Write a Chain Rule
This topic has information about Chain rules and how to create them in the CSE UI.
If you are new to writing rules, see About CSE Rules for information about rule expressions and other rule options.
About Chain rules
A Chain rule is similar to a Threshold rule. A Threshold rule fires when one rule expression is matched at least a certain number times during a specified length of time. In a Chain rule you configure two more rule expressions, and for each expression, the number of matches that are required for the rule to fire a Signal. The interval you define within which the matches must occur applies to all of the rule expressions in the rule.
Create a Chain rule
Choose Rules from the Content menu.
On the Create a Rule page, click Create in the Chain card.
In the rules editor:
Name. Enter a name for the rule. Signals fired by the rule will have this name.
Enabled. By default the rule will be enabled. It's good practice to use the slider to disable the rule so that it won’t be applied to incoming Records until you’ve tested it.
Configure “If Triggered” settings
When ... Records match the expression. Enter two or more rule expressions. For each, select the number of matches that are required.
Grouped by. By default, a chain rule implicitly groups by the entity field you’ll select below when configuring the Then Create a Signal options. You can select additional “group by” fields with the matches grouped by option, so that a Signal is only created if the count for the group is above the threshold count specified above.
in ... order. Choose either:
- any if matches can occur in any order.
- exact if matches must occur in the same order as you have ordered the rule expressions. If you choose this option, you can only have two rule expressions.
Test your rule expression
After creating a rule expression, you can test it against existing Records in CSE.
- Click Test Rule above the rule expression.
- The If Triggered section expands, and CSE searches for Records that match the rule expression. If there are no matching Records, you'll see a There aren't any matches for the expression message.
- If no matches were returned, try changing the time range.
If you use the Test Rule feature on a rule that has one or more Rule Tuning Expressions, you can test it without the tuning expressions, or with selected tuning expressions.
Configure “Then Create a Signal” settings
- On Entity. Define the Entity field—an IP address, hostname, or username—in the Record that the resulting Signal should be associated with. (In CSE, an Insight is a set of Signals with the same Entity field.) Select a value from the pull-down list.
- with the summary.
- with the description. Enter a description for the Signal. The Signal description should be a good indication of what the rule looks for.
- with a severity of. Severity is an estimate of the criticality of the detected activity, from 1 (lowest) to 10 (highest).
- with tags. If desired, you can add metadata tags to your rule. Tags are useful for adding context to items like Rules, Insights, Signals, Entities. You can also search for and filter items by tag. For more information, see Using Tags with Insights, Signals, Entities, and Rules.
Save as prototype
If you are not sure that your rule is ready for prime time, you can save it as a prototype. A prototype rule generates Signals, but those Signals won't contribute to Insights. (Signals generated by a prototype rule do not increment the rule's On Entity entity's Activity Score.) Running the rule as a prototype for a while allows you to determine whether the rule is too noisy and fires too many Signals.
To make the rule a prototype, click the box next to Save this rule as a prototype. When you are satisfied with the rule's behavior you can uncheck the box.
Duplicate Signals?
If you determine that a Threshold, Chain, or Aggregation rule is firing identical Signals for the same conditions during the same time interval, there’s a likely explanation. This situation can arise due to how these rule types are processed: they are evaluated differently than Match rules, because they support time duration conditions. For example, a Threshold rule fires when its rule expression is matched at least a certain number times during a specified length of time.
To successfully apply a rule across a sliding time window, CSE evaluates Records across overlapping time spans. Consider a rule that requires three matches across five minutes. With non-overlapping windows, we could detect one match at the end of one time window, and two more in the following time window. This should cause the rule to fire a Signal, but would not, because the required five minute span is split between two evaluation windows. Overlapping evaluation windows solves this problem. In some cases though, it can also result in duplicate Signals. However, as long as you don’t run the rule as a prototype, duplicate Signals will be suppressed, as described in Automatic suppression of redundant Signals.