Provided by: sec_2.7.12-1_all bug

NAME

       sec - simple event correlator

SYNOPSIS

       sec    [--conf=<file pattern> ...]
              [--input=<file pattern>[=<context>] ...]
              [--input-timeout=<input timeout>]
              [--timeout-script=<timeout script>]
              [--reopen-timeout=<reopen timeout>]
              [--check-timeout=<check timeout>]
              [--poll-timeout=<poll timeout>]
              [--socket-timeout=<socket timeout>]
              [--blocksize=<io block size>]
              [--bufsize=<input buffer size>]
              [--evstoresize=<event store size>]
              [--cleantime=<clean time>]
              [--log=<logfile>]
              [--syslog=<facility>]
              [--debug=<debuglevel>]
              [--pid=<pidfile>]
              [--dump=<dumpfile>]
              [--user=<username>]
              [--group=<groupname> ...]
              [--umask=<mode>]
              [--dumpfts | --nodumpfts]
              [--quoting | --noquoting]
              [--tail | --notail]
              [--fromstart | --nofromstart]
              [--detach | --nodetach]
              [--jointbuf | --nojointbuf]
              [--keepopen | --nokeepopen]
              [--rwfifo | --norwfifo]
              [--childterm | --nochildterm]
              [--intevents | --nointevents]
              [--intcontexts | --nointcontexts]
              [--testonly | --notestonly]
              [--help] [-?]
              [--version]

DESCRIPTION

       SEC  is an event correlation tool for advanced event processing which can be harnessed for
       event log monitoring, for network and security management, for fraud  detection,  and  for
       any other task which involves event correlation.  Event correlation is a procedure where a
       stream of events is processed, in order to detect (and act on) certain event  groups  that
       occur  within  predefined time windows. Unlike many other event correlation products which
       are heavyweight solutions, SEC is a lightweight and platform-independent event  correlator
       which  runs  as  a  single  process. The user can start it as a daemon, employ it in shell
       pipelines, execute it interactively in a terminal, run many SEC  processes  simultaneously
       for different tasks, and use it in a wide variety of other ways.

       SEC  reads  lines  from  files,  named  pipes,  or  standard input, matches the lines with
       patterns (regular expressions, Perl subroutines, etc.)  for recognizing input events,  and
       correlates  events according to the rules in its configuration file(s).  Rules are matched
       against input in the order they are given in the configuration file.  If there are two  or
       more  configuration  files, rule sequence from every file is matched against input (unless
       explicitly specified otherwise).  SEC can produce output by  executing  external  programs
       (e.g.,  snmptrap(1) or mail(1)), by writing to files, by sending data to TCP and UDP based
       servers, by calling precompiled Perl subroutines, etc.

       SEC can be run in various ways. For example, the following command line  starts  it  as  a
       daemon,  in  order  to  monitor  events appended to the /var/log/messages syslog file with
       rules from /etc/sec/syslog.rules:

       /usr/bin/sec --detach --conf=/etc/sec/syslog.rules \
                    --input=/var/log/messages

       Each time /var/log/messages is rotated, a new instance of /var/log/messages is opened  and
       processed  from  the  beginning.  The following command line runs SEC in a shell pipeline,
       configuring it to process lines from standard input, and to exit when the /usr/bin/nc tool
       closes its standard output and exits:

       /usr/bin/nc -l 8080 | /usr/bin/sec --notail --input=- \
                                          --conf=/etc/sec/my.conf

       Some  SEC rules start event correlation operations, while other rules react immediately to
       input events or system clock. For example, suppose that SEC  has  been  started  with  the
       following command line

       /usr/bin/sec --conf=/etc/sec/sshd.rules --input=/var/log/secure

       in  order  to monitor the /var/log/secure syslog file for sshd events.  Also, suppose that
       the /etc/sec/sshd.rules configuration file contains the following rule for correlating SSH
       failed login syslog events:

       type=SingleWithThreshold
       ptype=RegExp
       pattern=sshd\[\d+\]: Failed .+ for (\S+) from [\d.]+ port \d+ ssh2
       desc=Three SSH login failures within 1m for user $1
       action=pipe '%s' /bin/mail -s 'SSH login alert' root@localhost
       window=60
       thresh=3

       The  pattern field of the rule defines the pattern for recognizing input events, while the
       ptype field defines its type (regular expression). Suppose that user risto fails to log in
       over SSH and the following message is logged to /var/log/secure:

       Dec  16 16:24:59 myserver sshd[13685]: Failed password for risto from 10.12.2.5 port 41063
       ssh2

       This input message will match the regular expression pattern of the above  rule,  and  the
       match  variable  $1  will be set to the string risto (see perlre(1) for details).  After a
       match, SEC will evaluate the operation description string given with the desc field.  This
       is  done  by  substituting $1 with its current value which yields Three SSH login failures
       within 1m for user  risto.   SEC  will  then  check  if  there  already  exists  an  event
       correlation  operation identified with this string and triggered by the same rule.  If the
       operation is not found, SEC will create a new operation for the user name risto,  and  the
       occurrence  time  of  the  input event will be recorded into the operation.  Note that for
       event occurrence time SEC always uses the current time as returned by the  time(2)  system
       call,  *not*  the  timestamp  extracted  from the event.  Suppose that after 25 seconds, a
       similar SSH login failure event for the same user  name  is  observed.  In  this  case,  a
       running  operation  will  be  found  for  the operation description string Three SSH login
       failures within 1m for user risto, and the occurrence time of the second event is recorded
       into  the  operation.   If  after  30  seconds  a  third  event for the user name risto is
       observed, the operation has processed 3 events within  55  seconds.  Since  the  threshold
       condition "3 events within 60 seconds" (as defined by the thresh and window fields) is now
       satisfied, SEC will execute the action defined with the action field --  it  will  fork  a
       command

       /bin/mail -s 'SSH login alert' root@localhost

       with  a  pipe  connected to its standard input. Then, SEC writes the operation description
       string Three SSH login failures within 1m for user risto (held by the %s special variable)
       to  the standard input of the command through the pipe.  In other words, an e-mail warning
       is sent to the local root-user.  Finally, since there are 5 seconds left until the end  of
       the  event  correlation window, the operation will consume the following SSH login failure
       events for user risto without any further action, and finish after 5 seconds.

       The above example illustrates that the desc field of a rule defines  the  scope  of  event
       correlation  and  influences the number of operations created by the rule. For example, if
       we set the desc field to Three SSH login failures within 1m, the root-user would  be  also
       alerted  on 3 SSH login failure events for *different* users within 1 minute.  In order to
       avoid clashes between operations started by different rules,  operation  ID  contains  not
       only  the  value  set  by  the desc field, but also the rule file name and the rule number
       inside the file.  For example, if the rule file /etc/sec/sshd.rules contains one rule

       type=SingleWithThreshold
       ptype=RegExp
       pattern=sshd\[\d+\]: Failed .+ for (\S+) from [\d.]+ port \d+ ssh2
       desc=Three SSH login failures within 1m for user $1
       action=pipe '%s' /bin/mail -s 'SSH login alert' root@localhost
       window=60
       thresh=3

       and the event

       Dec 16 16:24:59 myserver sshd[13685]: Failed password for risto from 10.12.2.5 port  41063
       ssh2

       is  the  first  matching  event  for  the  above rule, this event will trigger a new event
       correlation operation with the ID

       /etc/sec/sshd.rules | 0 | Three SSH login failures within 1m for user risto

       (0 is the number assigned to the first rule in the file, see EVENT CORRELATION  OPERATIONS
       section for more information).

