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Cloudflare Logpush

Collect and parse logs from Cloudflare API with Elastic Agent.

Version
1.19.0 (View all)
Compatible Kibana version(s)
8.12.0 or higher
Supported Serverless project types

Security
Observability
Subscription level
Basic
Level of support
Elastic

Overview

The Cloudflare Logpush integration allows you to monitor Access Request, Audit, CASB, Device Posture, DNS, DNS Firewall, Firewall Event, Gateway DNS, Gateway HTTP, Gateway Network, HTTP Request, Magic IDS, NEL Report, Network Analytics, Sinkhole HTTP, Spectrum Event, Network Session and Workers Trace Events logs. Cloudflare is a content delivery network and DDoS mitigation company. Cloudflare provides a network designed to make everything you connect to the Internet secure, private, fast, and reliable; secure your websites, APIs, and Internet applications; protect corporate networks, employees, and devices; and write and deploy code that runs on the network edge.

The Cloudflare Logpush integration can be used in three different modes to collect data:

  • HTTP Endpoint mode - Cloudflare pushes logs directly to an HTTP endpoint hosted by your Elastic Agent.
  • AWS S3 polling mode - Cloudflare writes data to S3 and Elastic Agent polls the S3 bucket by listing its contents and reading new files.
  • AWS S3 SQS mode - Cloudflare writes data to S3, S3 pushes a new object notification to SQS, Elastic Agent receives the notification from SQS, and then reads the S3 object. Multiple Agents can be used in this mode.

For example, you could use the data from this integration to know which websites have the highest traffic, which areas have the highest network traffic, or observe mitigation statistics.

Data streams

The Cloudflare Logpush integration collects logs for the following types of events.

Zero Trust events

Access Request: See Example Schema here.

Audit: See Example Schema here.

CASB findings: See Example Schema here.

Device Posture Results: See Example Schema here.

Gateway DNS: See Example Schema here.

Gateway HTTP: See Example Schema here.

Gateway Network: See Example Schema here.

Zero Trust Network Session: See Example Schema here.

Non Zero Trust events

DNS: See Example Schema here.

DNS Firewall: See Example Schema here.

Firewall Event: See Example Schema here.

HTTP Request: See Example Schema here.

Magic IDS: See Example Schema here.

NEL Report: See Example Schema here.

Network Analytics: See Example Schema here.

Sinkhole HTTP: See Example Schema here.

Spectrum Event: See Example Schema here.

Workers Trace Events: See Example Schema here.

Requirements

You need Elasticsearch for storing and searching your data and Kibana for visualizing and managing it. You can use our hosted Elasticsearch Service on Elastic Cloud, which is recommended, or self-manage the Elastic Stack on your own hardware.

This module has been tested against Cloudflare version v4.

Note: It is recommended to use AWS SQS for Cloudflare Logpush.

Setup

To collect data from AWS S3 Bucket, follow the below steps:

  • Configure the Data Forwarder to ingest data into an AWS S3 bucket.

  • The default value of the "Bucket List Prefix" is listed below. However, the user can set the parameter "Bucket List Prefix" according to the requirement.

    Data Stream NameBucket List Prefix
     Access Request
    access_request
    Audit Logs
    audit_logs
     CASB findings
    casb
     Device Posture Results
    device_posture
    DNS
    dns
    DNS Firewall
    dns_firewall
    Firewall Event
    firewall_event
    Gateway DNS
     gateway_dns
    Gateway HTTP
     gateway_http
    Gateway Network
    gateway_network
    HTTP Request
    http_request
    Magic IDS
    magic_ids
    NEL Report
    nel_report
    Network Analytics
    network_analytics_logs
     Zero Trust Network Session
    network_session
    Sinkhole HTTP
    sinkhole_http
    Spectrum Event
    spectrum_event
    Workers Trace Events
    workers_trace

Note:

  • It is possible to ingest data from Cloudflare R2, an S3-compatible storage service, by setting the parameter Cloudflare R2. Using non-AWS S3 compatible buckets requires the use of Access Key ID and Secret Access Key for authentication, as well as the endpoint must be set to replace the default API endpoint. Endpoint should be a full URI, tipically in the form of https(s)://<accountid>.r2.cloudflarestorage.com, that will be used as the API endpoint of the service.
  • This setting can be also used to ingest data from other S3-compatible storage services.

To collect data from AWS SQS, follow the below steps:

  1. If data forwarding to an AWS S3 Bucket hasn't been configured, then first setup an AWS S3 Bucket as mentioned in the above documentation.
  2. To setup an SQS queue, follow "Step 1: Create an Amazon SQS queue" mentioned in the Documentation.
  • While creating an SQS Queue, please provide the same bucket ARN that has been generated after creating an AWS S3 Bucket.
  1. Setup event notification for an S3 bucket. Follow this Link.
  • The user has to perform Step 3 for all the data-streams individually, and each time prefix parameter should be set the same as the S3 Bucket List Prefix as created earlier. (for example, audit_logs/ for audit data stream.)
  • For all the event notifications that have been created, select the event type as s3:ObjectCreated:*, select the destination type SQS Queue, and select the queue that has been created in Step 2.

Note:

  • Credentials for the above AWS S3 and SQS input types should be configured using the link.
  • Data collection via AWS S3 Bucket and AWS SQS are mutually exclusive in this case.
  • You can configure a global SQS queue for all data streams or a local SQS queue for each data stream. Configuring data stream specific SQS queues will enable better performance and scalability. Data stream specific SQS queues will always override any global queue definitions for that specific data stream.

To collect data from GCS Buckets, follow the below steps:

  • Configure the Data Forwarder to ingest data into a GCS bucket.
  • Configure the GCS bucket names and credentials along with the required configs under the "Collect Cloudflare Logpush logs via Google Cloud Storage" section.
  • Make sure the service account and authentication being used, has proper levels of access to the GCS bucket Manage Service Account Keys

Note:

  • The GCS input currently does not support fetching of buckets using bucket prefixes, so the bucket names have to be configured manually for each data stream.
  • The GCS input currently only accepts a service account JSON key or a service account JSON file for authentication.
  • The GCS input currently only supports json data.

To collect data from the Cloudflare HTTP Endpoint, follow the below steps:

  • Reference link to Enable HTTP destination for Cloudflare Logpush.
  • Add same custom header along with its value on both the side for additional security.
  • For example, while creating a job along with a header and value for a particular dataset:
curl --location --request POST 'https://api.cloudflare.com/client/v4/zones/<ZONE ID>/logpush/jobs' \
--header 'X-Auth-Key: <X-AUTH-KEY>' \
--header 'X-Auth-Email: <X-AUTH-EMAIL>' \
--header 'Authorization: <BASIC AUTHORIZATION>' \
--header 'Content-Type: application/json' \
--data-raw '{
    "name":"<public domain>",
    "destination_conf": "https://<public domain>:<public port>/<dataset path>?header_Content-Type=application/json&header_<secret_header>=<secret_value>",
    "dataset": "audit",
    "logpull_options": "fields=RayID,EdgeStartTimestamp&timestamps=rfc3339"
}'

Note:

  • The destination_conf parameter inside the request data should set the Content-Type header to application/json. This is the content type that the HTTP endpoint expects for incoming events.
  • Default port for the HTTP Endpoint is 9560.
  • When using the same port for more than one dataset, be sure to specify different dataset paths.

Enabling the integration in Elastic

  1. In Kibana, go to Management > Integrations
  2. In the integrations search bar type Cloudflare Logpush.
  3. Click the Cloudflare Logpush integration from the search results.
  4. Click the Add Cloudflare Logpush button to add Cloudflare Logpush integration.
  5. Enable the Integration with the HTTP Endpoint, AWS S3 input or GCS input.
  6. Under the AWS S3 input, there are two types of inputs: using AWS S3 Bucket or using SQS.
  7. Configure Cloudflare to send logs to the Elastic Agent.

Logs reference

access_request

This is the access_request dataset.

Example

An example event for access_request looks as following:

{
    "@timestamp": "2023-05-23T17:18:33.000Z",
    "agent": {
        "ephemeral_id": "7b082606-3815-40c0-b4d8-db6183c25670",
        "id": "f25d13cd-18cc-4e73-822c-c4f849322623",
        "name": "docker-fleet-agent",
        "type": "filebeat",
        "version": "8.10.1"
    },
    "client": {
        "as": {
            "number": 35908
        },
        "geo": {
            "continent_name": "Asia",
            "country_iso_code": "BT",
            "country_name": "Bhutan",
            "location": {
                "lat": 27.5,
                "lon": 90.5
            }
        },
        "ip": "67.43.156.93"
    },
    "cloudflare_logpush": {
        "access_request": {
            "action": "login",
            "allowed": true,
            "app": {
                "domain": "partner-zt-logs.cloudflareaccess.com/warp",
                "uuid": "123e4567-e89b-12d3-a456-426614174000"
            },
            "client": {
                "ip": "67.43.156.93"
            },
            "connection": "onetimepin",
            "country": "us",
            "ray": {
                "id": "00c0ffeeabc12345"
            },
            "request": {
                "prompt": "Please provide your reason for accessing the application.",
                "response": "I need to access the application for work purposes."
            },
            "temp_access": {
                "approvers": [
                    "approver1@example.com",
                    "approver2@example.com"
                ],
                "duration": 7200
            },
            "timestamp": "2023-05-23T17:18:33.000Z",
            "user": {
                "email": "user@example.com",
                "id": "166befbb-00e3-5e20-bd6e-27245333949f"
            }
        }
    },
    "data_stream": {
        "dataset": "cloudflare_logpush.access_request",
        "namespace": "ep",
        "type": "logs"
    },
    "ecs": {
        "version": "8.11.0"
    },
    "elastic_agent": {
        "id": "f25d13cd-18cc-4e73-822c-c4f849322623",
        "snapshot": false,
        "version": "8.10.1"
    },
    "event": {
        "action": "login",
        "agent_id_status": "verified",
        "category": [
            "network"
        ],
        "dataset": "cloudflare_logpush.access_request",
        "id": "00c0ffeeabc12345",
        "ingested": "2023-09-25T18:20:10Z",
        "kind": "event",
        "original": "{\"Action\":\"login\",\"Allowed\":true,\"AppDomain\":\"partner-zt-logs.cloudflareaccess.com/warp\",\"AppUUID\":\"123e4567-e89b-12d3-a456-426614174000\",\"Connection\":\"onetimepin\",\"Country\":\"us\",\"CreatedAt\":1684862313000000000,\"Email\":\"user@example.com\",\"IPAddress\":\"67.43.156.93\",\"PurposeJustificationPrompt\":\"Please provide your reason for accessing the application.\",\"PurposeJustificationResponse\":\"I need to access the application for work purposes.\",\"RayID\":\"00c0ffeeabc12345\",\"TemporaryAccessApprovers\":[\"approver1@example.com\",\"approver2@example.com\"],\"TemporaryAccessDuration\":7200,\"UserUID\":\"166befbb-00e3-5e20-bd6e-27245333949f\"}",
        "type": [
            "access",
            "allowed"
        ]
    },
    "input": {
        "type": "http_endpoint"
    },
    "related": {
        "ip": [
            "67.43.156.93"
        ],
        "user": [
            "166befbb-00e3-5e20-bd6e-27245333949f",
            "user@example.com",
            "approver1@example.com",
            "approver2@example.com"
        ]
    },
    "tags": [
        "preserve_original_event",
        "preserve_duplicate_custom_fields",
        "forwarded",
        "cloudflare_logpush-access_request"
    ],
    "url": {
        "domain": "partner-zt-logs.cloudflareaccess.com/warp"
    },
    "user": {
        "email": "user@example.com",
        "id": "166befbb-00e3-5e20-bd6e-27245333949f"
    }
}

