code
Region ISO code.
keyword
source.geo.region_name
Region name.
keyword
source.ip
IP address of the source (IPv4 or IPv6).
ip
tags
List of keywords used to tag each event.
keyword

Message Delivered

This is the message_delivered dataset.

An example event for message_delivered looks as following:

{
    "@timestamp": "2022-01-01T00:00:00.000Z",
    "agent": {
        "ephemeral_id": "ebf5b065-0108-4db5-9431-ef67a62dcec4",
        "id": "19f05486-b68d-449a-9bdd-1493d2f3b55d",
        "name": "docker-fleet-agent",
        "type": "filebeat",
        "version": "8.4.0"
    },
    "data_stream": {
        "dataset": "proofpoint_tap.message_delivered",
        "namespace": "ep",
        "type": "logs"
    },
    "ecs": {
        "version": "8.7.0"
    },
    "elastic_agent": {
        "id": "19f05486-b68d-449a-9bdd-1493d2f3b55d",
        "snapshot": false,
        "version": "8.4.0"
    },
    "email": {
        "delivery_timestamp": "2022-01-01T00:00:00.000Z",
        "to": {
            "address": [
                "fxxxxhxsxxvxbcx2xx5xxx6x3xx26@example.com"
            ]
        }
    },
    "event": {
        "agent_id_status": "verified",
        "category": [
            "email"
        ],
        "created": "2022-11-04T13:50:51.734Z",
        "dataset": "proofpoint_tap.message_delivered",
        "id": "2hsvbU-i8abc123-12345-xxxxx12",
        "ingested": "2022-11-04T13:50:55Z",
        "kind": "event",
        "original": "{\"GUID\":\"NxxxsxvxbxUxixcx2xxxxx5x6xWxBxOxxxxxjxx\",\"QID\":null,\"ccAddresses\":null,\"cluster\":\"pharmtech_hosted\",\"completelyRewritten\":true,\"fromAddress\":null,\"headerFrom\":null,\"headerReplyTo\":null,\"id\":\"2hsvbU-i8abc123-12345-xxxxx12\",\"impostorScore\":0,\"malwareScore\":0,\"messageID\":\"\",\"messageParts\":null,\"messageSize\":0,\"messageTime\":\"2022-01-01T00:00:00.000Z\",\"modulesRun\":null,\"phishScore\":0,\"policyRoutes\":null,\"quarantineFolder\":null,\"quarantineRule\":null,\"recipient\":[\"fxxxxhxsxxvxbcx2xx5xxx6x3xx26@example.com\"],\"replyToAddress\":null,\"sender\":\"\",\"senderIP\":\"89.160.20.112\",\"spamScore\":0,\"subject\":null,\"threatsInfoMap\":[{\"campaignID\":null,\"classification\":\"spam\",\"threat\":\"http://zbcd123456x0.example.com\",\"threatID\":\"b7exxxxxxxx0d10xxxxxxe2xxxxxxxxxxxx81cxxxxxx034ac9cxxxxxxxxxxxxb\",\"threatStatus\":\"active\",\"threatTime\":\"2021-11-25T13:02:58.640Z\",\"threatType\":\"url\",\"threatUrl\":\"https://threatinsight.proofpoint.com/aaabcdef-1234-b1abcdefghe/threat/email/b7exxxxxxxx0d10xxxxxxe2xxxxxxxxxxxx81cxxxxxx034ac9cxxxxxxxxxxxxb\"},{\"campaignID\":null,\"classification\":\"phish\",\"threat\":\"http://zbcd123456x0.example.com\",\"threatID\":\"aaabcdefg123456f009971a9c193abcdefg123456bf5abcdefg1234566\",\"threatStatus\":\"active\",\"threatTime\":\"2021-07-19T10:28:15.100Z\",\"threatType\":\"url\",\"threatUrl\":\"https://threatinsight.proofpoint.com/aaabcdef-1234-b1abcdefghe/threat/email/b7exxxxxxxx0d10xxxxxxe2xxxxxxxxxxxx81cxxxxxx034ac9cxxxxxxxxxxxxb\"}],\"toAddresses\":null,\"xmailer\":null}",
        "type": [
            "info"
        ]
    },
    "input": {
        "type": "httpjson"
    },
    "proofpoint_tap": {
        "guid": "NxxxsxvxbxUxixcx2xxxxx5x6xWxBxOxxxxxjxx",
        "message_delivered": {
            "cluster": "pharmtech_hosted",
            "completely_rewritten": "true",
            "impostor_score": 0,
            "malware_score": 0,
            "message_size": 0,
            "phish_score": 0,
            "recipient": [
                "fxxxxhxsxxvxbcx2xx5xxx6x3xx26@example.com"
            ],
            "spam_score": 0,
            "threat_info_map": [
                {
                    "classification": "spam",
                    "threat": {
                        "artifact": "http://zbcd123456x0.example.com",
                        "id": "b7exxxxxxxx0d10xxxxxxe2xxxxxxxxxxxx81cxxxxxx034ac9cxxxxxxxxxxxxb",
                        "status": "active",
                        "time": "2021-11-25T13:02:58.640Z",
                        "type": "url",
                        "url": "https://threatinsight.proofpoint.com/aaabcdef-1234-b1abcdefghe/threat/email/b7exxxxxxxx0d10xxxxxxe2xxxxxxxxxxxx81cxxxxxx034ac9cxxxxxxxxxxxxb"
                    }
                },
                {
                    "classification": "phish",
                    "threat": {
                        "artifact": "http://zbcd123456x0.example.com",
                        "id": "aaabcdefg123456f009971a9c193abcdefg123456bf5abcdefg1234566",
                        "status": "active",
                        "time": "2021-07-19T10:28:15.100Z",
                        "type": "url",
                        "url": "https://threatinsight.proofpoint.com/aaabcdef-1234-b1abcdefghe/threat/email/b7exxxxxxxx0d10xxxxxxe2xxxxxxxxxxxx81cxxxxxx034ac9cxxxxxxxxxxxxb"
                    }
                }
            ]
        }
    },
    "related": {
        "ip": [
            "89.160.20.112"
        ]
    },
    "source": {
        "as": {
            "number": 29518,
            "organization": {
                "name": "Bredband2 AB"
            }
        },
        "geo": {
            "city_name": "Linköping",
            "continent_name": "Europe",
            "country_iso_code": "SE",
            "country_name": "Sweden",
            "location": {
                "lat": 58.4167,
                "lon": 15.6167
            },
            "region_iso_code": "SE-E",
            "region_name": "Östergötland County"
        },
        "ip": "89.160.20.112"
    },
    "tags": [
        "preserve_original_event",
        "forwarded",
        "proofpoint_tap-message_delivered"
    ]
}