       The following simple example demonstrates that event correlation schemes can be defined by
       combining several rules. In this example, two rules harness contexts and synthetic  events
       for achieving their goal:

       type=SingleWithThreshold
       ptype=RegExp
       pattern=sshd\[\d+\]: Failed .+ for (\S+) from [\d.]+ port \d+ ssh2
       desc=Three SSH login failures within 1m for user $1
       action=event 3_SSH_LOGIN_FAILURES_FOR_$1
       window=60
       thresh=3

       type=EventGroup
       ptype=RegExp
       pattern=3_SSH_LOGIN_FAILURES_FOR_(\S+)
       context=!USER_$1_COUNTED && !COUNTING_OFF
       count=create USER_$1_COUNTED 60
       desc=Repeated SSH login failures for 30 distinct users within 1m
       action=pipe '%s' /bin/mail -s 'SSH login alert' root@localhost; \
              create COUNTING_OFF 3600
       window=60
       thresh=30

       The  first  rule  looks  almost  identical  to the rule from the previous example, but its
       action field is different -- after three SSH login failures have  been  observed  for  the
       same  user  name  within  one minute by an event correlation operation, the operation will
       emit the synthetic event 3_SSH_LOGIN_FAILURES_FOR_<username>.  Although  synthetic  events
       are  created  by SEC, they are treated like regular events received from input sources and
       are matched against rules.  The regular expression pattern of the second rule  will  match
       the  3_SSH_LOGIN_FAILURES_FOR_<username> event and start a new event correlation operation
       if no such events have been previously seen.  Also, each time a synthetic event  for  some
       user name has matched the rule, a context with the lifetime of 1 minute for that user name
       is created (see the count field).  Note that this prevents further matches  for  the  same
       user  name,  since a synthetic event for <username> can match the rule only if the context
       USER_<username>_COUNTED *does not* exist (as requested by the boolean  expression  in  the
       context  field;  see  CONTEXTS AND CONTEXT EXPRESSIONS section for more information).  The
       operation started by the rule sends an  e-mail  warning  to  the  local  root-user  if  30
       synthetic  events  have  been observed within 1 minute (see the thresh and window fields).
       Note that due to the use of the USER_<username>_COUNTED  contexts,  all  synthetic  events
       concern  different  user  names.  After sending an e-mail warning, the operation will also
       create the context COUNTING_OFF with the lifetime of 1 hour,  and  will  continue  to  run
       until the 1 minute event correlation window expires. After the operation has finished, the
       presence of the COUNTING_OFF context will keep the second rule disabled (as  requested  by
       the  boolean expression in the context field). Therefore, at most one e-mail warning per 1
       hour is issued by above rules.

       The above examples have presented the event correlation capabilities  of  SEC  in  a  very
       brief  fashion.   The  following  sections  will  provide  an  in-depth  discussion of SEC
       features.

OPTIONS

       --conf=<file_pattern>
              expand <file_pattern> to filenames (with the Perl glob() function) and  read  event
              correlation  rules  from  every  file.  Multiple --conf options can be specified at
              command line. Each time SEC receives a signal that forces a  configuration  reload,
              <file_pattern>  is re-evaluated. See also INPUT PROCESSING AND TIMING section for a
              discussion on rule processing order for multiple configuration files.

       --input=<file_pattern>[=<context>]
              expand <file_pattern> to filenames (with the Perl  glob()  function)  and  use  the
              files  as  input  sources.  An  input  file  can  be a regular file, named pipe, or
              standard input if - was specified. Multiple --input options  can  be  specified  at
              command  line.  Each time SEC receives the SIGHUP or SIGABRT signal, <file_pattern>
              is re-evaluated.  If SEC experiences a system error  when  reading  from  an  input
              file,  it  will  close  the file (use the --reopen-timeout option for reopening the
              file). If <context> is given, SEC will set up the context <context>  each  time  it
              reads a line from input files that correspond to <file_pattern>. This will help the
              user to write rules that match data from  particular  input  source(s)  only.  When
              there  is  an --input option with <context> specified, it will automatically enable
              the --intcontexts option.  See  INTERNAL  EVENTS  AND  CONTEXTS  section  for  more
              information.

       --input-timeout=<input_timeout>, --timeout-script=<timeout_script>
              if  SEC  has  not observed new data in an input file during <input_timeout> seconds
              (or the file was closed <input_timeout>  seconds  ago),  <timeout_script>  will  be
              executed  with command line parameters 1 and <the name of the input file>. If fresh
              data become available again, <timeout_script> will be executed  with  command  line
              parameters  0  and  <the  name  of  the  input file>.  Setting <input_timeout> to 0
              disables this behavior (this is also the default).  Note that  --input_timeout  and
              --timeout_script   options   can  be  used  as  synonyms  for  --input-timeout  and
              --timeout-script, respectively.

       --reopen-timeout=<reopen_timeout>
              if an input file is in the closed state (e.g.,  SEC  fails  to  open  the  file  at
              startup,  because it has not been created yet), SEC will attempt to reopen the file
              after every <reopen_timeout> seconds until open succeeds.  Setting <reopen_timeout>
              to 0 disables this behavior (this is also the default).  This option has no meaning
              when the --notail option is  also  specified.   Note  that  --reopen_timeout  is  a
              synonym for --reopen-timeout.

       --check-timeout=<check_timeout>
              if  SEC  has  not  observed  new data in an input file, the file will not be polled
              (both for status and  data)  during  the  next  <check_timeout>  seconds.   Setting
              <check_timeout>  to 0 disables this behavior (this is also the default).  Note that
              --check_timeout is a synonym for --check-timeout.

       --poll-timeout=<poll_timeout>
              a real number that specifies how many seconds SEC will sleep when no new data  were
              read  from  input  files.  Default  is  0.1 seconds.  Note that --poll_timeout is a
              synonym for --poll-timeout.

       --socket-timeout=<socket_timeout>
              if  a  network  connection  to  a  remote  peer   can't   be   established   within
              <socket_timeout>   seconds,   give   up.   Default   is   60  seconds.   Note  that
              --socket_timeout is a synonym for --socket-timeout.

       --blocksize=<io_block_size>
              the number of bytes SEC will attempt to read at once from an input  file.   Default
              is 8192 bytes (i.e., read from input files by 8KB blocks).

       --bufsize=<input_buffer_size>
              set  all  input  buffers  to  hold <input_buffer_size> lines.  The content of input
              buffers will be compared with patterns that are part of rule definitions (i.e.,  no
              more  than  <input_buffer_size>  lines  can be matched by a pattern at a time).  If
              <input_buffer_size>  is  set  to  0,  SEC  will  determine  the  proper  value  for
              <input_buffer_size>  by checking event matching patterns of all SEC rules.  Default
              is 0 (i.e., determine the size of input buffers automatically).

       --evstoresize=<event_store_size>
              set an upper limit to the number of events in context event stores.  Default  is  0
              which sets no limit.

       --cleantime=<clean_time>
              time  interval  in  seconds that specifies how often internal event correlation and
              context lists are processed, in order  to  accomplish  time-related  tasks  and  to
              remove  obsolete  elements.  See  INPUT  PROCESSING  AND  TIMING  section  for more
              information.  Default is 1 second.

       --log=<logfile>
              use <logfile> for logging SEC activities. Note that if the SEC  standard  error  is
              connected to a terminal, messages will also be logged there, in order to facilitate
              debugging.

       --syslog=<facility>
              use syslog for logging SEC  activities.  All  messages  will  be  logged  with  the
              facility  <facility>,  e.g.,  local0  (see syslog(3) for possible facility values).
              Warning: be careful with using this option if SEC is employed for monitoring syslog
              log files, because message loops might occur.

       --debug=<debuglevel>
              set  logging  verbosity  for SEC. Setting debuglevel to <debuglevel> means that all
              messages of level <debuglevel> and lower are logged (e.g., if  <debuglevel>  is  3,
              messages from levels 1-3 are logged). The following levels are recognized by SEC:
              1  -  critical  messages (severe faults that cause SEC to terminate, e.g., a failed
              system call)
              2 - error messages (faults that need attention, e.g., an incorrect rule  definition
              in a configuration file)
              3  -  warning messages (possible faults, e.g., a command forked from SEC terminated
              with a non-zero exit code)
              4 - notification messages (normal system level events  and  interrupts,  e.g.,  the
              reception of a signal)
              5 - informative messages (information about external programs forked from SEC)
              6 - debug messages (detailed information about all SEC activities)
              Default  <debuglevel>  is  6  (i.e.,  log  everything).  See  SIGNALS  section  for
              information on how to change <debuglevel> at runtime.