Exported fields

FieldDescriptionType
@timestamp
Event timestamp.
date
client.as.number
Unique number allocated to the autonomous system. The autonomous system number (ASN) uniquely identifies each network on the Internet.
long
client.as.organization.name
Organization name.
keyword
client.as.organization.name.text
Multi-field of client.as.organization.name.
match_only_text
client.geo.city_name
City name.
keyword
client.geo.continent_code
Two-letter code representing continent's name.
keyword
client.geo.continent_name
Name of the continent.
keyword
client.geo.country_iso_code
Country ISO code.
keyword
client.geo.country_name
Country name.
keyword
client.geo.location
Longitude and latitude.
geo_point
client.geo.name
User-defined description of a location, at the level of granularity they care about. Could be the name of their data centers, the floor number, if this describes a local physical entity, city names. Not typically used in automated geolocation.
keyword
client.geo.postal_code
Postal code associated with the location. Values appropriate for this field may also be known as a postcode or ZIP code and will vary widely from country to country.
keyword
client.geo.region_iso_code
Region ISO code.
keyword
client.geo.region_name
Region name.
keyword
client.geo.timezone
The time zone of the location, such as IANA time zone name.
keyword
client.ip
IP address of the client (IPv4 or IPv6).
ip
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
cloudflare_logpush.access_request.action
What type of record is this. login
logout.
cloudflare_logpush.access_request.allowed
If request was allowed or denied.
boolean
cloudflare_logpush.access_request.app.domain
The domain of the Application that Access is protecting.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.access_request.app.uuid
Access Application UUID.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.access_request.client.ip
The IP address of the client.
ip
cloudflare_logpush.access_request.connection
Identity provider used for the login.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.access_request.country
Request’s country of origin.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.access_request.ray.id
Identifier of the request.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.access_request.request.prompt
Message prompted to the client when accessing the application.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.access_request.request.response
Justification given by the client when accessing the application.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.access_request.temp_access.approvers
List of approvers for this access request.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.access_request.temp_access.duration
Approved duration for this access request.
long
cloudflare_logpush.access_request.timestamp
The date and time the corresponding access request was made.
date
cloudflare_logpush.access_request.user.email
Email of the user who logged in.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.access_request.user.id
The uid of the user who logged in.
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
event.action
The action captured by the event. This describes the information in the event. It is more specific than event.category. Examples are group-add, process-started, file-created. The value is normally defined by the implementer.
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 is 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
log.source.address
Source address from which the log event was read / sent from.
keyword
related.ip
All of the IPs seen on your event.
ip
related.user
All the user names or other user identifiers seen on the event.
keyword
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
user.email
User email address.
keyword
user.id
Unique identifier of the user.
keyword

audit

This is the audit dataset.

Example

An example event for audit looks as following:

{
    "@timestamp": "2021-11-30T20:19:48.000Z",
    "agent": {
        "ephemeral_id": "2bf30adb-b1f3-4b24-9be4-a4cbb3cbc922",
        "id": "f25d13cd-18cc-4e73-822c-c4f849322623",
        "name": "docker-fleet-agent",
        "type": "filebeat",
        "version": "8.10.1"
    },
    "cloudflare_logpush": {
        "audit": {
            "action": {
                "result": "success",
                "type": "token_create"
            },
            "actor": {
                "email": "user@example.com",
                "id": "enl3j9du8rnx2swwd9l32qots7l54t9s",
                "ip": "81.2.69.142",
                "type": "user"
            },
            "id": "73fd39ed-5aab-4a2a-b93c-c9a4abf0c425",
            "interface": "UI",
            "metadata": {
                "token_name": "test",
                "token_tag": "b7261c49a793a82678d12285f0bc1401"
            },
            "new_value": {
                "key1": "value1",
                "key2": "value2"
            },
            "old_value": {
                "key3": "value4",
                "key4": "value4"
            },
            "owner": {
                "id": "enl3j9du8rnx2swwd9l32qots7l54t9s"
            },
            "resource": {
                "id": "enl3j9du8rnx2swwd9l32qots7l54t9s",
                "type": "account"
            },
            "timestamp": "2021-11-30T20:19:48.000Z"
        }
    },
    "data_stream": {
        "dataset": "cloudflare_logpush.audit",
        "namespace": "ep",
        "type": "logs"
    },
    "ecs": {
        "version": "8.11.0"
    },
    "elastic_agent": {
        "id": "f25d13cd-18cc-4e73-822c-c4f849322623",
        "snapshot": false,
        "version": "8.10.1"
    },
    "event": {
        "action": "token_create",
        "agent_id_status": "verified",
        "category": [
            "authentication"
        ],
        "dataset": "cloudflare_logpush.audit",
        "id": "73fd39ed-5aab-4a2a-b93c-c9a4abf0c425",
        "ingested": "2023-09-25T18:21:22Z",
        "kind": "event",
        "original": "{\"ActionResult\":true,\"ActionType\":\"token_create\",\"ActorEmail\":\"user@example.com\",\"ActorID\":\"enl3j9du8rnx2swwd9l32qots7l54t9s\",\"ActorIP\":\"81.2.69.142\",\"ActorType\":\"user\",\"ID\":\"73fd39ed-5aab-4a2a-b93c-c9a4abf0c425\",\"Interface\":\"UI\",\"Metadata\":{\"token_name\":\"test\",\"token_tag\":\"b7261c49a793a82678d12285f0bc1401\"},\"NewValue\":{\"key1\":\"value1\",\"key2\":\"value2\"},\"OldValue\":{\"key3\":\"value4\",\"key4\":\"value4\"},\"OwnerID\":\"enl3j9du8rnx2swwd9l32qots7l54t9s\",\"ResourceID\":\"enl3j9du8rnx2swwd9l32qots7l54t9s\",\"ResourceType\":\"account\",\"When\":\"2021-11-30T20:19:48Z\"}",
        "outcome": "success",
        "provider": "UI",
        "type": [
            "info"
        ]
    },
    "input": {
        "type": "http_endpoint"
    },
    "related": {
        "ip": [
            "81.2.69.142"
        ],
        "user": [
            "enl3j9du8rnx2swwd9l32qots7l54t9s"
        ]
    },
    "source": {
        "ip": "81.2.69.142"
    },
    "tags": [
        "preserve_original_event",
        "preserve_duplicate_custom_fields",
        "forwarded",
        "cloudflare_logpush-audit"
    ],
    "user": {
        "email": "user@example.com",
        "id": "enl3j9du8rnx2swwd9l32qots7l54t9s"
    }
}

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
cloudflare_logpush.audit.action.result
Whether the action was successful.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.audit.action.type
Type of action taken.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.audit.actor.email
Email of the actor.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.audit.actor.id
Unique identifier of the actor in Cloudflare system.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.audit.actor.ip
Physical network address of the actor.
ip
cloudflare_logpush.audit.actor.type
Type of user that started the audit trail.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.audit.id
Unique identifier of an audit log.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.audit.interface
Entry point or interface of the audit log.
text
cloudflare_logpush.audit.metadata
Additional audit log-specific information, Metadata is organized in key:value pairs, Key and Value formats can vary by ResourceType.
flattened
cloudflare_logpush.audit.new_value
Contains the new value for the audited item.
flattened
cloudflare_logpush.audit.old_value
Contains the old value for the audited item.
flattened
cloudflare_logpush.audit.owner.id
The identifier of the user that was acting or was acted on behalf of.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.audit.resource.id
Unique identifier of the resource within Cloudflare system.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.audit.resource.type
The type of resource that was changed.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.audit.timestamp
When the change happened.
date
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
event.action
The action captured by the event. This describes the information in the event. It is more specific than event.category. Examples are group-add, process-started, file-created. The value is normally defined by the implementer.
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 is 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.outcome
This is one of four ECS Categorization Fields, and indicates the lowest level in the ECS category hierarchy. event.outcome simply denotes whether the event represents a success or a failure from the perspective of the entity that produced the event. Note that when a single transaction is described in multiple events, each event may populate different values of event.outcome, according to their perspective. Also note that in the case of a compound event (a single event that contains multiple logical events), this field should be populated with the value that best captures the overall success or failure from the perspective of the event producer. Further note that not all events will have an associated outcome. For example, this field is generally not populated for metric events, events with event.type:info, or any events for which an outcome does not make logical sense.
keyword
event.provider
Source of the event. Event transports such as Syslog or the Windows Event Log typically mention the source of an event. It can be the name of the software that generated the event (e.g. Sysmon, httpd), or of a subsystem of the operating system (kernel, Microsoft-Windows-Security-Auditing).
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
log.source.address
Source address from which the log event was read / sent from.
keyword
related.ip
All of the IPs seen on your event.
ip
related.user
All the user names or other user identifiers seen on the event.
keyword
source.ip
IP address of the source (IPv4 or IPv6).
ip
tags
List of keywords used to tag each event.
keyword
user.email
User email address.
keyword
user.id
Unique identifier of the user.
keyword

casb

This is the casb dataset.

Example

An example event for casb looks as following:

{
    "@timestamp": "2023-05-16T10:00:00.000Z",
    "agent": {
        "ephemeral_id": "3b1c9617-77f5-4ce2-ad16-dc9ca9602c56",
        "id": "f25d13cd-18cc-4e73-822c-c4f849322623",
        "name": "docker-fleet-agent",
        "type": "filebeat",
        "version": "8.10.1"
    },
    "cloudflare_logpush": {
        "casb": {
            "asset": {
                "id": "0051N000004mG2LAAA",
                "metadata": {
                    "Address": {
                        "city": "Singapore",
                        "country": "Singapore",
                        "countryCode": "SG"
                    },
                    "Alias": "JDoe",
                    "BannerPhotoUrl": "/profilephoto/001",
                    "CommunityNickname": "Doe.John",
                    "CompanyName": "MyCompany",
                    "DefaultGroupNotificationFrequency": "N",
                    "Department": "521",
                    "DigestFrequency": "D",
                    "Email": "user@example.com",
                    "EmailEncodingKey": "UTF-8",
                    "EmailPreferencesAutoBcc": true,
                    "EmployeeNumber": "18124",
                    "FirstName": "John",
                    "ForecastEnabled": false,
                    "FullPhotoUrl": "https://photos.com/profilephoto/001",
                    "Id": "0051N000004mG2LAAA",
                    "IsActive": false,
                    "IsProfilePhotoActive": false,
                    "LanguageLocaleKey": "en_US",
                    "LastLoginDate": "2021-10-06T06:32:09.000+0000",
                    "LastName": "Doe",
                    "LocaleSidKey": "en_SG",
                    "MediumBannerPhotoUrl": "/profilephoto/001/E",
                    "Name": "John Doe",
                    "Phone": "+3460000000",
                    "ReceivesAdminInfoEmails": true,
                    "ReceivesInfoEmails": true,
                    "SenderEmail": "sender@example.com",
                    "SmallBannerPhotoUrl": "/profilephoto/001/D",
                    "SmallPhotoUrl": "https://photos.com/photo/001",
                    "TimeZoneSidKey": "Asia/Singapore",
                    "Title": "Customer Solutions Engineer",
                    "UserPermissionsCallCenterAutoLogin": false,
                    "UserPermissionsInteractionUser": true,
                    "UserPermissionsMarketingUser": false,
                    "UserPermissionsOfflineUser": false,
                    "UserPermissionsSupportUser": false,
                    "UserRoleId": "00E2G000001E",
                    "UserType": "Standard",
                    "attributes": {
                        "type": "User",
                        "url": "/services/data/userID"
                    }
                },
                "name": "John Doe",
                "url": "https://example.com/resource"
            },
            "finding": {
                "id": "6b187be4-2dd5-42c5-a37b-111111111111",
                "type": {
                    "id": "a2790c4f-03f5-449f-b209-5f4447f417aa",
                    "name": "Salesforce User Sending Email with Different Email Address",
                    "severity": "Medium"
                }
            },
            "integration": {
                "id": "c772678d-5cf1-4c73-bf3f-111111111111",
                "name": "Salesforce Testing",
                "policy_vendor": "Salesforce Connection"
            },
            "timestamp": "2023-05-16T10:00:00.000Z"
        }
    },
    "data_stream": {
        "dataset": "cloudflare_logpush.casb",
        "namespace": "ep",
        "type": "logs"
    },
    "ecs": {
        "version": "8.11.0"
    },
    "elastic_agent": {
        "id": "f25d13cd-18cc-4e73-822c-c4f849322623",
        "snapshot": false,
        "version": "8.10.1"
    },
    "event": {
        "agent_id_status": "verified",
        "category": [
            "network"
        ],
        "dataset": "cloudflare_logpush.casb",
        "id": "6b187be4-2dd5-42c5-a37b-111111111111",
        "ingested": "2023-09-25T18:22:35Z",
        "kind": "event",
        "original": "{\"AssetDisplayName\":\"John Doe\",\"AssetExternalID\":\"0051N000004mG2LAAA\",\"AssetLink\":\"https://example.com/resource\",\"AssetMetadata\":{\"AccountId\":null,\"Address\":{\"city\":\"Singapore\",\"country\":\"Singapore\",\"countryCode\":\"SG\",\"geocodeAccuracy\":null,\"latitude\":null,\"longitude\":null,\"postalCode\":null,\"state\":null,\"stateCode\":null,\"street\":null},\"Alias\":\"JDoe\",\"BadgeText\":\"\",\"BannerPhotoUrl\":\"/profilephoto/001\",\"CallCenterId\":null,\"CommunityNickname\":\"Doe.John\",\"CompanyName\":\"MyCompany\",\"ContactId\":null,\"DefaultGroupNotificationFrequency\":\"N\",\"Department\":\"521\",\"DigestFrequency\":\"D\",\"Division\":null,\"Email\":\"user@example.com\",\"EmailEncodingKey\":\"UTF-8\",\"EmailPreferencesAutoBcc\":true,\"EmployeeNumber\":\"18124\",\"Extension\":null,\"Fax\":null,\"FederationIdentifier\":null,\"FirstName\":\"John\",\"ForecastEnabled\":false,\"FullPhotoUrl\":\"https://photos.com/profilephoto/001\",\"Id\":\"0051N000004mG2LAAA\",\"IsActive\":false,\"IsProfilePhotoActive\":false,\"LanguageLocaleKey\":\"en_US\",\"LastLoginDate\":\"2021-10-06T06:32:09.000+0000\",\"LastName\":\"Doe\",\"LastReferencedDate\":null,\"LastViewedDate\":null,\"LocaleSidKey\":\"en_SG\",\"MediumBannerPhotoUrl\":\"/profilephoto/001/E\",\"MobilePhone\":null,\"Name\":\"John Doe\",\"OfflineTrialExpirationDate\":null,\"Phone\":\"+3460000000\",\"ReceivesAdminInfoEmails\":true,\"ReceivesInfoEmails\":true,\"SenderEmail\":\"sender@example.com\",\"SenderName\":null,\"Signature\":null,\"SmallBannerPhotoUrl\":\"/profilephoto/001/D\",\"SmallPhotoUrl\":\"https://photos.com/photo/001\",\"TimeZoneSidKey\":\"Asia/Singapore\",\"Title\":\"Customer Solutions Engineer\",\"UserPermissionsCallCenterAutoLogin\":false,\"UserPermissionsInteractionUser\":true,\"UserPermissionsMarketingUser\":false,\"UserPermissionsOfflineUser\":false,\"UserPermissionsSupportUser\":false,\"UserRoleId\":\"00E2G000001E\",\"UserType\":\"Standard\",\"attributes\":{\"type\":\"User\",\"url\":\"/services/data/userID\"}},\"DetectedTimestamp\":\"2023-05-16T10:00:00Z\",\"FindingTypeDisplayName\":\"Salesforce User Sending Email with Different Email Address\",\"FindingTypeID\":\"a2790c4f-03f5-449f-b209-5f4447f417aa\",\"FindingTypeSeverity\":\"Medium\",\"InstanceID\":\"6b187be4-2dd5-42c5-a37b-111111111111\",\"IntegrationDisplayName\":\"Salesforce Testing\",\"IntegrationID\":\"c772678d-5cf1-4c73-bf3f-111111111111\",\"IntegrationPolicyVendor\":\"Salesforce Connection\"}",
        "severity": 2,
        "type": [
            "access"
        ]
    },
    "input": {
        "type": "http_endpoint"
    },
    "tags": [
        "preserve_original_event",
        "preserve_duplicate_custom_fields",
        "forwarded",
        "cloudflare_logpush-casb"
    ],
    "url": {
        "domain": "example.com",
        "original": "https://example.com/resource",
        "path": "/resource",
        "scheme": "https"
    }
}

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
cloudflare_logpush.casb.asset.id
Unique identifier for an asset of this type. Format will vary by policy vendor.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.casb.asset.metadata
Metadata associated with the asset. Structure will vary by policy vendor.
flattened
cloudflare_logpush.casb.asset.name
Asset display name.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.casb.asset.url
URL to the asset. This may not be available for some policy vendors and asset types.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.casb.finding.id
UUID of the finding in Cloudflare´s system.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.casb.finding.type.id
UUID of the finding type in Cloudflare´s system.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.casb.finding.type.name
Human-readable name of the finding type.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.casb.finding.type.severity
Severity of the finding type.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.casb.integration.id
UUID of the integration in Cloudflare´s system.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.casb.integration.name
Human-readable name of the integration.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.casb.integration.policy_vendor
Human-readable vendor name of the integration´s policy.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.casb.timestamp
Date and time the finding was first identified.
date
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
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 is 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.severity
The numeric severity of the event according to your event source. What the different severity values mean can be different between sources and use cases. It's up to the implementer to make sure severities are consistent across events from the same source. The Syslog severity belongs in log.syslog.severity.code. event.severity is meant to represent the severity according to the event source (e.g. firewall, IDS). If the event source does not publish its own severity, you may optionally copy the log.syslog.severity.code to event.severity.
long
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
log.source.address
Source address from which the log event was read / sent from.
keyword
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.registered_domain
The highest registered url domain, stripped of the subdomain. For example, the registered domain for "foo.example.com" is "example.com". This value can be determined precisely with a list like the public suffix list (http://publicsuffix.org). Trying to approximate this by simply taking the last two labels will not work well for TLDs such as "co.uk".
keyword
url.scheme
Scheme of the request, such as "https". Note: The : is not part of the scheme.
keyword
url.subdomain
The subdomain portion of a fully qualified domain name includes all of the names except the host name under the registered_domain. In a partially qualified domain, or if the the qualification level of the full name cannot be determined, subdomain contains all of the names below the registered domain. For example the subdomain portion of "www.east.mydomain.co.uk" is "east". If the domain has multiple levels of subdomain, such as "sub2.sub1.example.com", the subdomain field should contain "sub2.sub1", with no trailing period.
keyword
url.top_level_domain
The effective top level domain (eTLD), also known as the domain suffix, is the last part of the domain name. For example, the top level domain for example.com is "com". This value can be determined precisely with a list like the public suffix list (http://publicsuffix.org). Trying to approximate this by simply taking the last label will not work well for effective TLDs such as "co.uk".
keyword
url.username
Username of the request.
keyword

device_posture

This is the device_posture dataset.

Example

An example event for device_posture looks as following:

{
    "@timestamp": "2023-05-17T12:00:00.000Z",
    "agent": {
        "ephemeral_id": "7f349992-1fc7-4534-b1c0-f21729fd96f7",
        "id": "f25d13cd-18cc-4e73-822c-c4f849322623",
        "name": "docker-fleet-agent",
        "type": "filebeat",
        "version": "8.10.1"
    },
    "cloudflare_logpush": {
        "device_posture": {
            "eval": {
                "expected": {
                    "operator": "==",
                    "os_distro_name": "ubuntu",
                    "os_distro_revision": "20.04",
                    "version": "5.15.0-1025-gcp"
                },
                "received": {
                    "operator": "==",
                    "os_distro_name": "ubuntu",
                    "os_distro_revision": "20.04",
                    "version": "5.15.0-1025-gcp"
                },
                "result": true
            },
            "host": {
                "id": "083a8354-d56c-11ed-9771-111111111",
                "manufacturer": "Google Compute Engine",
                "model": "Google Compute Engine",
                "name": "zt-test-vm1",
                "os": {
                    "family": "linux",
                    "version": "5.15.0"
                },
                "serial": "GoogleCloud-ABCD1234567890"
            },
            "rule": {
                "category": "os_version",
                "id": "policy-abcdefgh",
                "name": "Ubuntu"
            },
            "timestamp": "2023-05-17T12:00:00.000Z",
            "user": {
                "email": "user@example.com",
                "id": "user-abcdefgh"
            },
            "version": "2023.3.258"
        }
    },
    "data_stream": {
        "dataset": "cloudflare_logpush.device_posture",
        "namespace": "ep",
        "type": "logs"
    },
    "ecs": {
        "version": "8.11.0"
    },
    "elastic_agent": {
        "id": "f25d13cd-18cc-4e73-822c-c4f849322623",
        "snapshot": false,
        "version": "8.10.1"
    },
    "event": {
        "agent_id_status": "verified",
        "category": [
            "host"
        ],
        "dataset": "cloudflare_logpush.device_posture",
        "ingested": "2023-09-25T18:23:49Z",
        "kind": "event",
        "original": "{\"ClientVersion\":\"2023.3.258\",\"DeviceID\":\"083a8354-d56c-11ed-9771-111111111\",\"DeviceManufacturer\":\"Google Compute Engine\",\"DeviceModel\":\"Google Compute Engine\",\"DeviceName\":\"zt-test-vm1\",\"DeviceSerialNumber\":\"GoogleCloud-ABCD1234567890\",\"DeviceType\":\"linux\",\"Email\":\"user@example.com\",\"OSVersion\":\"5.15.0\",\"PolicyID\":\"policy-abcdefgh\",\"PostureCheckName\":\"Ubuntu\",\"PostureCheckType\":\"os_version\",\"PostureEvaluatedResult\":true,\"PostureExpectedJSON\":{\"operator\":\"==\",\"os_distro_name\":\"ubuntu\",\"os_distro_revision\":\"20.04\",\"version\":\"5.15.0-1025-gcp\"},\"PostureReceivedJSON\":{\"operator\":\"==\",\"os_distro_name\":\"ubuntu\",\"os_distro_revision\":\"20.04\",\"version\":\"5.15.0-1025-gcp\"},\"Timestamp\":\"2023-05-17T12:00:00Z\",\"UserUID\":\"user-abcdefgh\"}",
        "outcome": "success",
        "type": [
            "info"
        ]
    },
    "host": {
        "id": "083a8354-d56c-11ed-9771-111111111",
        "name": "zt-test-vm1",
        "os": {
            "family": "linux",
            "version": "5.15.0"
        }
    },
    "input": {
        "type": "http_endpoint"
    },
    "related": {
        "hosts": [
            "083a8354-d56c-11ed-9771-111111111",
            "zt-test-vm1"
        ],
        "user": [
            "user-abcdefgh",
            "user@example.com"
        ]
    },
    "rule": {
        "category": "os_version",
        "id": "policy-abcdefgh",
        "name": "Ubuntu"
    },
    "tags": [
        "preserve_original_event",
        "preserve_duplicate_custom_fields",
        "forwarded",
        "cloudflare_logpush-device_posture"
    ],
    "user": {
        "email": "user@example.com",
        "id": "user-abcdefgh"
    },
    "user_agent": {
        "version": "2023.3.258"
    }
}

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
cloudflare_logpush.device_posture.eval.expected
JSON object of what the posture check expects from the Zero Trust client.
flattened
cloudflare_logpush.device_posture.eval.received
JSON object of what the Zero Trust client actually uploads.
flattened
cloudflare_logpush.device_posture.eval.result
Whether this posture upload passes the associated posture check, given the requirements posture check at the time of the timestamp.
boolean
cloudflare_logpush.device_posture.host.id
The device ID that performed the posture upload.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.device_posture.host.manufacturer
The manufacturer of the device that the Zero Trust client is running on.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.device_posture.host.model
The model of the device that the Zero Trust client is running on.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.device_posture.host.name
The name of the device that the Zero Trust client is running on.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.device_posture.host.os.family
The Zero Trust client operating system type.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.device_posture.host.os.version
The operating system version at the time of upload.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.device_posture.host.serial
The serial number of the device that the Zero Trust client is running on.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.device_posture.rule.category
The type of the Zero Trust client check or service provider check.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.device_posture.rule.id
The posture check ID associated with this device posture result.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.device_posture.rule.name
The name of the posture check associated with this device posture result.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.device_posture.timestamp
The date and time the corresponding device posture upload was performed.
date
cloudflare_logpush.device_posture.user.email
The email used to register the device with the Zero Trust client.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.device_posture.user.id
The uid of the user who registered the device.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.device_posture.version
The Zero Trust client version at the time of upload.
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
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.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 is 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.outcome
This is one of four ECS Categorization Fields, and indicates the lowest level in the ECS category hierarchy. event.outcome simply denotes whether the event represents a success or a failure from the perspective of the entity that produced the event. Note that when a single transaction is described in multiple events, each event may populate different values of event.outcome, according to their perspective. Also note that in the case of a compound event (a single event that contains multiple logical events), this field should be populated with the value that best captures the overall success or failure from the perspective of the event producer. Further note that not all events will have an associated outcome. For example, this field is generally not populated for metric events, events with event.type:info, or any events for which an outcome does not make logical sense.
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
log.source.address
Source address from which the log event was read / sent from.
keyword
related.hosts
All hostnames or other host identifiers seen on your event. Example identifiers include FQDNs, domain names, workstation names, or aliases.
keyword
related.user
All the user names or other user identifiers seen on the event.
keyword
rule.category
A categorization value keyword used by the entity using the rule for detection of this event.
keyword
rule.id
A rule ID that is unique within the scope of an agent, observer, or other entity using the rule for detection of this event.
keyword
rule.name
The name of the rule or signature generating the event.
keyword
tags
List of keywords used to tag each event.
keyword
user.email
User email address.
keyword
user.id
Unique identifier of the user.
keyword
user_agent.version
Version of the user agent.
keyword

dns

This is the dns dataset.