Exported fields

FieldDescriptionType
@timestamp
Event timestamp.
date
cloud.account.id
The cloud account or organization ID used to identify different entities in a multi-tenant environment. Examples: AWS account ID, Google Cloud ORG ID, or other unique identifier.
keyword
cloud.availability_zone
Availability zone in which this host is running.
keyword
cloud.image.id
Image ID for the cloud instance.
keyword
cloud.instance.id
Instance ID of the host machine.
keyword
cloud.instance.name
Instance name of the host machine.
keyword
cloud.machine.type
Machine type of the host machine.
keyword
cloud.project.id
Name of the project in Google Cloud.
keyword
cloud.provider
Name of the cloud provider. Example values are aws, azure, gcp, or digitalocean.
keyword
cloud.region
Region in which this host is running.
keyword
container.id
Unique container ID.
keyword
container.image.name
Name of the image the container was built on.
keyword
container.labels
Image labels.
object
container.name
Container name.
keyword
data_stream.dataset
Data stream dataset.
constant_keyword
data_stream.namespace
Data stream namespace.
constant_keyword
data_stream.type
Data stream type.
constant_keyword
ecs.version
ECS version this event conforms to. ecs.version is a required field and must exist in all events. When querying across multiple indices -- which may conform to slightly different ECS versions -- this field lets integrations adjust to the schema version of the events.
keyword
email.attachments
A list of objects describing the attachment files sent along with an email message.
nested
email.attachments.file.hash.md5
MD5 hash.
keyword
email.attachments.file.hash.sha256
SHA256 hash.
keyword
email.attachments.file.name
Name of the attachment file including the file extension.
keyword
email.cc.address
The email address of CC recipient
keyword
email.content_type
Information about how the message is to be displayed. Typically a MIME type.
keyword
email.delivery_timestamp
The date and time when the email message was received by the service or client.
date
email.from.address
The email address of the sender, typically from the RFC 5322 From: header field.
keyword
email.message_id
Identifier from the RFC 5322 Message-ID: email header that refers to a particular email message.
wildcard
email.reply_to.address
The address that replies should be delivered to based on the value in the RFC 5322 Reply-To: header.
keyword
email.sender.address
Per RFC 5322, specifies the address responsible for the actual transmission of the message.
keyword
email.subject
A brief summary of the topic of the message.
keyword
email.subject.text
Multi-field of email.subject.
match_only_text
email.to.address
The email address of recipient
keyword
email.x_mailer
The name of the application that was used to draft and send the original email message.
keyword
event.category
This is one of four ECS Categorization Fields, and indicates the second level in the ECS category hierarchy. event.category represents the "big buckets" of ECS categories. For example, filtering on event.category:process yields all events relating to process activity. This field is closely related to event.type, which is used as a subcategory. This field is an array. This will allow proper categorization of some events that fall in multiple categories.
keyword
event.created
event.created contains the date/time when the event was first read by an agent, or by your pipeline. This field is distinct from @timestamp in that @timestamp typically contain the time extracted from the original event. In most situations, these two timestamps will be slightly different. The difference can be used to calculate the delay between your source generating an event, and the time when your agent first processed it. This can be used to monitor your agent's or pipeline's ability to keep up with your event source. In case the two timestamps are identical, @timestamp should be used.
date
event.dataset
Event dataset.
constant_keyword
event.id
Unique ID to describe the event.
keyword
event.kind
This is one of four ECS Categorization Fields, and indicates the highest level in the ECS category hierarchy. event.kind gives high-level information about what type of information the event contains, without being specific to the contents of the event. For example, values of this field distinguish alert events from metric events. The value of this field can be used to inform how these kinds of events should be handled. They may warrant different retention, different access control, it may also help understand whether the data coming in at a regular interval or not.
keyword
event.module
Event module.
constant_keyword
event.original
Raw text message of entire event. Used to demonstrate log integrity or where the full log message (before splitting it up in multiple parts) may be required, e.g. for reindex. This field is not indexed and doc_values are disabled. It cannot be searched, but it can be retrieved from _source. If users wish to override this and index this field, please see Field data types in the Elasticsearch Reference.