       --pid=<pidfile>
              SEC will store its process ID to <pidfile> at startup.

       --dump=<dumpfile>
              SEC will use <dumpfile> as its dump file for writing performance  and  debug  data.
              With  the  --dumpfts  option, a timestamp suffix is appended to the dump file name.
              See SIGNALS section for more information. Default is /tmp/sec.dump.

       --user=<username>, --group=<groupname>
              if SEC is started with effective user  ID  0,  it  will  drop  root  privileges  by
              switching  to  user  <username> and group <groupname>.  The --group option can't be
              used without the --user option. If the --user  option  is  given  without  --group,
              primary group of the user <username> is assumed for <groupname>.  If several groups
              are provided with multiple --group options, SEC switches to the  first  group  with
              other groups as supplementary groups.

       --umask=<mode>
              set  file mode creation mask to <mode> at SEC startup, where <mode> is a value from
              the range 0..0777 (see also umask(2)).  Octal,  decimal,  hexadecimal,  and  binary
              values  can be specified for <mode> (e.g., octal mask 0027 can also be expressed as
              23, 0x17, and 0b000010111).

       --dumpfts, --nodumpfts
              if the --dumpfts option is specified, a timestamp suffix (seconds since  Epoch)  is
              appended  to  the  dump  file name that reflects the file creation time. Default is
              --nodumpfts.

       --quoting, --noquoting
              if the --quoting option  is  specified,  operation  description  strings  that  are
              supplied to command lines of shellcmd, spawn, and cspawn actions will be put inside
              single quotes. Each single quote  (')  that  strings  originally  contain  will  be
              masked.  This  option  prevents  the  shell  from interpreting special symbols that
              operation description strings might contain.  Default is --noquoting.

       --tail, --notail
              if the --notail option is specified, SEC will process all data that  are  currently
              available  in  input  files  and  exit  after  reaching  all EOFs.  If all input is
              received from a pipe and the --notail option is given, SEC terminates when the last
              writer  closes the pipe (EOF condition). Please note that with named pipes --notail
              should be used with --norwfifo.  With the --tail option, SEC will jump to  the  end
              of  input  files and wait for new lines to arrive.  Each input file is tracked both
              by its name and i-node, and input file rotations are handled  seamlessly.   If  the
              input  file  is  recreated or truncated, SEC will reopen it and process its content
              from the beginning. If the input file is removed (i.e., there  is  just  an  i-node
              left  without  a  name),  SEC will keep the i-node open and wait for the input file
              recreation.  Default is --tail.

       --fromstart, --nofromstart
              these flags have no meaning when the --notail option is also specified.  When  used
              in  combination  with  --tail  (or  alone,  since  --tail  is  enabled by default),
              --fromstart will force SEC to read and process input files from  the  beginning  to
              the end, before the 'tail' mode is entered. Default is --nofromstart.

       --detach, --nodetach
              if  the  --detach  option  is  specified,  SEC  will  disassociate  itself from the
              controlling terminal and become a daemon at startup (note that SEC will  close  its
              standard  input,  standard  output,  and  standard  error,  and  change its working
              directory to the root directory). Default is --nodetach.

       --jointbuf, --nojointbuf
              if the --jointbuf option is specified, SEC uses joint input buffer  for  all  input
              sources (the size of the buffer is set with the --bufsize option). The --nojointbuf
              option creates a separate input buffer for each input file, and a  separate  buffer
              for  all  synthetic  and internal events (the sizes of all buffers are set with the
              --bufsize option). The --jointbuf option allows multiline patterns to  match  lines
              from  several  input sources, while the --nojointbuf pattern restricts the matching
              to lines from one input source only.  See INPUT PROCESSING AND TIMING  section  for
              more  information.  If the size of input buffer(s) is 1 (either explicitly set with
              --bufsize=1 or automatically determined  from  SEC  rules),  --jointbuf  option  is
              enabled, otherwise the default is --nojointbuf.

       --keepopen, --nokeepopen
              if  the  --keepopen option is specified, SEC will keep input files open across soft
              restarts.  When the SIGABRT signal is received, SEC will  not  reopen  input  files
              which  have been opened previously, but will only open input files which are in the
              closed state.  The --nokeepopen option forces SEC to close and (re)open  all  input
              files during soft restarts.  Default is --keepopen.

       --rwfifo, --norwfifo
              if  the  --norwfifo option is specified, named pipe input files are opened in read-
              only mode.  In this mode, the named pipe has to be reopened when  the  last  writer
              closes the pipe, in order to clear the EOF condition on the pipe. With the --rwfifo
              option, named pipe input files are opened in read-write mode,  although  SEC  never
              writes  to  the  pipes. In this mode, the pipe does not need to be reopened when an
              external writer closes it, since there is always at least one writer  on  the  pipe
              and  EOF  will  never  appear.  Therefore,  if  the --notail option has been given,
              --norwfifo should also be specified.  Default is --rwfifo.

       --childterm, --nochildterm
              if the --childterm option is specified, SEC will send the SIGTERM signal to all its
              child  processes  when  it  terminates  or  goes through a full restart. Default is
              --childterm.

       --intevents, --nointevents
              SEC will generate internal events when it  starts  up,  when  it  receives  certain
              signals,  and when it terminates gracefully. Specific rules can be written to match
              those internal events, in  order  to  accomplish  special  tasks  at  SEC  startup,
              restart,  and  shutdown.   See  INTERNAL  EVENTS  AND  CONTEXTS  section  for  more
              information. Default is --nointevents.

       --intcontexts, --nointcontexts
              SEC will create an internal context when it reads a line from an input file.   This
              will  help  the  user  to  write rules that match data from particular input source
              only. See INTERNAL EVENTS AND CONTEXTS section for more  information.   Default  is
              --nointcontexts.

       --testonly, --notestonly
              if  the --testonly option is specified, SEC will exit immediately after parsing the
              configuration file(s). If the configuration file(s) contained no faulty rules,  SEC
              will exit with 0, otherwise with 1. Default is --notestonly.

       --help, -?
              SEC will output usage information and exit.

       --version
              SEC will output version information and exit.

       Note  that  options  can be introduced both with the single dash (-) and double dash (--),
       and both the equal sign (=) and whitespace can be used for separating the option name from
       the  option value. For example, -conf=<file_pattern> and --conf <file_pattern> options are
       equivalent.

CONFIGURATION FILES

       Each SEC configuration file consists of rule definitions  which  are  separated  by  empty
       lines,   whitespace  lines  and/or  comment  lines.   Each  rule  definition  consists  of
       keyword=value fields, one keyword and value per line. Values  are  case  insensitive  only
       where  character  case  is  not  important  (like  the values specifying rule types, e.g.,
       'Single' and 'single' are treated identically).  The backslash character (\) may  be  used
       at  the  end  of  a line to continue the current rule field in the next line.  Lines which
       begin with the number sign (#) are treated as comments and ignored (whitespace  characters
       may  precede  #).  Any  comment  line,  empty  line,  whitespace line, or end of file will
       terminate the preceding rule definition.  For inserting comments  into  rule  definitions,
       the rem keyword can be used. For example, the following lines define two rules:

       type=Single
       rem=this rule matches any line which contains \
           three consecutive A characters and writes the string \
           "three A characters were observed" to standard output
       ptype=SubStr
       pattern=AAA
       desc=Three A characters
       action=write - three A characters were observed
       # This comment line ends preceding rule definition.
       # The following rule works like the previous rule,
       # but looks for three consecutive B characters and
       # writes the string "three B characters were observed"
       # to standard output
       type=Single
       ptype=SubStr
       pattern=BBB
       desc=Three B characters
       action=write - three B characters were observed

       Apart  from keywords that are part of rule definitions, label keywords may appear anywhere
       in the configuration file. The value of each label keyword will be treated as a label that
       can be referred to in rule definitions as a point-of-continue.  This allows for continuing
       event processing at a rule that follows the label, after the current rule has matched  and
       processed the event.