Example

An example event for dns looks as following:

{
    "@timestamp": "2022-05-26T09:23:54.000Z",
    "agent": {
        "ephemeral_id": "24a14041-5e4e-4672-8f07-bae791d8c256",
        "id": "f25d13cd-18cc-4e73-822c-c4f849322623",
        "name": "docker-fleet-agent",
        "type": "filebeat",
        "version": "8.10.1"
    },
    "cloudflare_logpush": {
        "dns": {
            "colo": {
                "code": "MRS"
            },
            "edns": {
                "subnet": "1.128.0.0",
                "subnet_length": 0
            },
            "query": {
                "name": "example.com",
                "type": 65535
            },
            "response": {
                "cached": false,
                "code": 0
            },
            "source": {
                "ip": "175.16.199.0"
            },
            "timestamp": "2022-05-26T09:23:54.000Z"
        }
    },
    "data_stream": {
        "dataset": "cloudflare_logpush.dns",
        "namespace": "ep",
        "type": "logs"
    },
    "dns": {
        "question": {
            "name": "example.com"
        }
    },
    "ecs": {
        "version": "8.11.0"
    },
    "elastic_agent": {
        "id": "f25d13cd-18cc-4e73-822c-c4f849322623",
        "snapshot": false,
        "version": "8.10.1"
    },
    "event": {
        "agent_id_status": "verified",
        "category": [
            "network"
        ],
        "dataset": "cloudflare_logpush.dns",
        "ingested": "2023-09-25T18:25:00Z",
        "kind": "event",
        "original": "{\"ColoCode\":\"MRS\",\"EDNSSubnet\":\"1.128.0.0\",\"EDNSSubnetLength\":0,\"QueryName\":\"example.com\",\"QueryType\":65535,\"ResponseCached\":false,\"ResponseCode\":0,\"SourceIP\":\"175.16.199.0\",\"Timestamp\":\"2022-05-26T09:23:54Z\"}",
        "type": [
            "info"
        ]
    },
    "input": {
        "type": "http_endpoint"
    },
    "related": {
        "ip": [
            "175.16.199.0",
            "1.128.0.0"
        ]
    },
    "source": {
        "ip": "175.16.199.0"
    },
    "tags": [
        "preserve_original_event",
        "preserve_duplicate_custom_fields",
        "forwarded",
        "cloudflare_logpush-dns"
    ]
}

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
cloudflare_logpush.dns.colo.code
IATA airport code of data center that received the request.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.dns.edns.subnet
EDNS Client Subnet (IPv4 or IPv6).
ip
cloudflare_logpush.dns.edns.subnet_length
EDNS Client Subnet length.
long
cloudflare_logpush.dns.query.name
Name of the query that was sent.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.dns.query.type
Integer value of query type.
long
cloudflare_logpush.dns.response.cached
Whether the response was cached or not.
boolean
cloudflare_logpush.dns.response.code
Integer value of response code.
long
cloudflare_logpush.dns.source.ip
IP address of the client (IPv4 or IPv6).
ip
cloudflare_logpush.dns.timestamp
Timestamp at which the query occurred.
date
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
dns.question.name
The name being queried. If the name field contains non-printable characters (below 32 or above 126), those characters should be represented as escaped base 10 integers (\DDD). Back slashes and quotes should be escaped. Tabs, carriage returns, and line feeds should be converted to \t, \r, and \n respectively.
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
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.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 is 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
log.source.address
Source address from which the log event was read / sent from.
keyword
related.hosts
All hostnames or other host identifiers seen on your event. Example identifiers include FQDNs, domain names, workstation names, or aliases.
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

dns_firewall

This is the dns_firewall dataset.

Example

An example event for dns_firewall looks as following:

{
    "@timestamp": "2023-09-19T12:30:00.000Z",
    "agent": {
        "ephemeral_id": "e6695261-9e3f-4227-aa72-baa589ec4eaf",
        "id": "e0bfaeb7-64d9-40b9-8534-3d0e780f33cf",
        "name": "docker-fleet-agent",
        "type": "filebeat",
        "version": "8.10.1"
    },
    "cloudflare_logpush": {
        "dns_firewall": {
            "cluster_id": "CLUSTER-001",
            "colo": {
                "code": "SFO"
            },
            "edns": {
                "subnet": "67.43.156.0",
                "subnet_length": 24
            },
            "question": {
                "dnssec_ok": true,
                "name": "example.com",
                "recursion_desired": true,
                "size": 60,
                "tcp": false,
                "type": 1
            },
            "response": {
                "cached": true,
                "cached_stale": false,
                "code": "0"
            },
            "source": {
                "ip": "67.43.156.2"
            },
            "timestamp": "2023-09-19T12:30:00.000Z",
            "upstream": {
                "ip": "81.2.69.144",
                "response_code": "0",
                "response_time_ms": 30
            }
        }
    },
    "data_stream": {
        "dataset": "cloudflare_logpush.dns_firewall",
        "namespace": "ep",
        "type": "logs"
    },
    "dns": {
        "question": {
            "name": "example.com"
        },
        "response_code": "0"
    },
    "ecs": {
        "version": "8.11.0"
    },
    "elastic_agent": {
        "id": "e0bfaeb7-64d9-40b9-8534-3d0e780f33cf",
        "snapshot": false,
        "version": "8.10.1"
    },
    "event": {
        "agent_id_status": "verified",
        "category": [
            "network"
        ],
        "dataset": "cloudflare_logpush.dns_firewall",
        "ingested": "2023-09-22T16:49:28Z",
        "kind": "event",
        "original": "{\"ClientResponseCode\":0,\"ClusterID\":\"CLUSTER-001\",\"ColoCode\":\"SFO\",\"EDNSSubnet\":\"67.43.156.0\",\"EDNSSubnetLength\":24,\"QueryDO\":true,\"QueryName\":\"example.com\",\"QueryRD\":true,\"QuerySize\":60,\"QueryTCP\":false,\"QueryType\":1,\"ResponseCached\":true,\"ResponseCachedStale\":false,\"SourceIP\":\"67.43.156.2\",\"Timestamp\":\"2023-09-19T12:30:00Z\",\"UpstreamIP\":\"81.2.69.144\",\"UpstreamResponseCode\":0,\"UpstreamResponseTimeMs\":30}",
        "type": [
            "info"
        ]
    },
    "input": {
        "type": "http_endpoint"
    },
    "network": {
        "transport": "udp"
    },
    "related": {
        "ip": [
            "67.43.156.2",
            "67.43.156.0",
            "81.2.69.144"
        ]
    },
    "source": {
        "as": {
            "number": 35908
        },
        "geo": {
            "continent_name": "Asia",
            "country_iso_code": "BT",
            "country_name": "Bhutan",
            "location": {
                "lat": 27.5,
                "lon": 90.5
            }
        },
        "ip": "67.43.156.2"
    },
    "tags": [
        "preserve_original_event",
        "preserve_duplicate_custom_fields",
        "forwarded",
        "cloudflare_logpush-dns_firewall"
    ]
}

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
cloudflare_logpush.dns_firewall.cluster_id
The ID of the cluster which handled this request.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.dns_firewall.colo.code
IATA airport code of data center that received the request.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.dns_firewall.edns.subnet
EDNS Client Subnet (IPv4 or IPv6).
ip
cloudflare_logpush.dns_firewall.edns.subnet_length
EDNS Client Subnet length.
long
cloudflare_logpush.dns_firewall.question.dnssec_ok
Indicates if the client is capable of handling a signed response (DNSSEC answer OK).
boolean
cloudflare_logpush.dns_firewall.question.name
Name of the query that was sent.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.dns_firewall.question.recursion_desired
Indicates if the client means a recursive query (Recursion Desired).
boolean
cloudflare_logpush.dns_firewall.question.size
The size of the query sent from the client in bytes.
long
cloudflare_logpush.dns_firewall.question.tcp
Indicates if the query from the client was made via TCP (if false, then UDP).
boolean
cloudflare_logpush.dns_firewall.question.type
Integer value of query type.
long
cloudflare_logpush.dns_firewall.response.cached
Whether the response was cached or not.
boolean
cloudflare_logpush.dns_firewall.response.cached_stale
Whether the response was cached stale. In other words, the TTL had expired and the upstream nameserver was not reachable.
boolean
cloudflare_logpush.dns_firewall.response.code
DNS response code.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.dns_firewall.source.ip
The source IP address of the request.
ip
cloudflare_logpush.dns_firewall.timestamp
Timestamp at which the query occurred.
date
cloudflare_logpush.dns_firewall.upstream.ip
IP of the upstream nameserver (IPv4 or IPv6).
ip
cloudflare_logpush.dns_firewall.upstream.response_code
Response code from the upstream nameserver.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.dns_firewall.upstream.response_time_ms
Upstream response time in milliseconds.
long
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
dns.question.name
The name being queried. If the name field contains non-printable characters (below 32 or above 126), those characters should be represented as escaped base 10 integers (\DDD). Back slashes and quotes should be escaped. Tabs, carriage returns, and line feeds should be converted to \t, \r, and \n respectively.
keyword
dns.response_code
The DNS response code.
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
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.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 is 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.timezone
This field should be populated when the event's timestamp does not include timezone information already (e.g. default Syslog timestamps). It's optional otherwise. Acceptable timezone formats are: a canonical ID (e.g. "Europe/Amsterdam"), abbreviated (e.g. "EST") or an HH:mm differential (e.g. "-05:00").
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
log.source.address
Source address from which the log event was read / sent from.
keyword
network.transport
Same as network.iana_number, but instead using the Keyword name of the transport layer (udp, tcp, ipv6-icmp, etc.) The field value must be normalized to lowercase for querying.
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_code
Two-letter code representing continent's 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.name
User-defined description of a location, at the level of granularity they care about. Could be the name of their data centers, the floor number, if this describes a local physical entity, city names. Not typically used in automated geolocation.
keyword
source.geo.postal_code
Postal code associated with the location. Values appropriate for this field may also be known as a postcode or ZIP code and will vary widely from country to country.
keyword
source.geo.region_iso_code
Region ISO code.
keyword
source.geo.region_name
Region name.
keyword
source.geo.timezone
The time zone of the location, such as IANA time zone name.
keyword
source.ip
IP address of the source (IPv4 or IPv6).
ip
tags
List of keywords used to tag each event.
keyword

firewall_event

This is the firewall_event dataset.