keyword
event.type
This is one of four ECS Categorization Fields, and indicates the third level in the ECS category hierarchy. event.type represents a categorization "sub-bucket" that, when used along with the event.category field values, enables filtering events down to a level appropriate for single visualization. This field is an array. This will allow proper categorization of some events that fall in multiple event types.
keyword
host.architecture
Operating system architecture.
keyword
host.containerized
If the host is a container.
boolean
host.domain
Name of the domain of which the host is a member. For example, on Windows this could be the host's Active Directory domain or NetBIOS domain name. For Linux this could be the domain of the host's LDAP provider.
keyword
host.hostname
Hostname of the host. It normally contains what the hostname command returns on the host machine.
keyword
host.id
Unique host ID. As hostname is not always unique, use values that are meaningful in your environment. Example: The current usage of beat.name.
keyword
host.ip
Host IP addresses.
ip
host.mac
Host mac addresses.
keyword
host.name
Name of the host. It can contain what hostname returns on Unix systems, the fully qualified domain name, or a name specified by the user. The sender decides which value to use.
keyword
host.os.build
OS build information.
keyword
host.os.codename
OS codename, if any.
keyword
host.os.family
OS family (such as redhat, debian, freebsd, windows).
keyword
host.os.kernel
Operating system kernel version as a raw string.
keyword
host.os.name
Operating system name, without the version.
keyword
host.os.name.text
Multi-field of host.os.name.
text
host.os.platform
Operating system platform (such centos, ubuntu, windows).
keyword
host.os.version
Operating system version as a raw string.
keyword
host.type
Type of host. For Cloud providers this can be the machine type like t2.medium. If vm, this could be the container, for example, or other information meaningful in your environment.
keyword
input.type
Input type
keyword
log.offset
Log offset
long
proofpoint_tap.guid
The ID of the message within PPS. It can be used to identify the message in PPS and is guaranteed to be unique.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.message_delivered.cluster
The name of the PPS cluster which processed the message.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.message_delivered.completely_rewritten
The rewrite status of the message. If value is 'true', all instances of URL threats within the message were successfully rewritten. If the value is 'false', at least one instance of the a threat URL was not rewritten. If the value is 'na', the message did not contain any URL-based threats.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.message_delivered.header.from
The full content of the From: header, including any friendly name.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.message_delivered.header.replyto
If present, the full content of the Reply-To: header, including any friendly names.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.message_delivered.impostor_score
The impostor score of the message. Higher scores indicate higher certainty.
double
proofpoint_tap.message_delivered.malware_score
The malware score of the message. Higher scores indicate higher certainty.
long
proofpoint_tap.message_delivered.message_parts.disposition
If the value is 'inline,' the messagePart is a message body. If the value is 'attached,' the messagePart is an attachment.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.message_delivered.message_parts.o_content_type
The declared Content-Type of the messagePart.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.message_delivered.message_parts.sandbox_status
The verdict returned by the sandbox during the scanning process. If the value is 'unsupported', the messagePart is not supported by Attachment Defense and was not scanned. If the value is 'clean', the sandbox returned a clean verdict. If the value is 'threat', the sandbox returned a malicious verdict. If the value is 'prefilter', the messagePart contained no active content, and was therefore not sent to the sandboxing service. If the value is 'uploaded,' the message was uploaded by PPS to the sandboxing service, but did not yet have a verdict at the time the message was processed. If the value is 'inprogress,' the attachment had been uploaded and was awaiting scanning at the time the message was processed. If the verdict is 'uploaddisabled,' the attachment was eligible for scanning, but was not uploaded because of PPS policy.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.message_delivered.message_size
The size in bytes of the message, including headers and attachments.
long
proofpoint_tap.message_delivered.modules_run