       The points-of-continue are defined with continue* fields. Accepted values for these fields
       are:

       TakeNext
              after an event has matched the rule, search for matching rules in the configuration
              file will continue from the next rule.

       GoTo <label>
              after  an  event has matched the rule, search for matching rules will continue from
              the location of <label> in the configuration file (<label> must be defined with the
              label  keyword  anywhere  in  the  configuration  file  *after*  the  current  rule
              definition).

       DontCont (default value)
              after an event has matched  the  rule,  search  for  matching  rules  ends  in  the
              *current* configuration file.

       EndMatch
              after  an  event  has  matched  the  rule, search for matching rules ends for *all*
              configuration files.

       SEC rules from the same configuration file are matched against input  in  the  order  they
       have  been  given  in the file.  For example, consider a configuration file which contains
       the following rule sequence:

       type=Single
       ptype=SubStr
       pattern=AAA
       rem=after this rule has matched, continue from last rule
       continue=GoTo lastRule
       desc=Three A characters
       action=write - three A characters were observed

       type=Single
       ptype=SubStr
       pattern=BBB
       rem=after this rule has matched, don't consider following rules, \
           since 'continue' defaults to 'DontCont'
       desc=Three B characters
       action=write - three B characters were observed

       type=Single
       ptype=SubStr
       pattern=CCC
       rem=after this rule has matched, continue from next rule
       continue=TakeNext
       desc=Three C characters
       action=write - three C characters were observed

       label=lastRule

       type=Single
       ptype=SubStr
       pattern=DDD
       desc=Three D characters
       action=write - three D characters were observed

       For the input line "AAABBBCCCDDD", this ruleset writes strings "three  A  characters  were
       observed"  and "three D characters were observed" to standard output. If the input line is
       "BBBCCCDDD", the string "three B characters were observed" is written to standard  output.
       For  the  input  line  "CCCDDD",  strings  "three C characters were observed" and "three D
       characters were observed" are sent to standard output, while the input line "DDD" produces
       the output string "three D characters were observed".

       If  there  are  two  or more configuration files, rule sequence from every file is matched
       against input (unless explicitly  specified  otherwise).   For  example,  suppose  SEC  is
       started with the command line

       /usr/bin/sec --input=- \
                    --conf=/etc/sec/sec1.rules --conf=/etc/sec/sec2.rules

       and the configuration file /etc/sec/sec1.rules has the following content:

       type=Single
       ptype=SubStr
       pattern=AAA
       desc=Three A characters
       action=write - three A characters were observed

       type=Single
       ptype=SubStr
       pattern=BBB
       continue=EndMatch
       desc=Three B characters
       action=write - three B characters were observed

       Also, suppose the  configuration file /etc/sec/sec2.rules has the following content:

       type=Single
       ptype=SubStr
       pattern=CCC
       desc=Three C characters
       action=write - three C characters were observed

       If  SEC  receives  the line "AAABBBCCC" from standard input, rules from both configuration
       files are tried, and as a result, the strings  "three  A  characters  were  observed"  and
       "three  C  characters  were observed" are written to standard output. Note that rules from
       /etc/sec/sec1.rules  are  tried  first  against  the  input   line,   since   the   option
       --conf=/etc/sec/sec1.rules  is  given before --conf=/etc/sec/sec2.rules in the SEC command
       line (see also INPUT PROCESSING AND TIMING section for a more  detailed  discussion).   If
       SEC   receives   the   line   "BBBCCC"   from   standard   input,  the  second  rule  from
       /etc/sec/sec1.rules produces a match, and the string "three B characters were observed" is
       written  to  standard  output.   Since  the rule contains continue=EndMatch statement, the
       search  for  matching  rules  will  end  for  all  configuration  files,  and  rules  from
       /etc/sec/sec2.rules will not be not tried. Without this statement, the search for matching
       rules would continue in /etc/sec/sec2.rules, and the first rule  would  write  the  string
       "three C characters were observed" to standard output.

PATTERNS, PATTERN TYPES AND MATCH VARIABLES

       Patterns and pattern types are defined with pattern* and ptype* rule fields.  Many pattern
       types define the number of lines N which the pattern  matches  (if  N  is  omitted,  1  is
       assumed).  If  N  is  greater than 1, the scope of matching is set with the --jointbuf and
       --nojointbuf options.  With --jointbuf, the pattern is used  for  matching  N  last  input
       lines taken from the joint input buffer (the lines can come from different input sources).
       With --nojointbuf, the source of the last input line is identified,  and  the  pattern  is
       matched with N last input lines from the input buffer of the identified source.

       SubStr[N]
              pattern  is a string that is searched in the last N input lines L1, L2, ..., LN. If
              N  is  greater   than   1,   the   input   lines   are   joined   into   a   string
              "L1<NEWLINE>L2<NEWLINE>...<NEWLINE>LN",  and  the  pattern  string will be searched
              from it.  If the pattern string is found in input  line(s),  the  pattern  matches.
              Backslash  sequences \t, \n, \r, \s, and \0 can be used in the pattern for denoting
              tabulation,  newline,  carriage  return,  space  character,   and   empty   string,
              respectively,  while  \\  denotes  backslash  itself.   For  example,  consider the
              following pattern definition:

              ptype=substr
              pattern=Backup done:\tsuccess

              The pattern matches lines containing "Backup done:<TAB>success".

              Note that since the SubStr[N] pattern type has been designed for fast matching,  it
              does not support match variables.

       RegExp[N]
              pattern  is  a  Perl  regular  expression  (see perlre(1) for more information) for
              matching the last N input lines L1, L2, ..., LN. If N is greater than 1, the  input
              lines  are  joined  into  a  string "L1<NEWLINE>L2<NEWLINE>...<NEWLINE>LN", and the
              regular expression is matched with this string.  If the regular expression matches,
              match  variables  will be set, and these match variables can be used in other parts
              of the rule definition.

              In addition to numbered match variables ($1, $2, etc.), SEC  supports  named  match
              variables  $+{name} and the $0 variable. The $0 variable holds the entire string of
              last N input lines that the regular expression has matched.  Named match  variables
              can  be  created  in  newer  versions  of  Perl  regular expression language, e.g.,
              (?<myvar>AB|CD) sets $+{myvar} to AB  or  CD.  The  special  named  match  variable
              $+{_inputsrc} is created by SEC and holds input file name(s) where matching line(s)
              came from.

              For example, the following pattern matches the SSH  "Connection  from"  event,  and
              sets  $0  to  the  entire  event  line, both $1 and $+{ip} to the IP address of the
              remote node, $2 to the port number at the remote node,  and  $+{_inputsrc}  to  the
              input file name:

              ptype=RegExp
              pattern=sshd\[\d+\]: Connection from (?<ip>[\d.]+) port (\d+)

              Also,  SEC  allows for match caching and for the creation of additional named match
              variables through variable maps which are defined with the varmap* fields. Variable
              map  is  a  list of name=number mappings separated by semicolons, where name is the
              name for the named variable and number identifies a numbered match variable that is
              set  by  the regular expression.  Each name must begin with a letter and consist of
              letters, digits and underscores. After the regular expression  has  matched,  named
              variables  specified  by the map are created from corresponding numbered variables.
              If the same named variable is set up both from the regular expression and  variable
              map, the map takes precedence.

              If  name  is  not followed by the equal sign and number in the varmap* field, it is
              regarded as a common  name  for  all  match  variables  and  their  values  from  a
              successful  match.  This name is used for caching a successful match by the pattern
              -- match variables and their values are stored in the  memory-based  pattern  match
              cache  under  name.   Cached  match  results  can  be  reused by Cached and NCached
              patterns. Note that before processing each new input line, previous content of  the
              pattern match cache is cleared. Also note that a successful pattern match is cached
              even if the subsequent  context  expression  evaluation  yields  FALSE  (see  INPUT
              PROCESSING AND TIMING section for more information).