Example

An example event for firewall_event looks as following:

{
    "@timestamp": "2022-05-31T05:23:43.000Z",
    "agent": {
        "ephemeral_id": "2f35940d-740d-4aad-ad4b-6aeaf15c4f88",
        "id": "f25d13cd-18cc-4e73-822c-c4f849322623",
        "name": "docker-fleet-agent",
        "type": "filebeat",
        "version": "8.10.1"
    },
    "cloudflare_logpush": {
        "firewall_event": {
            "action": "block",
            "client": {
                "asn": {
                    "description": "CLOUDFLARENET",
                    "value": 15169
                },
                "country": "us",
                "ip": "175.16.199.0",
                "ip_class": "searchEngine",
                "referer": {
                    "host": "abc.example.com",
                    "path": "/abc/checkout",
                    "query": "?sourcerer=(default%3A(id%3A!n%2CselectedPatterns%3A!(eqldemo%2C%27logs-endpoint.*-eqldemo%27%2C%27logs-system.*-eqldemo%27%2C%27logs-windows.*-eqldemo%27%2Cmetricseqldemo)))&timerange=(global%3A(linkTo%3A!()%2Ctimerange%3A(from%3A%272022-04-05T00%3A00%3A01.199Z%27%2CfromStr%3Anow-24h%2Ckind%3Arelative%2Cto%3A%272022-04-06T00%3A00%3A01.200Z%27%2CtoStr%3Anow))%2Ctimeline%3A(linkTo%3A!()%2Ctimerange%3A(from%3A%272022-04-05T00%3A00%3A01.201Z%27%2CfromStr%3Anow-24h%2Ckind%3Arelative%2Cto%3A%272022-04-06T00%3A00%3A01.202Z%27%2CtoStr%3Anow)))",
                    "scheme": "referer URL scheme"
                },
                "request": {
                    "host": "xyz.example.com",
                    "method": "GET",
                    "path": "/abc/checkout",
                    "protocol": "HTTP/1.1",
                    "query": "?sourcerer=(default%3A(id%3A!n%2CselectedPatterns%3A!(eqldemo%2C%27logs-endpoint.*-eqldemo%27%2C%27logs-system.*-eqldemo%27%2C%27logs-windows.*-eqldemo%27%2Cmetricseqldemo)))&timerange=(global%3A(linkTo%3A!()%2Ctimerange%3A(from%3A%272022-04-05T00%3A00%3A01.199Z%27%2CfromStr%3Anow-24h%2Ckind%3Arelative%2Cto%3A%272022-04-06T00%3A00%3A01.200Z%27%2CtoStr%3Anow))%2Ctimeline%3A(linkTo%3A!()%2Ctimerange%3A(from%3A%272022-04-05T00%3A00%3A01.201Z%27%2CfromStr%3Anow-24h%2Ckind%3Arelative%2Cto%3A%272022-04-06T00%3A00%3A01.202Z%27%2CtoStr%3Anow)))",
                    "scheme": "https",
                    "user": {
                        "agent": "Mozilla/5.0 (Linux; Android 6.0.1; Nexus 5X Build/MMB29P) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/101.0.4951.64 Mobile Safari/537.36 (compatible; Googlebot/2.1; +http://www.google.com/bot.html)"
                    }
                }
            },
            "edge": {
                "colo": {
                    "code": "IAD"
                },
                "response": {
                    "status": 403
                }
            },
            "kind": "firewall",
            "match_index": 1,
            "meta_data": {
                "filter": "1ced07e066a34abf8b14f2a99593bc8d",
                "type": "customer"
            },
            "origin": {
                "ray": {
                    "id": "00"
                },
                "response": {
                    "status": 0
                }
            },
            "ray": {
                "id": "713d477539b55c29"
            },
            "rule": {
                "id": "7dc666e026974dab84884c73b3e2afe1"
            },
            "source": "firewallrules",
            "timestamp": "2022-05-31T05:23:43.000Z"
        }
    },
    "data_stream": {
        "dataset": "cloudflare_logpush.firewall_event",
        "namespace": "ep",
        "type": "logs"
    },
    "ecs": {
        "version": "8.11.0"
    },
    "elastic_agent": {
        "id": "f25d13cd-18cc-4e73-822c-c4f849322623",
        "snapshot": false,
        "version": "8.10.1"
    },
    "event": {
        "action": "block",
        "agent_id_status": "verified",
        "category": [
            "network"
        ],
        "dataset": "cloudflare_logpush.firewall_event",
        "ingested": "2023-09-25T18:26:12Z",
        "kind": "event",
        "original": "{\"Action\":\"block\",\"ClientASN\":15169,\"ClientASNDescription\":\"CLOUDFLARENET\",\"ClientCountry\":\"us\",\"ClientIP\":\"175.16.199.0\",\"ClientIPClass\":\"searchEngine\",\"ClientRefererHost\":\"abc.example.com\",\"ClientRefererPath\":\"/abc/checkout\",\"ClientRefererQuery\":\"?sourcerer=(default%3A(id%3A!n%2CselectedPatterns%3A!(eqldemo%2C%27logs-endpoint.*-eqldemo%27%2C%27logs-system.*-eqldemo%27%2C%27logs-windows.*-eqldemo%27%2Cmetricseqldemo)))\\u0026timerange=(global%3A(linkTo%3A!()%2Ctimerange%3A(from%3A%272022-04-05T00%3A00%3A01.199Z%27%2CfromStr%3Anow-24h%2Ckind%3Arelative%2Cto%3A%272022-04-06T00%3A00%3A01.200Z%27%2CtoStr%3Anow))%2Ctimeline%3A(linkTo%3A!()%2Ctimerange%3A(from%3A%272022-04-05T00%3A00%3A01.201Z%27%2CfromStr%3Anow-24h%2Ckind%3Arelative%2Cto%3A%272022-04-06T00%3A00%3A01.202Z%27%2CtoStr%3Anow)))\",\"ClientRefererScheme\":\"referer URL scheme\",\"ClientRequestHost\":\"xyz.example.com\",\"ClientRequestMethod\":\"GET\",\"ClientRequestPath\":\"/abc/checkout\",\"ClientRequestProtocol\":\"HTTP/1.1\",\"ClientRequestQuery\":\"?sourcerer=(default%3A(id%3A!n%2CselectedPatterns%3A!(eqldemo%2C%27logs-endpoint.*-eqldemo%27%2C%27logs-system.*-eqldemo%27%2C%27logs-windows.*-eqldemo%27%2Cmetricseqldemo)))\\u0026timerange=(global%3A(linkTo%3A!()%2Ctimerange%3A(from%3A%272022-04-05T00%3A00%3A01.199Z%27%2CfromStr%3Anow-24h%2Ckind%3Arelative%2Cto%3A%272022-04-06T00%3A00%3A01.200Z%27%2CtoStr%3Anow))%2Ctimeline%3A(linkTo%3A!()%2Ctimerange%3A(from%3A%272022-04-05T00%3A00%3A01.201Z%27%2CfromStr%3Anow-24h%2Ckind%3Arelative%2Cto%3A%272022-04-06T00%3A00%3A01.202Z%27%2CtoStr%3Anow)))\",\"ClientRequestScheme\":\"https\",\"ClientRequestUserAgent\":\"Mozilla/5.0 (Linux; Android 6.0.1; Nexus 5X Build/MMB29P) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/101.0.4951.64 Mobile Safari/537.36 (compatible; Googlebot/2.1; +http://www.google.com/bot.html)\",\"Datetime\":\"2022-05-31T05:23:43Z\",\"EdgeColoCode\":\"IAD\",\"EdgeResponseStatus\":403,\"Kind\":\"firewall\",\"MatchIndex\":1,\"Metadata\":{\"filter\":\"1ced07e066a34abf8b14f2a99593bc8d\",\"type\":\"customer\"},\"OriginResponseStatus\":0,\"OriginatorRayID\":\"00\",\"RayID\":\"713d477539b55c29\",\"RuleID\":\"7dc666e026974dab84884c73b3e2afe1\",\"Source\":\"firewallrules\"}",
        "type": [
            "info"
        ]
    },
    "http": {
        "request": {
            "method": "GET"
        },
        "response": {
            "status_code": 403
        },
        "version": "1.1"
    },
    "input": {
        "type": "http_endpoint"
    },
    "network": {
        "protocol": "http"
    },
    "related": {
        "hosts": [
            "abc.example.com",
            "xyz.example.com"
        ],
        "ip": [
            "175.16.199.0"
        ]
    },
    "rule": {
        "id": "7dc666e026974dab84884c73b3e2afe1"
    },
    "source": {
        "as": {
            "number": 15169
        },
        "geo": {
            "country_iso_code": "us"
        },
        "ip": "175.16.199.0"
    },
    "tags": [
        "preserve_original_event",
        "preserve_duplicate_custom_fields",
        "forwarded",
        "cloudflare_logpush-firewall_event"
    ],
    "url": {
        "domain": "xyz.example.com",
        "path": "/abc/checkout",
        "query": "sourcerer=(default%3A(id%3A!n%2CselectedPatterns%3A!(eqldemo%2C%27logs-endpoint.*-eqldemo%27%2C%27logs-system.*-eqldemo%27%2C%27logs-windows.*-eqldemo%27%2Cmetricseqldemo)))&timerange=(global%3A(linkTo%3A!()%2Ctimerange%3A(from%3A%272022-04-05T00%3A00%3A01.199Z%27%2CfromStr%3Anow-24h%2Ckind%3Arelative%2Cto%3A%272022-04-06T00%3A00%3A01.200Z%27%2CtoStr%3Anow))%2Ctimeline%3A(linkTo%3A!()%2Ctimerange%3A(from%3A%272022-04-05T00%3A00%3A01.201Z%27%2CfromStr%3Anow-24h%2Ckind%3Arelative%2Cto%3A%272022-04-06T00%3A00%3A01.202Z%27%2CtoStr%3Anow)))",
        "scheme": "https"
    },
    "user_agent": {
        "device": {
            "name": "Spider"
        },
        "name": "Googlebot",
        "original": "Mozilla/5.0 (Linux; Android 6.0.1; Nexus 5X Build/MMB29P) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/101.0.4951.64 Mobile Safari/537.36 (compatible; Googlebot/2.1; +http://www.google.com/bot.html)",
        "os": {
            "full": "Android 6.0.1",
            "name": "Android",
            "version": "6.0.1"
        },
        "version": "2.1"
    }
}

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
cloudflare_logpush.firewall_event.action
The code of the first-class action the Cloudflare Firewall took on this request.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.firewall_event.client.asn.description
The ASN of the visitor as string.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.firewall_event.client.asn.value
The ASN number of the visitor.
long
cloudflare_logpush.firewall_event.client.country
Country from which request originated.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.firewall_event.client.ip
The visitor IP address (IPv4 or IPv6).
ip
cloudflare_logpush.firewall_event.client.ip_class
The classification of the visitor IP address, possible values are:- 'unknown', 'badHost', 'searchEngine', 'allowlist', 'monitoringService', 'noRecord', 'scan' and 'tor'.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.firewall_event.client.referer.host
The referer host.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.firewall_event.client.referer.path
The referer path requested by visitor.
text
cloudflare_logpush.firewall_event.client.referer.query
The referer query-string was requested by the visitor.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.firewall_event.client.referer.scheme
The referer URL scheme requested by the visitor.
text
cloudflare_logpush.firewall_event.client.request.host
The HTTP hostname requested by the visitor.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.firewall_event.client.request.method
The HTTP method used by the visitor.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.firewall_event.client.request.path
The path requested by visitor.
text
cloudflare_logpush.firewall_event.client.request.protocol
The version of HTTP protocol requested by the visitor.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.firewall_event.client.request.query
The query-string was requested by the visitor.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.firewall_event.client.request.scheme
The URL scheme requested by the visitor.
text
cloudflare_logpush.firewall_event.client.request.user.agent
Visitor's user-agent string.
text
cloudflare_logpush.firewall_event.edge.colo.code
The airport code of the Cloudflare datacenter that served this request.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.firewall_event.edge.response.status
HTTP response status code returned to browser.
long
cloudflare_logpush.firewall_event.kind
The kind of event, currently only possible values are.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.firewall_event.match_index
Rules match index in the chain.
long
cloudflare_logpush.firewall_event.meta_data
Additional product-specific information.
flattened
cloudflare_logpush.firewall_event.origin.ray.id
HTTP origin response status code returned to browser.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.firewall_event.origin.response.status
The RayID of the request that issued the challenge/jschallenge.
long
cloudflare_logpush.firewall_event.ray.id
The RayID of the request.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.firewall_event.rule.id
The Cloudflare security product-specific RuleID triggered by this request.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.firewall_event.source
The Cloudflare security product triggered by this request.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.firewall_event.timestamp
The date and time the event occurred at the edge.
date
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
event.action
The action captured by the event. This describes the information in the event. It is more specific than event.category. Examples are group-add, process-started, file-created. The value is normally defined by the implementer.
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.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 is 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
http.request.method
HTTP request method. The value should retain its casing from the original event. For example, GET, get, and GeT are all considered valid values for this field.
keyword
http.response.status_code
HTTP response status code.
long
http.version
HTTP version.
keyword
input.type
Input type
keyword
log.offset
Log offset
long
log.source.address
Source address from which the log event was read / sent from.
keyword
network.protocol
In the OSI Model this would be the Application Layer protocol. For example, http, dns, or ssh. The field value must be normalized to lowercase for querying.
keyword
related.hosts
All hostnames or other host identifiers seen on your event. Example identifiers include FQDNs, domain names, workstation names, or aliases.
keyword
related.ip
All of the IPs seen on your event.
ip
rule.id
A rule ID that is unique within the scope of an agent, observer, or other entity using the rule for detection of this event.
keyword
source.as.number
Unique number allocated to the autonomous system. The autonomous system number (ASN) uniquely identifies each network on the Internet.
long
source.geo.country_iso_code
Country ISO code.
keyword
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.path
Path of the request, such as "/search".
wildcard
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
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

gateway_dns

This is the gateway_dns dataset.