The list of PPS modules which processed the message.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.message_delivered.phish_score
The phish score of the message. Higher scores indicate higher certainty.
long
proofpoint_tap.message_delivered.policy_routes
The policy routes that the message matched during processing by PPS.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.message_delivered.qid
The queue ID of the message within PPS. It can be used to identify the message in PPS and is not unique.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.message_delivered.quarantine.folder
The name of the folder which contains the quarantined message. This appears only for messagesBlocked.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.message_delivered.quarantine.rule
The name of the rule which quarantined the message. This appears only for messagesBlocked events.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.message_delivered.recipient
An array containing the email addresses of the SMTP (envelope) recipients.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.message_delivered.spam_score
The spam score of the message. Higher scores indicate higher certainty.
long
proofpoint_tap.message_delivered.threat_info_map.campaign_id
An identifier for the campaign of which the threat is a member, if available at the time of the query. Threats can be linked to campaigns even after these events are retrieved.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.message_delivered.threat_info_map.classification
The category of threat found in the message.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.message_delivered.threat_info_map.threat.artifact
The artifact which was condemned by Proofpoint. The malicious URL, hash of the attachment threat, or email address of the impostor sender.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.message_delivered.threat_info_map.threat.id
The unique identifier associated with this threat. It can be used to query the forensics and campaign endpoints.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.message_delivered.threat_info_map.threat.status
The current state of the threat.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.message_delivered.threat_info_map.threat.time
Proofpoint assigned the threatStatus at this time.
date
proofpoint_tap.message_delivered.threat_info_map.threat.type
Whether the threat was an attachment, URL, or message type.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.message_delivered.threat_info_map.threat.url
A link to the entry about the threat on the TAP Dashboard.
keyword
proofpoint_tap.message_delivered.to_addresses
A list of email addresses contained within the To: header, excluding friendly names.
keyword
related.hash
All the hashes seen on your event. Populating this field, then using it to search for hashes can help in situations where you're unsure what the hash algorithm is (and therefore which key name to search).
keyword
related.ip
All of the IPs seen on your event.
ip
source.as.number
Unique number allocated to the autonomous system. The autonomous system number (ASN) uniquely identifies each network on the Internet.
long
source.as.organization.name
Organization name.
keyword
source.as.organization.name.text
Multi-field of source.as.organization.name.
match_only_text
source.geo.city_name
City name.
keyword
source.geo.continent_name
Name of the continent.
keyword
source.geo.country_iso_code
Country ISO code.
keyword
source.geo.country_name
Country name.
keyword
source.geo.location
Longitude and latitude.
geo_point
source.geo.region_iso_code
Region ISO code.
keyword
source.geo.region_name
Region name.
keyword
source.ip
IP address of the source (IPv4 or IPv6).
ip
tags
List of keywords used to tag each event.
keyword

Changelog

VersionDetails
1.5.0
Enhancement View pull request
Update package to ECS 8.7.0.
1.4.1
Enhancement View pull request
Added categories and/or subcategories.
1.4.0
Enhancement View pull request
Update package to ECS 8.6.0.
1.3.1
Enhancement View pull request
Update the pagination termination condition.
1.3.0
Enhancement View pull request
Added Filter instead of KQL in visualizations, Add an on_failure processor to the convert, geo_ip, uri_parts and date processors, remove unnecessary white spaces, mapped to related ecs field and convert double quotes to single quotes.
1.2.0
Enhancement View pull request
Update package to ECS 8.5.0.
1.1.1
Enhancement View pull request
Remove unused visualizations
1.1.0
Enhancement View pull request
Clarify us of {source,destination}.ip in click datasets.
1.0.0
Enhancement View pull request
Make GA
0.3.0
Enhancement View pull request
Update package to ECS 8.4.0
0.2.2
Bug fix View pull request
Fix proxy URL documentation rendering.
0.2.1
Bug fix View pull request
Set @timestamp for delivery and quarantine.
0.2.0
Enhancement View pull request
Update package to ECS 8.3.0.
0.1.0
Enhancement View pull request
Initial draft of the package.