              For example, consider the following pattern definition:

              ptype=regexp
              pattern=(?i)(\S+\.mydomain).*printer: toner\/ink low
              varmap=printer_toner_or_ink_low; message=0; hostname=1

              The  pattern matches "printer: toner/ink low" messages in a case insensitive manner
              from printers belonging to .mydomain. Note that the printer hostname is assigned to
              $1  and  $+{hostname},  while  the  whole  message  line  is  assigned  to  $0  and
              $+{message}. The name of the file where message  line  came  from  is  assigned  to
              $+{_inputsrc}.  Also,  these  variables  and their values are stored to the pattern
              match cache under the name "printer_toner_or_ink_low".

              The following pattern definition produces a match if the last two input  lines  are
              AAA and BBB:

              ptype=regexp2
              pattern=^AAA\nBBB$
              varmap=aaa_bbb

              Note  that  with  the  --nojointbuf option the pattern only matches if the matching
              lines are coming from the *same* input file, while the --jointbuf option lifts that
              restriction.

              In  the  case  of a match, $0 is set to "AAA<NEWLINE>BBB" and $+{_inputsrc} to file
              name(s) for matching lines. Also, these variable-value pairs are cached  under  the
              name "aaa_bbb".

       PerlFunc[N]
              pattern is a Perl function for matching the last N input lines L1, L2, ..., LN. The
              Perl function is compiled at SEC startup with the Perl eval() function, and  eval()
              must return a code reference for the pattern to be valid (see also PERL INTEGRATION
              section).  The function is called in Perl list context,  and  with  the  --jointbuf
              option,  lines  L1,  L2, ..., LN and the names of corresponding input files F1, F2,
              ..., FN are passed to the function as parameters:

              function(L1, L2, ..., LN, F1, F2, ..., FN)

              Note that with the --nojointbuf option, the function is called with a  single  file
              name parameter F, since lines L1, ..., LN are coming from the same input file:

              function(L1, L2, ..., LN, F)

              Also  note that if the input line is a synthetic event, the input file name is Perl
              undefined value.

              If the function returns several values or a single  value  that  is  true  in  Perl
              boolean context, the pattern matches. If the function returns no values or a single
              value that is false in Perl boolean context (0, empty string or  undefined  value),
              the  pattern does not match. If the pattern matches, return values will be assigned
              to numbered match variables ($1, $2, etc.).  Like  with  RegExp  patterns,  the  $0
              variable  is  set  to  matching input line(s), the $+{_inputsrc} variable is set to
              input file name(s), and named match variables can be created  from  variable  maps.
              For example, consider the following pattern definition:

              ptype=perlfunc2
              pattern=sub { return ($_[0] cmp $_[1]); }

              The  pattern  compares last two input lines in a stringwise manner ($_[1] holds the
              last line and $_[0] the preceding one), and matches if  the  lines  are  different.
              Note  that the result of the comparison is assigned to $1, while two matching lines
              are concatenated (with the newline character between them) and assigned to $0.  The
              file name(s) for matching lines are assigned to $+{_inputsrc}.

              The  following  pattern  produces  a  match  for  any  line, and sets $1, $2 and $3
              variables to strings "abc", "def" and "ghi", respectively (also, $0 is set  to  the
              whole input line and $+{_inputsrc} to the input file name):

              ptype=perlfunc
              pattern=sub { return ("abc", "def", "ghi"); }

              The  following  pattern  definition  produces  a  match  if the input line is not a
              synthetic event and contains either the string "abc" or "def". The $0  variable  is
              set  to the matching line, while $1, $+{file} and $+{_inputsrc} are set to the name
              of the input file:

              ptype=perlfunc
              pattern=sub { if (defined($_[1]) && $_[0] =~ /abc|def/) \
              { return $_[1]; } return 0; }
              varmap= file=1

              Finally, if a function pattern returns a single value which is  a  reference  to  a
              Perl  hash, named match variables are created from key-value pairs in the hash. For
              example, the following pattern matches a line if  it  contains  either  the  string
              "three"  or  "four".  Apart  from  setting  $0  and $+{_inputsrc}, the pattern also
              creates match variables  $+{three}  and  $+{four},  and  sets  them  to  3  and  4,
              respectively:

              ptype=perlfunc
              pattern=sub { my(%hash); \
              if ($_[0] !~ /three|four/) { return 0; } \
              $hash{"three"} = 3; $hash{"four"} = 4; return \%hash; }

       Cached pattern  is  a name that is searched in the pattern match cache (entries are stored
              into the cache with the varmap* fields). If an entry with the given name  is  found
              in  the  cache,  the  pattern matches, and match variables and values are retrieved
              from the cache.  For example, if the input line matches the following pattern

              ptype=perlfunc
              pattern=sub { if (defined($_[1]) && $_[0] =~ /abc|def/) \
              { return $_[1]; } return 0; }
              varmap=abc_or_def_found; file=1

              then  the  entry  "abc_or_def_found"  is  created  in  the  pattern  match   cache.
              Therefore, the pattern

              ptype=cached
              pattern=abc_or_def_found

              will  also  produce  a match for this input line, and set the $0, $1, $+{file}, and
              $+{_inputsrc} variables to values from the previous match.

       NSubStr[N]
              like SubStr[N], except that the result of the match is  negated.   Note  that  this
              pattern type does not support match variables.

       NRegExp[N]
              like  RegExp[N],  except  that the result of the match is negated and variable maps
              are not supported. Note that the only match variables  supported  by  this  pattern
              type are $0 and $+{_inputsrc}.

       NPerlFunc[N]
              like  PerlFunc[N], except that the result of the match is negated and variable maps
              are not supported. Note that the only match variables  supported  by  this  pattern
              type are $0 and $+{_inputsrc}.

       NCached
              like  Cached,  except  that  the  result  of  the match is negated.  Note that this
              pattern type does not support match variables.

       TValue pattern is a truth value, with TRUE and FALSE being legitimate values.  TRUE always
              matches  an input line, while FALSE never matches anything.  Note that this pattern
              type does not support match variables.

       When match variables are substituted, each "$$"  sequence  is  interpreted  as  a  literal
       dollar  sign  ($)  which  allows  for  masking  match  variables.  For example, the string
       "Received $$1" becomes "Received $1" after substitution,  while  "Received  $$$1"  becomes
       "Received  $<value_of_1st_var>".   In  order to disambiguate numbered match variables from
       the following text, variable number must be enclosed in braces. For  example,  the  string
       "Received  ${1}0"  becomes  "Received  <value_of_1st_var>0"  after substitution, while the
       string "Received $10" would become "Received <value_of_10th_var>".

       If the match variable was not set by the pattern, it is substituted with an  empty  string
       (i.e.,  a  zero-width string).  Thus the string "Received $10!" becomes "Received !" after
       substitution if the pattern did not set $10.  (Note that prior to SEC-2.6, unset variables
       were *not* substituted.)

       In  the  current  version  of  SEC, names of $+{name} match variables must comply with the
       following naming convention -- the first character can be a letter  or  underscore,  while
       remaining  characters  can  be  letters,  digits,  underscores  and exclamation marks (!).
       However, when setting named match variables from a pattern, it is recommended to begin the
       variable  name with a letter, since names of special automatically created variables begin
       with an underscore (e.g., $+{_inputsrc}).

       After the pattern has matched an event and match variables  have  been  set,  it  is  also
       possible   to   refer   to   previously   cached   match   variables   with   the   syntax
       $:{entryname:varname}, where entryname is the name of the pattern match cache  entry,  and
       varname  is the name of the variable stored under the entry.  For example, if the variable
       $+{ip} has been previously cached under the entry "SSH", it can be referred as $:{SSH:ip}.
       For  the reasons of efficiency, the $:{entryname:varname} syntax is not supported for fast
       pattern types which do not  set  match  variables  (i.e.,  SubStr,  NSubStr,  NCached  and
       TValue).

       Note  that  since  Pair and PairWithWindow rules have two patterns, match variables of the
       first pattern are shadowed for some rule fields when the second pattern matches  and  sets
       variables.  In order to refer to shadowed variables, their names must begin with % instead
       of $ (e.g., %1 refers to match variable $1 set by the first pattern). However, the use  of
       the  %-prefix  is  only  valid  under  the following circumstances -- *both* pattern types
       support match variables *and* in the given rule field match variables from *both* patterns
       can be used.