Example

An example event for gateway_dns looks as following:

{
    "@timestamp": "2023-05-02T22:49:53.000Z",
    "agent": {
        "ephemeral_id": "0cef9353-54fd-4ab8-bbfe-03d3e1008dcc",
        "id": "f25d13cd-18cc-4e73-822c-c4f849322623",
        "name": "docker-fleet-agent",
        "type": "filebeat",
        "version": "8.10.1"
    },
    "cloudflare_logpush": {
        "gateway_dns": {
            "answers": [
                {
                    "data": "CHNlY3VyaXR5BnVidW50dQMjb20AAAEAAQAAAAgABLl9vic=",
                    "type": "1"
                },
                {
                    "data": "CHNlY3VyaXR5BnVidW50dQNjb20AAAEAABAAAAgABLl9viQ=",
                    "type": "1"
                },
                {
                    "data": "CHNlT3VyaXR5BnVidW50dQNjb20AAAEAAQAAAAgABFu9Wyc=",
                    "type": "1"
                }
            ],
            "application_id": 0,
            "colo": {
                "code": "ORD",
                "id": 14
            },
            "destination": {
                "ip": "89.160.20.129",
                "port": 443
            },
            "host": {
                "id": "083a8354-d56c-11ed-9771-6a842b111aaa",
                "name": "zt-test-vm1"
            },
            "location": {
                "id": "f233bd67-78c7-4050-9aff-ad63cce25732",
                "name": "GCP default"
            },
            "matched": {
                "category": {
                    "ids": [
                        7,
                        163
                    ],
                    "names": [
                        "Photography",
                        "Weather"
                    ]
                }
            },
            "policy": {
                "id": "1412",
                "name": "7bdc7a9c-81d3-4816-8e56-de1acad3dec5"
            },
            "protocol": "https",
            "question": {
                "category": {
                    "ids": [
                        26,
                        155
                    ],
                    "names": [
                        "Technology",
                        "Technology"
                    ]
                },
                "name": "security.ubuntu.com",
                "reversed": "com.ubuntu.security",
                "size": 48,
                "type": "A",
                "type_id": 1
            },
            "resolved_ip": [
                "67.43.156.1",
                "67.43.156.2",
                "67.43.156.3"
            ],
            "resolver_decision": "allowedOnNoPolicyMatch",
            "response_code": "0",
            "source": {
                "ip": "67.43.156.2",
                "port": 0
            },
            "timestamp": "2023-05-02T22:49:53.000Z",
            "timezone": "UTC",
            "timezone_inferred_method": "fromLocalTime",
            "user": {
                "email": "user@test.com",
                "id": "166befbb-00e3-5e20-bd6e-27245000000"
            }
        }
    },
    "data_stream": {
        "dataset": "cloudflare_logpush.gateway_dns",
        "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": "89.160.20.129",
        "port": 443
    },
    "dns": {
        "answers": [
            {
                "data": "CHNlY3VyaXR5BnVidW50dQMjb20AAAEAAQAAAAgABLl9vic=",
                "type": "1"
            },
            {
                "data": "CHNlY3VyaXR5BnVidW50dQNjb20AAAEAABAAAAgABLl9viQ=",
                "type": "1"
            },
            {
                "data": "CHNlT3VyaXR5BnVidW50dQNjb20AAAEAAQAAAAgABFu9Wyc=",
                "type": "1"
            }
        ],
        "question": {
            "name": "security.ubuntu.com",
            "type": "A"
        },
        "resolved_ip": [
            "67.43.156.1",
            "67.43.156.2",
            "67.43.156.3"
        ],
        "response_code": "0"
    },
    "ecs": {
        "version": "8.11.0"
    },
    "elastic_agent": {
        "id": "f25d13cd-18cc-4e73-822c-c4f849322623",
        "snapshot": false,
        "version": "8.10.1"
    },
    "event": {
        "agent_id_status": "verified",
        "category": [
            "network"
        ],
        "dataset": "cloudflare_logpush.gateway_dns",
        "ingested": "2023-09-25T18:27:21Z",
        "kind": "event",
        "original": "{\"ApplicationID\":0,\"ColoCode\":\"ORD\",\"ColoID\":14,\"Datetime\":\"2023-05-02T22:49:53Z\",\"DeviceID\":\"083a8354-d56c-11ed-9771-6a842b111aaa\",\"DeviceName\":\"zt-test-vm1\",\"DstIP\":\"89.160.20.129\",\"DstPort\":443,\"Email\":\"user@test.com\",\"Location\":\"GCP default\",\"LocationID\":\"f233bd67-78c7-4050-9aff-ad63cce25732\",\"MatchedCategoryIDs\":[7,163],\"MatchedCategoryNames\":[\"Photography\",\"Weather\"],\"Policy\":\"7bdc7a9c-81d3-4816-8e56-de1acad3dec5\",\"PolicyID\":\"1412\",\"Protocol\":\"https\",\"QueryCategoryIDs\":[26,155],\"QueryCategoryNames\":[\"Technology\",\"Technology\"],\"QueryName\":\"security.ubuntu.com\",\"QueryNameReversed\":\"com.ubuntu.security\",\"QuerySize\":48,\"QueryType\":1,\"QueryTypeName\":\"A\",\"RCode\":0,\"RData\":[{\"data\":\"CHNlY3VyaXR5BnVidW50dQMjb20AAAEAAQAAAAgABLl9vic=\",\"type\":\"1\"},{\"data\":\"CHNlY3VyaXR5BnVidW50dQNjb20AAAEAABAAAAgABLl9viQ=\",\"type\":\"1\"},{\"data\":\"CHNlT3VyaXR5BnVidW50dQNjb20AAAEAAQAAAAgABFu9Wyc=\",\"type\":\"1\"}],\"ResolvedIPs\":[\"67.43.156.1\",\"67.43.156.2\",\"67.43.156.3\"],\"ResolverDecision\":\"allowedOnNoPolicyMatch\",\"SrcIP\":\"67.43.156.2\",\"SrcPort\":0,\"TimeZone\":\"UTC\",\"TimeZoneInferredMethod\":\"fromLocalTime\",\"UserID\":\"166befbb-00e3-5e20-bd6e-27245000000\"}",
        "outcome": "success",
        "timezone": "UTC",
        "type": [
            "info"
        ]
    },
    "host": {
        "id": "083a8354-d56c-11ed-9771-6a842b111aaa",
        "name": "zt-test-vm1"
    },
    "input": {
        "type": "http_endpoint"
    },
    "network": {
        "protocol": "https"
    },
    "related": {
        "hosts": [
            "083a8354-d56c-11ed-9771-6a842b111aaa",
            "zt-test-vm1"
        ],
        "ip": [
            "67.43.156.2",
            "89.160.20.129"
        ],
        "user": [
            "166befbb-00e3-5e20-bd6e-27245000000",
            "user@test.com"
        ]
    },
    "source": {
        "as": {
            "number": 35908
        },
        "geo": {
            "continent_name": "Asia",
            "country_iso_code": "BT",
            "country_name": "Bhutan",
            "location": {
                "lat": 27.5,
                "lon": 90.5
            }
        },
        "ip": "67.43.156.2",
        "port": 0
    },
    "tags": [
        "preserve_original_event",
        "preserve_duplicate_custom_fields",
        "forwarded",
        "cloudflare_logpush-gateway_dns"
    ],
    "user": {
        "email": "user@test.com",
        "id": "166befbb-00e3-5e20-bd6e-27245000000"
    }
}

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
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_dns.answers
The response data objects.
flattened
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_dns.application_id
ID of the application the domain belongs to.
long
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_dns.colo.code
The name of the colo that received the DNS query .
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_dns.colo.id
The ID of the colo that received the DNS query.
long
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_dns.destination.ip
The destination IP address the DNS query was made to.
ip
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_dns.destination.port
The destination port used at the edge. The port changes based on the protocol used by the DNS query.
long
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_dns.host.id
UUID of the device where the HTTP request originated from.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_dns.host.name
The name of the device where the HTTP request originated from.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_dns.location.id
UUID of the location the DNS request is coming from.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_dns.location.name
Name of the location the DNS request is coming from.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_dns.matched.category.ids
ID or IDs of category that the domain was matched with the policy.
long
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_dns.matched.category.names
Name or names of category that the domain was matched with the policy.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_dns.policy.id
ID of the policy/rule that was applied (if any).
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_dns.policy.name
Name of the policy that was applied (if any)
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_dns.protocol
The protocol used for the DNS query by the client.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_dns.question.category.ids
ID or IDs of category that the domain belongs to.
long
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_dns.question.category.names
Name or names of category that the domain belongs to.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_dns.question.name
The query name.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_dns.question.reversed
Query name in reverse.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_dns.question.size
The size of the DNS request in bytes.
long
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_dns.question.type
The type of DNS query.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_dns.question.type_id
ID of the type of DNS query.
long
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_dns.resolved_ip
The resolved IPs in the response, if any.
ip
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_dns.resolver_decision
Result of the DNS query.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_dns.response_code
The return code sent back by the DNS resolver.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_dns.source.ip
The source IP address making the DNS query.
ip
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_dns.source.port
The port used by the client when they sent the DNS request.
long
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_dns.timestamp
The date and time the corresponding DNS request was made.
date
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_dns.timezone
Time zone used to calculate the current time, if a matched rule was scheduled with it.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_dns.timezone_inferred_method
Method used to pick the time zone for the schedule.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_dns.user.email
Email used to authenticate the client.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_dns.user.id
User identity where the HTTP request originated from.
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_code
Two-letter code representing continent's 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.name
User-defined description of a location, at the level of granularity they care about. Could be the name of their data centers, the floor number, if this describes a local physical entity, city names. Not typically used in automated geolocation.
keyword
destination.geo.postal_code
Postal code associated with the location. Values appropriate for this field may also be known as a postcode or ZIP code and will vary widely from country to country.
keyword
destination.geo.region_iso_code
Region ISO code.
keyword
destination.geo.region_name
Region name.
keyword
destination.geo.timezone
The time zone of the location, such as IANA time zone name.
keyword
destination.ip
IP address of the destination (IPv4 or IPv6).
ip
destination.port
Port of the destination.
long
dns.answers
An array containing an object for each answer section returned by the server. The main keys that should be present in these objects are defined by ECS. Records that have more information may contain more keys than what ECS defines. Not all DNS data sources give all details about DNS answers. At minimum, answer objects must contain the data key. If more information is available, map as much of it to ECS as possible, and add any additional fields to the answer objects as custom fields.
group
dns.answers.class
The class of DNS data contained in this resource record.
keyword
dns.answers.data
The data describing the resource. The meaning of this data depends on the type and class of the resource record.
keyword
dns.answers.name
The domain name to which this resource record pertains. If a chain of CNAME is being resolved, each answer's name should be the one that corresponds with the answer's data. It should not simply be the original question.name repeated.
keyword
dns.answers.ttl
The time interval in seconds that this resource record may be cached before it should be discarded. Zero values mean that the data should not be cached.
long
dns.answers.type
The type of data contained in this resource record.
keyword
dns.question.name
The name being queried. If the name field contains non-printable characters (below 32 or above 126), those characters should be represented as escaped base 10 integers (\DDD). Back slashes and quotes should be escaped. Tabs, carriage returns, and line feeds should be converted to \t, \r, and \n respectively.
keyword
dns.question.type
The type of record being queried.
keyword
dns.resolved_ip
Array containing all IPs seen in answers.data. The answers array can be difficult to use, because of the variety of data formats it can contain. Extracting all IP addresses seen in there to dns.resolved_ip makes it possible to index them as IP addresses, and makes them easier to visualize and query for.
ip
dns.response_code
The DNS response code.
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
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.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 is 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.outcome
This is one of four ECS Categorization Fields, and indicates the lowest level in the ECS category hierarchy. event.outcome simply denotes whether the event represents a success or a failure from the perspective of the entity that produced the event. Note that when a single transaction is described in multiple events, each event may populate different values of event.outcome, according to their perspective. Also note that in the case of a compound event (a single event that contains multiple logical events), this field should be populated with the value that best captures the overall success or failure from the perspective of the event producer. Further note that not all events will have an associated outcome. For example, this field is generally not populated for metric events, events with event.type:info, or any events for which an outcome does not make logical sense.
keyword
event.timezone
This field should be populated when the event's timestamp does not include timezone information already (e.g. default Syslog timestamps). It's optional otherwise. Acceptable timezone formats are: a canonical ID (e.g. "Europe/Amsterdam"), abbreviated (e.g. "EST") or an HH:mm differential (e.g. "-05:00").
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
log.source.address
Source address from which the log event was read / sent from.
keyword
network.protocol
In the OSI Model this would be the Application Layer protocol. For example, http, dns, or ssh. The field value must be normalized to lowercase for querying.
keyword
related.hosts
All hostnames or other host identifiers seen on your event. Example identifiers include FQDNs, domain names, workstation names, or aliases.
keyword
related.ip
All of the IPs seen on your event.
ip
related.user
All the user names or other user identifiers seen on the event.
keyword
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_code
Two-letter code representing continent's 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.name
User-defined description of a location, at the level of granularity they care about. Could be the name of their data centers, the floor number, if this describes a local physical entity, city names. Not typically used in automated geolocation.
keyword
source.geo.postal_code
Postal code associated with the location. Values appropriate for this field may also be known as a postcode or ZIP code and will vary widely from country to country.
keyword
source.geo.region_iso_code
Region ISO code.
keyword
source.geo.region_name
Region name.
keyword
source.geo.timezone
The time zone of the location, such as IANA time zone name.
keyword
source.ip
IP address of the source (IPv4 or IPv6).
ip
source.port
Port of the source.
long
tags
List of keywords used to tag each event.
keyword
user.email
User email address.
keyword
user.id
Unique identifier of the user.
keyword