       The  %-prefixed  match  variables  are  masked  with the "%%" sequence (like regular match
       variables with "$$"). Similarly, the braces can be used for disambiguating the  %-prefixed
       variables from the following text.

       Finally,  note  that the second pattern of Pair and PairWithWindow rules may contain match
       variables if the second pattern is of  type  SubStr,  NSubStr,  Regexp,  or  NRegExp.  The
       variables  are  substituted  at  runtime  with the values set by the first pattern. If the
       pattern is a regular expression, all special  characters  inside  substituted  values  are
       masked  with  the  Perl  quotemeta()  function  and  the  final  expression is checked for
       correctness.

CONTEXTS AND CONTEXT EXPRESSIONS

       A SEC context is a memory based entity which has one or more names,  a  lifetime,  and  an
       event  store.  Also,  an  action  list  can  be  set  up  for  a context which is executed
       immediately before the context expires.

       For example, the action create MYCONTEXT 3600 (report MYCONTEXT /bin/mail  root@localhost)
       creates  the context MYCONTEXT which has a lifetime of 3600 seconds and empty event store.
       Also, immediately before MYCONTEXT expires and is dropped from memory, the  action  report
       MYCONTEXT /bin/mail root@localhost is executed which mails the event store of MYCONTEXT to
       root@localhost.

       Contexts can be used for event aggregation and reporting.  Suppose the  following  actions
       are executed in this order:

       create MYCONTEXT
       add MYCONTEXT This is a test
       alias MYCONTEXT MYALIAS
       add MYALIAS This is another test
       report MYCONTEXT /bin/mail root@localhost
       delete MYALIAS

       The  first  action  creates  the  context MYCONTEXT with infinite lifetime and empty event
       store. The second action appends the string "This  is  a  test"  to  the  event  store  of
       MYCONTEXT.   The  third  action  sets  up  an  alias  name  MYALIAS for the context (names
       MYCONTEXT and MYALIAS refer to the same context data structure). The fourth action appends
       the  string  "This  is  another test" to the event store of the context.  The fifth action
       writes the lines

       This is a test
       This is another test

       to the standard input of the /bin/mail root@localhost command. The  sixth  action  deletes
       the context data structure from memory and drops its names MYCONTEXT and MYALIAS.

       Since contexts are accessible from all rules and event correlation operations, they can be
       used for data sharing and joining several rules into one  event  correlation  scheme.   In
       order  to  check  for  the  presence  of  contexts  from rules, context expressions can be
       employed.

       Context expressions are boolean expressions  that  are  defined  with  the  context*  rule
       fields.  Context expressions can be used for restricting the matches produced by patterns,
       since if the expression evaluates FALSE, the rule will not match an input event.

       The context expression accepts context  names,  Perl  miniprograms,  Perl  functions,  and
       pattern match cache lookups as operands. These operands can be combined with the following
       operators:
       !  - logical NOT,
       &&  - short-circuit logical AND,
       ||  - short-circuit logical OR.
       In addition, parentheses can be used for grouping purposes.

       If the operand does not contain any special operators (such as -> or :>, see below), it is
       treated  as a context name. Context name operands may contain match variables, but may not
       contain whitespace.  If the context name  refers  to  an  existing  context,  the  operand
       evaluates TRUE, otherwise it evaluates FALSE.

       For example, consider the following rule sequence:

       type=Single
       ptype=RegExp
       pattern=Test: (\d+)
       desc=test
       action=create CONT_$1

       type=Single
       ptype=RegExp
       pattern=Test2: (\d+) (\d+)
       context=CONT_$1 && CONT_$2
       desc=test
       action=write - Both $1 and $2 have been seen in the past

       If the following input lines appear in this order

       Test: 19
       Test: 261
       Test2: 19 787
       Test: 787
       Test2: 787 261

       the  first  input  line  matches  the  first  rule  which creates the context CONT_19, and
       similarly, the second input line triggers the creation of the context CONT_261.  The third
       input line "Test2: 19 787" matches the regular expression

       Test2: (\d+) (\d+)

       but does not match the second rule, since the boolean expression

       CONT_19 && CONT_787

       evaluates  FALSE  (context CONT_19 exists, but context CONT_787 doesn't). The fourth input
       line matches the first rule which creates the context  CONT_787.   The  fifth  input  line
       "Test2: 787 261" matches the second rule, since the boolean expression

       CONT_787 && CONT_261

       evaluates  TRUE  (both  context  CONT_787  and  context CONT_261 exist), and therefore the
       string "Both 787 and 261 have been seen in the past" is written to standard output.

       If the context expression operand contains the arrow operator (->), the text following the
       arrow  must  be  a valid Perl function definition that is compiled at SEC startup with the
       Perl eval() function. The eval() must return a code reference (see also  PERL  INTEGRATION
       section  for more information). If any text precedes the arrow, it is treated as a list of
       parameters for the function. Parameters must be separated by whitespace  and  may  contain
       match  variables.   In order to evaluate the context expression operand, the Perl function
       is called in the Perl scalar context. If the return value of the function is true  in  the
       Perl boolean context, the operand evaluates TRUE, otherwise it evaluates FALSE.

       For  example,  the  following rule matches an SSH login failure event if the login attempt
       comes from a privileged port of the client host:

       type=Single
       ptype=RegExp
       pattern=sshd\[\d+\]: Failed .+ for (\S+) from [\d.]+ port (\d+) ssh2
       context=$2 -> ( sub { $_[0] < 1024 } )
       desc=SSH login failure for $1 priv port $2
       action=write - SSH login failure for user $1 from a privileged port $2

       When the following message from SSH daemon appears

       Dec 16 16:24:59 myserver sshd[13685]: Failed password for risto from 10.12.2.5 port  41063
       ssh2

       the  regular  expression  of  the rule matches this message, and the value of the $2 match
       variable (41063) is passed to the Perl function

       sub { $_[0] < 1024 }

       This function returns true if its input parameter is less than 1024 and  false  otherwise,
       and therefore the above message will not match the rule.  However, the following message

       Dec  16  16:25:17 myserver sshd[13689]: Failed password for risto from 10.12.2.5 port 1023
       ssh2

       matches the rule, and the string "SSH login failure for user risto from a privileged  port
       1023" is written to standard output.

       As   another   example,   the   following   context   expression  evaluates  TRUE  if  the
       /var/log/messages file does not exist or was last modified more than 1 hour ago (note that
       the Perl function takes no parameters):

       context= -> ( sub { my(@stat) = stat("/var/log/messages"); \
       return (!scalar(@stat) || time() - $stat[9] > 3600); } )

       If  the context expression operand contains the :> operator, the text that follows :> must
       be a valid Perl function definition that is compiled at SEC startup with the  Perl  eval()
       function.  The  eval() must return a code reference (see also PERL INTEGRATION section for
       more information). If any text precedes the :> operator,  it  is  treated  as  a  list  of
       parameters  for  the  function. Parameters must be separated by whitespace and may contain
       match variables.  It is assumed that each parameter is a name of an entry in  the  pattern
       match  cache.  If  an  entry  with  the given name does not exist, Perl undefined value is
       passed to the function. If an entry with the given name exists, a reference to  the  entry
       is passed to the Perl function.  Internally, each pattern match cache entry is implemented
       as a Perl hash which contains all match variables for the given entry. In the  hash,  each
       key-value  pair  represents  some  variable name and value, e.g., if cached match variable
       $+{ip} is holding 10.1.1.1, the hash contains the value 10.1.1.1  with  the  key  ip.   In
       order  to evaluate the context expression operand, the Perl function is called in the Perl
       scalar context. If the return value of the function is true in the Perl  boolean  context,
       the operand evaluates TRUE, otherwise it evaluates FALSE.

       For example, consider the following rule sequence:

       type=Single
       ptype=RegExp
       pattern=sshd\[\d+\]: (?<status>Accepted|Failed) .+ \
       for (?<invuser>invalid user )?(?<user>\S+) from (?<ip>[\d.]+) \
       port (?<port>\d+) ssh2
       varmap=SSH
       continue=TakeNext
       desc=parse SSH login events and pass them to following rules
       action=none

       type=Single
       ptype=Cached
       pattern=SSH
       context=SSH :> ( sub { $_[0]->{"status"} eq "Failed" && \
                              $_[0]->{"port"} < 1024 && \
                              defined($_[0]->{"invuser"}) } )
       desc=Probe of invalid user $+{user} from privileged port of $+{ip}
       action=pipe '%t: %s' /bin/mail -s 'SSH alert' root@localhost

       The  first  rule  matches and parses SSH login messages, and stores parsing results to the
       pattern match cache under the name SSH.  The pattern of  the  second  rule  (defined  with
       ptype=Cached  and  pattern=SSH)  matches  any input event for which the entry SSH has been
       previously created in the pattern  match  cache  (in  other  words,  the  event  has  been
       recognized  and parsed as an SSH login message).  For each matching event, the second rule
       passes the reference to the SSH cache entry to the Perl function

       sub { $_[0]->{"status"} eq "Failed" && \
             $_[0]->{"port"} < 1024 && \
             defined($_[0]->{"invuser"}) }

       The function checks the values of $+{status}, $+{port}, and  $+{invuser}  match  variables
       under  the  SSH entry, and returns true if $+{status} equals to the string "Failed" (i.e.,
       login attempt failed), the value of $+{port} is less than 1024, and  $+{invuser}  holds  a
       defined  value  (i.e.,  user  account  does not exist).  If the function (and thus context
       expression) evaluates TRUE, the rule sends a warning e-mail to root@localhost that a  non-
       existing user account was probed from a privileged port of a client host.

       If  the context expression operand begins with the varset keyword, the following string is
       treated as a name of an entry in the pattern match cache. The operand  evaluates  TRUE  if
       the given entry exists, and FALSE otherwise.

       For  example,  the  following  context expression definition evaluates TRUE if the pattern
       match cache entry SSH exists and under  this  entry,  the  value  of  the  match  variable
       $+{user} equals to the string "risto":

       context=varset SSH && SSH :> ( sub { $_[0]->{"user"} eq "risto" } )

       If  the context expression operand begins with the equal sign (=), the following text must
       be a Perl miniprogram which is a  valid  parameter  for  the  Perl  eval()  function.  The
       miniprogram  may  contain  match  variables.   In  order  to evaluate the Perl miniprogram
       operand, it will be compiled and executed by calling the Perl eval() function in the  Perl
       scalar  context  (see  also PERL INTEGRATION section).  If the return value from eval() is
       true in the Perl boolean context, the  operand  evaluates  TRUE,  otherwise  it  evaluates
       FALSE.  Please  note  that unlike Perl functions of -> and :> operators which are compiled
       once at SEC startup, Perl miniprograms are  compiled  before  each  execution,  and  their
       evaluation is thus considerably more expensive.

       For  example,  the following context expression evaluates TRUE when neither the context C1
       nor the context C2 exists  and  the  value  of  the  $1  variable  equals  to  the  string
       "myhost.mydomain":

       context=!(C1 || C2) && =("$1" eq "myhost.mydomain")

       Since && is a short-circuiting operator, the Perl code

       "$1" eq "myhost.mydomain"

       is *not* evaluated if either C1 or C2 exists.

       Note  that  since  Perl  functions  and  miniprograms  may contain strings that clash with
       context  expression  operators  (e.g.,  '!'),  it  is  recommended  to  enclose  them   in
       parentheses, e.g.,

       context=$1 $2 -> ( sub { $_[0] != $_[1] } )

       context= =({my($temp) = 0; !$temp;})

       Also,  if  function  parameter  lists  contain  such  strings,  they should be enclosed in
       parentheses in the similar way:

       context=($1! $2) -> ( sub { $_[0] eq $_[1] } )

       If the whole context expression is enclosed in square brackets [],  e.g.,  [MYCONTEXT1  &&
       !MYCONTEXT2],  SEC  evaluates  the  expression  *before*  pattern  matching (normally, the
       pattern is matched with input line(s) first, so that match variables would be  initialized
       and  substituted before the expression is evaluated).  However, if the expression does not
       contain match variables and many input events are known to match the pattern but  not  the
       expression, the []-operator could save substantial amount of CPU time.

ACTIONS, ACTION LISTS AND ACTION LIST VARIABLES

       Action  lists  are defined with the action* rule fields. An action list consists of action
       definitions that are separated by  semicolons.   Each  action  definition  begins  with  a
       keyword  specifying the action type.  Depending on the action type, parameters may follow,
       and non-constant parameters may contain match variables. For instance, if the  $1  and  $2
       match  variables  have  the values "test1" and "the second test", respectively, the action
       create MYCONT_$1 60 creates the context MYCONT_test1 with  the  lifetime  of  60  seconds,
       while the action write - The names of tests: $1, $2 writes the string "The names of tests:
       test1, the second test" to standard output.  In order to  use  semicolons  inside  a  non-
       constant  parameter,  the  parameter must be enclosed in parentheses (the outermost set of
       parentheses will be removed by SEC during configuration file parsing).

       For example, the following action list consists of delete and shellcmd actions:

       action=delete MYCONTEXT; shellcmd (rm /tmp/sec1.tmp; rm /tmp/sec2.tmp)

       The delete action deletes the context MYCONTEXT, while the shellcmd  action  executes  the
       command  line  rm  /tmp/sec1.tmp;  rm  /tmp/sec2.tmp.   Since  the command line contains a
       semicolon, it has been enclosed in parentheses, since otherwise  the  semicolon  would  be
       mistakenly considered a separator between two actions.

       Apart  from  match  variables,  SEC  supports  action list variables in action lists which
       facilitate data sharing between actions and Perl integration. Each  action  list  variable
       has  a name which must begin with a letter and consist of letters, digits and underscores.
       Names of built-in variables usually start with a punctuation mark (.), so that they can be
       distinguished  from  user defined variables. In order to refer to an action list variable,
       its name must be prefixed by a percent sign (%).   Unlike  match  variables,  action  list
       variables  can  only  be  used  in action lists and they are substituted with their values
       immediately before the action list execution. Also,  action  list  variables  continue  to
       exist  after the current action list has been executed and can be employed in action lists
       of other rules.

       The following action list variables are predefined by SEC:

       %s     operation description string (the value of the desc  field  after  match  variables
              have  been substituted with their values).  Note that for the action2 field of Pair
              and PairWithWindow rules, the %s variable is set by evaluating the desc2  field  of
              the rule.

       %t     the  time in human-readable format, as returned by the Perl localtime() function in
              the Perl scalar context (e.g., Fri Feb 19 17:54:18 2016).

       %u     the time in seconds since Epoch, as returned by the time(2) system call.

       %.sec  number of seconds after the minute, in the range 00-59 (the value consists  of  two
              digits and is zero padded on the left).

       %.min  number  of  minutes  after  the hour, in the range 00-59 (the value consists of two
              digits and is zero padded on the left).

       %.hour number of hours past midnight, in the range 00-23 (the value consists of two digits
              and is zero padded on the left).

       %.hmsstr
              the  time in HH:MM:SS format (hours, minutes and seconds separated by colons, e.g.,
              09:32:04 or 18:06:02).

       %.mday day of the month, in the range 01-31 (the value consists of two digits and is  zero
              padded on the left).

       %.mdaystr
              day  of  the  month  as a string (the value consists of two characters and is space
              padded on the left, e.g., " 1", " 4", " 9", or "25").

       %.mon  month, in the range 01-12 (the value consists of two digits and is zero  padded  on
              the left).

       %.monstr
              abbreviated  name  of the month according to the current locale, as returned by the
              %b specification of the strftime(3) library call (e.g., Jan, May, or Sep).

       %.year year (e.g., 1998 or 2016).