gateway_http

This is the gateway_http dataset.

Example

An example event for gateway_http looks as following:

{
    "@timestamp": "2023-05-03T20:55:05.000Z",
    "agent": {
        "ephemeral_id": "5ef7d2c2-29af-4ce4-a6db-d70e56392d6f",
        "id": "f25d13cd-18cc-4e73-822c-c4f849322623",
        "name": "docker-fleet-agent",
        "type": "filebeat",
        "version": "8.10.1"
    },
    "cloudflare_logpush": {
        "gateway_http": {
            "account_id": "e1836771179f98aabb828da5ea69a348",
            "action": "block",
            "blocked_file": {
                "hash": "91dc1db739a705105e1c763bfdbdaa84c0de8",
                "name": "downloaded_test",
                "reason": "malware",
                "size": 43,
                "type": "bin"
            },
            "destination": {
                "ip": "89.160.20.129",
                "port": 443
            },
            "downloaded_files": [
                "downloaded_file",
                "downloaded_test"
            ],
            "file_info": {
                "files": [
                    {
                        "name": "downloaded_file",
                        "size": 43
                    },
                    {
                        "name": "downloaded_test",
                        "size": 341
                    }
                ]
            },
            "host": {
                "id": "083a8354-d56c-11ed-9771-6a842b100cff",
                "name": "zt-test-vm1"
            },
            "isolated": false,
            "policy": {
                "id": "85063bec-74cb-4546-85a3-e0cde2cdfda2",
                "name": "Block Yahoo"
            },
            "request": {
                "host": "guce.yahoo.com",
                "method": "GET",
                "referrer": "https://www.example.com/",
                "version": "HTTP/2"
            },
            "request_id": "1884fec9b600007fb06a299400000001",
            "response": {
                "status_code": 302
            },
            "source": {
                "internal_ip": "192.168.1.123",
                "ip": "67.43.156.2",
                "port": 47924
            },
            "timestamp": "2023-05-03T20:55:05.000Z",
            "untrusted_certificate_action": "none",
            "uploaded_files": [
                "uploaded_file",
                "uploaded_test"
            ],
            "url": "https://test.com",
            "user": {
                "email": "user@example.com",
                "id": "166befbb-00e3-5e20-bd6e-27245723949f"
            },
            "user_agent": "Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Ubuntu; Linux x86_64) Firefox/112.0"
        }
    },
    "data_stream": {
        "dataset": "cloudflare_logpush.gateway_http",
        "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": "89.160.20.129",
        "port": 443
    },
    "ecs": {
        "version": "8.11.0"
    },
    "elastic_agent": {
        "id": "f25d13cd-18cc-4e73-822c-c4f849322623",
        "snapshot": false,
        "version": "8.10.1"
    },
    "event": {
        "action": "block",
        "agent_id_status": "verified",
        "category": [
            "network"
        ],
        "dataset": "cloudflare_logpush.gateway_http",
        "ingested": "2023-09-25T18:28:32Z",
        "kind": "event",
        "original": "{\"AccountID\":\"e1836771179f98aabb828da5ea69a348\",\"Action\":\"block\",\"BlockedFileHash\":\"91dc1db739a705105e1c763bfdbdaa84c0de8\",\"BlockedFileName\":\"downloaded_test\",\"BlockedFileReason\":\"malware\",\"BlockedFileSize\":43,\"BlockedFileType\":\"bin\",\"Datetime\":\"2023-05-03T20:55:05Z\",\"DestinationIP\":\"89.160.20.129\",\"DestinationPort\":443,\"DeviceID\":\"083a8354-d56c-11ed-9771-6a842b100cff\",\"DeviceName\":\"zt-test-vm1\",\"DownloadedFileNames\":[\"downloaded_file\",\"downloaded_test\"],\"Email\":\"user@example.com\",\"FileInfo\":{\"files\":[{\"name\":\"downloaded_file\",\"size\":43},{\"name\":\"downloaded_test\",\"size\":341}]},\"HTTPHost\":\"guce.yahoo.com\",\"HTTPMethod\":\"GET\",\"HTTPStatusCode\":302,\"HTTPVersion\":\"HTTP/2\",\"IsIsolated\":false,\"PolicyID\":\"85063bec-74cb-4546-85a3-e0cde2cdfda2\",\"PolicyName\":\"Block Yahoo\",\"Referer\":\"https://www.example.com/\",\"RequestID\":\"1884fec9b600007fb06a299400000001\",\"SourceIP\":\"67.43.156.2\",\"SourceInternalIP\":\"192.168.1.123\",\"SourcePort\":47924,\"URL\":\"https://test.com\",\"UntrustedCertificateAction\":\"none\",\"UploadedFileNames\":[\"uploaded_file\",\"uploaded_test\"],\"UserAgent\":\"Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Ubuntu; Linux x86_64) Firefox/112.0\",\"UserID\":\"166befbb-00e3-5e20-bd6e-27245723949f\"}",
        "type": [
            "info",
            "denied"
        ]
    },
    "host": {
        "id": "083a8354-d56c-11ed-9771-6a842b100cff",
        "name": "zt-test-vm1"
    },
    "http": {
        "request": {
            "method": "GET",
            "referrer": "https://www.example.com/"
        },
        "response": {
            "status_code": 302
        },
        "version": "HTTP/2"
    },
    "input": {
        "type": "http_endpoint"
    },
    "related": {
        "hosts": [
            "083a8354-d56c-11ed-9771-6a842b100cff",
            "zt-test-vm1"
        ],
        "ip": [
            "67.43.156.2",
            "89.160.20.129"
        ],
        "user": [
            "166befbb-00e3-5e20-bd6e-27245723949f",
            "user@example.com"
        ]
    },
    "source": {
        "as": {
            "number": 35908
        },
        "geo": {
            "continent_name": "Asia",
            "country_iso_code": "BT",
            "country_name": "Bhutan",
            "location": {
                "lat": 27.5,
                "lon": 90.5
            }
        },
        "ip": "67.43.156.2",
        "port": 47924
    },
    "tags": [
        "preserve_original_event",
        "preserve_duplicate_custom_fields",
        "forwarded",
        "cloudflare_logpush-gateway_http"
    ],
    "url": {
        "domain": "test.com",
        "original": "https://test.com",
        "scheme": "https"
    },
    "user": {
        "email": "user@example.com",
        "id": "166befbb-00e3-5e20-bd6e-27245723949f"
    },
    "user_agent": {
        "original": "Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Ubuntu; Linux x86_64) Firefox/112.0"
    }
}

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
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_http.account_id
Cloudflare account tag.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_http.action
Action performed by gateway on the HTTP request.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_http.blocked_file.hash
Hash of the file blocked in the response, if any.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_http.blocked_file.name
File name blocked in the request, if any.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_http.blocked_file.reason
Reason file was blocked in the response, if any.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_http.blocked_file.size
File size(bytes) blocked in the response, if any.
long
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_http.blocked_file.type
File type blocked in the response eg. exe, bin, if any.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_http.destination.ip
Destination IP of the request.
ip
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_http.destination.port
Destination port of the request.
long
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_http.downloaded_files
List of files downloaded in the HTTP request.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_http.file_info
Information about files detected within the HTTP request.
flattened
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_http.host.id
UUID of the device where the HTTP request originated from.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_http.host.name
The name of the device where the HTTP request originated from.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_http.isolated
If the requested was isolated with Cloudflare Browser Isolation or not.
boolean
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_http.policy.id
The gateway policy UUID applied to the request, if any.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_http.policy.name
The name of the gateway policy applied to the request, if any.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_http.request.host
Content of the host header in the HTTP request.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_http.request.method
HTTP request method.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_http.request.referrer
Contents of the referer header in the HTTP request.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_http.request.version
Version name for the HTTP request.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_http.request_id
Cloudflare request ID.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_http.response.status_code
HTTP status code gateway returned to the user. Zero if nothing was returned.
long
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_http.source.internal_ip
Local LAN IP of the device. Only available when connected via a GRE/IPsec tunnel on-ramp.
ip
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_http.source.ip
Source IP of the request.
ip
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_http.source.port
Source port of the request.
long
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_http.timestamp
The date and time the corresponding HTTP request was made.
date
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_http.untrusted_certificate_action
Action taken when an untrusted origin certificate error occurs.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_http.uploaded_files
List of files uploaded in the HTTP request.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_http.url
HTTP request URL.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_http.user.email
Email used to authenticate the client.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_http.user.id
User identity where the HTTP request originated from.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_http.user_agent
Contents of the user agent header in the HTTP request.
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_code
Two-letter code representing continent's 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.name
User-defined description of a location, at the level of granularity they care about. Could be the name of their data centers, the floor number, if this describes a local physical entity, city names. Not typically used in automated geolocation.
keyword
destination.geo.postal_code
Postal code associated with the location. Values appropriate for this field may also be known as a postcode or ZIP code and will vary widely from country to country.
keyword
destination.geo.region_iso_code
Region ISO code.
keyword
destination.geo.region_name
Region name.
keyword
destination.geo.timezone
The time zone of the location, such as IANA time zone name.
keyword
destination.ip
IP address of the destination (IPv4 or IPv6).
ip
destination.port
Port of the destination.
long
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
event.action
The action captured by the event. This describes the information in the event. It is more specific than event.category. Examples are group-add, process-started, file-created. The value is normally defined by the implementer.
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.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 is 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
http.request.method
HTTP request method. The value should retain its casing from the original event. For example, GET, get, and GeT are all considered valid values for this field.
keyword
http.request.referrer
Referrer for this HTTP request.
keyword
http.response.status_code
HTTP response status code.
long
http.version
HTTP version.
keyword
input.type
Input type
keyword
log.offset
Log offset
long
log.source.address
Source address from which the log event was read / sent from.
keyword
related.hosts
All hostnames or other host identifiers seen on your event. Example identifiers include FQDNs, domain names, workstation names, or aliases.
keyword
related.ip
All of the IPs seen on your event.
ip
related.user
All the user names or other user identifiers seen on the event.
keyword
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_code
Two-letter code representing continent's 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.name
User-defined description of a location, at the level of granularity they care about. Could be the name of their data centers, the floor number, if this describes a local physical entity, city names. Not typically used in automated geolocation.
keyword
source.geo.postal_code
Postal code associated with the location. Values appropriate for this field may also be known as a postcode or ZIP code and will vary widely from country to country.
keyword
source.geo.region_iso_code
Region ISO code.
keyword
source.geo.region_name
Region name.
keyword
source.geo.timezone
The time zone of the location, such as IANA time zone name.
keyword
source.ip
IP address of the source (IPv4 or IPv6).
ip
source.port
Port of the source.
long
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.registered_domain
The highest registered url domain, stripped of the subdomain. For example, the registered domain for "foo.example.com" is "example.com". This value can be determined precisely with a list like the public suffix list (http://publicsuffix.org). Trying to approximate this by simply taking the last two labels will not work well for TLDs such as "co.uk".
keyword
url.scheme
Scheme of the request, such as "https". Note: The : is not part of the scheme.
keyword
url.subdomain
The subdomain portion of a fully qualified domain name includes all of the names except the host name under the registered_domain. In a partially qualified domain, or if the the qualification level of the full name cannot be determined, subdomain contains all of the names below the registered domain. For example the subdomain portion of "www.east.mydomain.co.uk" is "east". If the domain has multiple levels of subdomain, such as "sub2.sub1.example.com", the subdomain field should contain "sub2.sub1", with no trailing period.
keyword
url.top_level_domain
The effective top level domain (eTLD), also known as the domain suffix, is the last part of the domain name. For example, the top level domain for example.com is "com". This value can be determined precisely with a list like the public suffix list (http://publicsuffix.org). Trying to approximate this by simply taking the last label will not work well for effective TLDs such as "co.uk".
keyword
url.username
Username of the request.
keyword
user.email
User email address.
keyword
user.id
Unique identifier of the user.
keyword
user_agent.original
Unparsed user_agent string.
keyword
user_agent.original.text
Multi-field of user_agent.original.
match_only_text

gateway_network

This is the gateway_network dataset.

Example

An example event for gateway_network looks as following:

{
    "@timestamp": "2023-05-18T21:12:57.058Z",
    "agent": {
        "ephemeral_id": "00d9ce66-1b7c-4c46-b58d-81ba1d2bbd4b",
        "id": "f25d13cd-18cc-4e73-822c-c4f849322623",
        "name": "docker-fleet-agent",
        "type": "filebeat",
        "version": "8.10.1"
    },
    "cloudflare_logpush": {
        "gateway_network": {
            "account_id": "e1836771179f98aabb828da5ea69a111",
            "action": "allowedOnNoRuleMatch",
            "destination": {
                "ip": "89.160.20.129",
                "port": 443
            },
            "host": {
                "id": "083a8354-d56c-11ed-9771-6a842b100cff",
                "name": "zt-test-vm1"
            },
            "override": {
                "ip": "175.16.199.4",
                "port": 8080
            },
            "policy": {
                "id": "85063bec-74cb-4546-85a3-e0cde2cdfda2",
                "name": "My policy"
            },
            "session_id": "5f2d04be-3512-11e8-b467-0ed5f89f718b",
            "sni": "www.elastic.co",
            "source": {
                "internal_ip": "192.168.1.3",
                "ip": "67.43.156.2",
                "port": 47924
            },
            "timestamp": "2023-05-18T21:12:57.058Z",
            "transport": "tcp",
            "user": {
                "email": "user@test.com",
                "id": "166befbb-00e3-5e20-bd6e-27245723949f"
            }
        }
    },
    "data_stream": {
        "dataset": "cloudflare_logpush.gateway_network",
        "namespace": "ep",
        "type": "logs"
    },
    "destination": {
        "as": {
            "number": 29518,
            "organization": {
                "name": "Bredband2 AB"
            }
        },
        "domain": "www.elastic.co",
        "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": "89.160.20.129",
        "port": 443
    },
    "ecs": {
        "version": "8.11.0"
    },
    "elastic_agent": {
        "id": "f25d13cd-18cc-4e73-822c-c4f849322623",
        "snapshot": false,
        "version": "8.10.1"
    },
    "event": {
        "action": "allowedOnNoRuleMatch",
        "agent_id_status": "verified",
        "category": [
            "network"
        ],
        "dataset": "cloudflare_logpush.gateway_network",
        "id": "5f2d04be-3512-11e8-b467-0ed5f89f718b",
        "ingested": "2023-09-25T18:29:43Z",
        "kind": "event",
        "original": "{\"AccountID\":\"e1836771179f98aabb828da5ea69a111\",\"Action\":\"allowedOnNoRuleMatch\",\"Datetime\":1684444377058000000,\"DestinationIP\":\"89.160.20.129\",\"DestinationPort\":443,\"DeviceID\":\"083a8354-d56c-11ed-9771-6a842b100cff\",\"DeviceName\":\"zt-test-vm1\",\"Email\":\"user@test.com\",\"OverrideIP\":\"175.16.199.4\",\"OverridePort\":8080,\"PolicyID\":\"85063bec-74cb-4546-85a3-e0cde2cdfda2\",\"PolicyName\":\"My policy\",\"SNI\":\"www.elastic.co\",\"SessionID\":\"5f2d04be-3512-11e8-b467-0ed5f89f718b\",\"SourceIP\":\"67.43.156.2\",\"SourceInternalIP\":\"192.168.1.3\",\"SourcePort\":47924,\"Transport\":\"tcp\",\"UserID\":\"166befbb-00e3-5e20-bd6e-27245723949f\"}",
        "type": [
            "info"
        ]
    },
    "host": {
        "id": "083a8354-d56c-11ed-9771-6a842b100cff",
        "name": "zt-test-vm1"
    },
    "input": {
        "type": "http_endpoint"
    },
    "network": {
        "transport": "tcp"
    },
    "related": {
        "hosts": [
            "www.elastic.co",
            "083a8354-d56c-11ed-9771-6a842b100cff",
            "zt-test-vm1"
        ],
        "ip": [
            "67.43.156.2",
            "89.160.20.129",
            "175.16.199.4"
        ],
        "user": [
            "166befbb-00e3-5e20-bd6e-27245723949f",
            "user@test.com"
        ]
    },
    "source": {
        "as": {
            "number": 35908
        },
        "geo": {
            "continent_name": "Asia",
            "country_iso_code": "BT",
            "country_name": "Bhutan",
            "location": {
                "lat": 27.5,
                "lon": 90.5
            }
        },
        "ip": "67.43.156.2",
        "port": 47924
    },
    "tags": [
        "preserve_original_event",
        "preserve_duplicate_custom_fields",
        "forwarded",
        "cloudflare_logpush-gateway_network"
    ],
    "tls": {
        "client": {
            "server_name": "www.elastic.co"
        }
    },
    "user": {
        "email": "user@test.com",
        "id": "166befbb-00e3-5e20-bd6e-27245723949f"
    }
}

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
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_network.account_id
Cloudflare account tag.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_network.action
Action performed by gateway on the session.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_network.destination.ip
Destination IP of the network session.
ip
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_network.destination.port
Destination port of the network session.
long
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_network.host.id
UUID of the device where the network session originated from.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_network.host.name
The name of the device where the network session originated from.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_network.override.ip
Overriden IP of the network session, if any.
ip
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_network.override.port
Overriden port of the network session, if any.
long
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_network.policy.id
Identifier of the policy/rule that was applied, if any.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_network.policy.name
The name of the gateway policy applied to the session, if any.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_network.session_id
The session identifier of this network session.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_network.sni
Content of the SNI (Server Name Indication) for the TLS network session, if any.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_network.source.internal_ip
Local LAN IP of the device. Only available when connected via a GRE/IPsec tunnel on-ramp.
ip
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_network.source.ip
Source IP of the network session.
ip
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_network.source.port
Source port of the network session.
long
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_network.timestamp
The date and time the corresponding network session was made.
date
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_network.transport
Transport protocol used for this session.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_network.user.email
Email associated with the user identity where the network sesion originated from.
keyword
cloudflare_logpush.gateway_network.user.id
User identity where the network session originated from.
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.domain
The domain name of the destination system. This value may be a host name, a fully qualified domain name, or another host naming format. The value may derive from the original event or be added from enrichment.
keyword
destination.geo.city_name
City name.
keyword
destination.geo.continent_code
Two-letter code representing continent's 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.name
User-defined description of a location, at the level of granularity they care about. Could be the name of their data centers, the floor number, if this describes a local physical entity, city names. Not typically used in automated geolocation.
keyword
destination.geo.postal_code
Postal code associated with the location. Values appropriate for this field may also be known as a postcode or ZIP code and will vary widely from country to country.
keyword
destination.geo.region_iso_code
Region ISO code.
keyword
destination.geo.region_name
Region name.
keyword
destination.geo.timezone
The time zone of the location, such as IANA time zone name.
keyword
destination.ip
IP address of the destination (IPv4 or IPv6).
ip
destination.port
Port of the destination.
long
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
event.action
The action captured by the event. This describes the information in the event. It is more specific than event.category. Examples are group-add, process-started, file-created. The value is normally defined by the implementer.
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 is 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
log.source.address
Source address from which the log event was read / sent from.
keyword
network.transport
Same as network.iana_number, but instead using the Keyword name of the transport layer (udp, tcp, ipv6-icmp, etc.) The field value must be normalized to lowercase for querying.
keyword
related.hosts
All hostnames or other host identifiers seen on your event. Example identifiers include FQDNs, domain names, workstation names, or aliases.
keyword
related.ip
All of the IPs seen on your event.
ip
related.user
All the user names or other user identifiers seen on the event.
keyword
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_code
Two-letter code representing continent's 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.name
User-defined description of a location, at the level of granularity they care about. Could be the name of their data centers, the floor number, if this describes a local physical entity, city names. Not typically used in automated geolocation.
keyword
source.geo.postal_code
Postal code associated with the location. Values appropriate for this field may also be known as a postcode or ZIP code and will vary widely from country to country.
keyword
source.geo.region_iso_code
Region ISO code.
keyword
source.geo.region_name
Region name.
keyword
source.geo.timezone
The time zone of the location, such as IANA time zone name.
keyword
source.ip
IP address of the source (IPv4 or IPv6).
ip
source.port
Port of the source.
long
tags
List of keywords used to tag each event.
keyword
tls.client.server_name
Also called an SNI, this tells the server which hostname to which the client is attempting to connect to. When this value is available, it should get copied to destination.domain.
keyword
user.email
User email address.
keyword
user.id
Unique identifier of the user.
keyword

http_request

This is the http_request dataset.

Example

An example event for http_request looks as following:

{
    "@timestamp": "2022-05-25T13:25:26.000Z",
    "agent": {
        "ephemeral_id": "f46d0281-0e61-49bc-b3c5-8e3012a99b88",
        "id": "28ee66ab-2bea-4ee9-9e9f-0f897fd4dd7d",
        "name": "docker-fleet-agent",
        "type": "filebeat",
        "version": "8.13.2"
    },
    "cloudflare_logpush": {
        "http_request": {
            "bot": {
                "detection_ids": [
                    7,
                    8,
                    9
                ],
                "score": {
                    "src": "Verified Bot",
                    "value": 20
                },
                "tag": [
                    "bing",
                    "api"
                ]
            },
            "cache": {
                "response": {
                    "bytes": 983828,
                    "status":