       %.wday day of the week, in the range 0-6 (0 denotes Sunday).

       %.wdaystr
              abbreviated name of the day of  the  week  according  to  the  current  locale,  as
              returned  by  the %a specification of the strftime(3) library call (e.g., Mon, Wed,
              or Sat).

       %.tzname
              name of the timezone according to  the  current  locale,  as  returned  by  the  %Z
              specification of the strftime(3) library call (e.g., UTC or EET).

       %.tzoff
              timezone  offset  from  UTC, as returned by the %z specification of the strftime(3)
              library call (e.g., -0500 or +0200).

       %.tzoff2
              timezone offset from UTC in +hh:mm/-hh:mm format (e.g., -05:00 or +02:00), provided
              that  the  %z  specification  of  the strftime(3) library call returns the value in
              +hhmm/-hhmm format (if the value does not follow this format, %.tzoff2 is set to an
              empty string).

       %.nl   newline character.

       %.cr   carriage return character.

       %.tab  tabulation character.

       %.chr0, ..., %.chr31
              ASCII  0..31  control  characters  (e.g.,  %.chr7  is bell and %.chr12 is form feed
              character).

       For example, the following action list assigns the current time in human  readable  format
       and  the content of the $0 match variable to the %text action list variable, and mails the
       value of %text to root@localhost:

       action=assign %text %t: $0; pipe '%text' /bin/mail root@localhost

       If the action list is executed at Nov 19 10:58:51 2015 and the $0 match variable  has  the
       value "This is a test event", the assign action sets the %text action list variable to the
       string "Thu Nov 19 10:58:51 2015: This is a test event", while the pipe action mails  this
       string  to root@localhost.  Note that unlike match variables, action list variables have a
       global scope, and accessing the value of the %text variable in action lists of other rules
       will thus yield the string "Thu Nov 19 10:58:51 2015: This is a test event" (until another
       value is assigned to %text).

       In order to disambiguate the variable from the following text, the variable name  must  be
       enclosed in braces. For example, the following action

       action=write - %{.year}-%{.mon}-%{.mday}T%{.hmsstr}%{.tzoff2}

       writes  a timestamp in ISO 8601 format to standard output, e.g., 2016-02-24T07:34:01+02:00
       (replacing %{.mday} with %.mday in the above action would mistakenly create a reference to
       %.mdayT variable).

       When  action  list  variables  are  substituted  with  their values, each sequence "%%" is
       interpreted as a literal percent sign (%) which allows  for  masking  the  variables.  For
       example, the string "s%%t" becomes "s%t" after substitution, not "s%<timestamp>".

       However,  note  that  if %-prefixed match variables are supported for the action2 field of
       the Pair or PairWithWindow rule, the sequence "%%%" must be used in action2 for masking  a
       variable,  since  the  string  goes  through *two* variable substitution rounds (first for
       %-prefixed match variables and then for action list variables, e.g.,  the  string  "s%%%t"
       first becomes "s%%t" and finally "s%t").

       Whenever  a rule field goes through several substitution rounds, the $ or % characters are
       masked inside values substituted during earlier rounds, in order to  avoid  unwanted  side
       effects during later rounds.

       If  the  action  list  variable  has  not been set, it is substituted with an empty string
       (i.e., a zero-width string).  Thus the string "Value of A is: %a" becomes "Value of A  is:
       "  after  substitution  if  the  variable %a is unset.  (Note that prior to SEC-2.6, unset
       variables were *not* substituted.)

       Finally, the values are substituted as strings, therefore values  of  other  types  (e.g.,
       references)  lose  their  original  meaning, unless explicitly noted otherwise (e.g., if a
       Perl function reference is stored to an action list variable, the function  can  later  be
       invoked through this variable with the call action).

       SEC supports the following actions (optional parameters are enclosed in square brackets):

       none   No action.

       logonly [<string>]
              Message  <string>  is  logged  to  destinations  given  with the --log and --syslog
              options. The level of the log message is set to 4 (see the --debug option for  more
              information on log message levels). Default value for <string> is %s.

       write <filename> [<string>]
              String  <string>  with  a  terminating  newline  is  written to the file <filename>
              (<filename> may not contain whitespace). File may be a regular file, named pipe, or
              standard  output  (denoted  by  -).   If  the  file  is a regular file, <string> is
              appended to the end of the file.  If the file does not exist, it is  created  as  a
              regular  file  before  writing.   Note  that  the file will not be closed after the
              action completes, and the following write actions will access an already open file.
              However,  several  signals  cause  the  file to be closed and reopened (see SIGNALS
              section for more information).  Default value for <string> is %s.

       writen <filename> [<string>]
              Similar to the write action, except that the string <string> is written  without  a
              terminating  newline.  Note that write and writen actions share the same filehandle
              for accessing the file.

       closef <filename>
              Close the file <filename> that has been previously opened by the  write  or  writen
              action (<filename> may not contain whitespace).

       owritecl <filename> [<string>]
              Similar  to  the write action, except that the file <filename> is opened and closed
              at each write.  Also, the string <string> is written without a terminating newline.
              If  the  file has already been opened by a previous write action, owritecl does not
              use existing filehandle, but opens and closes the file separately.

       udgram <filename> [<string>]
              String <string> is written to the UNIX datagram socket <filename>  (<filename>  may
              not  contain whitespace).  Note that the socket will not be closed after the action
              completes, and the following udgram actions will access  an  already  open  socket.
              However,  several  signals  cause the socket to be closed and reopened (see SIGNALS
              section for more information).  Default value for <string> is %s.

       closeudgr <filename>
              Close the UNIX datagram socket <filename> that has been previously  opened  by  the
              udgram action (<filename> may not contain whitespace).

       ustream <filename> [<string>]
              String <string> is written to the UNIX stream socket <filename> (<filename> may not
              contain whitespace).  Note that the socket will not  be  closed  after  the  action
              completes,  and  the  following ustream actions will access an already open socket.
              However, several signals cause the socket to be closed and  reopened  (see  SIGNALS
              section for more information).  Default value for <string> is %s.

       closeustr <filename>
              Close  the  UNIX  stream  socket  <filename> that has been previously opened by the
              ustream action (<filename> may not contain whitespace).

       udpsock <host>:<port> [<string>]
              String <string> is sent to the UDP port <port> of the host <host>.  Note  that  the
              UDP  socket  which  is  used  for communication will not be closed after the action
              completes, and the following udpsock actions for the same remote peer will  use  an
              already  existing  socket.   However, several signals cause the socket to be closed
              and recreated (see SIGNALS  section  for  more  information).   Default  value  for
              <string> is %s.

       closeudp <host>:<port>
              Close  the UDP socket for peer <host>:<port> that has been previously opened by the
              udpsock action.

       tcpsock <host>:<port> [<string>]
              String <string> is sent to the TCP port <port> of the  host  <host>.   The  timeout
              value  given  with  the --socket-timeout option determines for how many seconds SEC
              will attempt to establish a connection  to  the  remote  peer.  If  the  connection
              establishment  does not succeed immediately, the tcpsock action buffers <string> in
              memory for later sending to the remote peer.  Note that  the  relevant  TCP  socket
              will  not  be closed after <string> has been transmitted, and the following tcpsock
              actions for the same peer will use an already existing  socket.   However,  several
              signals  cause  the socket to be closed and recreated (see SIGNALS section for more
              information).  Default value for <string> is %s.

       closetcp <host>:<port>
              Close the TCP socket for peer <host>:<port> that has been previously opened by  the
              tcpsock action.

       shellcmd <cmdline>
              Fork  a  process  for executing command line <cmdline>. If the --quoting option was
              specified and <cmdline> contains %s variables, the  value  of  %s  is  quoted  with
              single  quotes  before  substituting it into <cmdline>; if the value of %s contains
              single quotes, they are masked with backslashes (e.g., abc is  converted  to  'abc'
              and   aa'bb   is   converted  to  'aa'\''bb').   For  additional  information,  see
              INTERPROCESS COMMUNICATION section.

       spawn <cmdline>
              Similar to the shellcmd action, except that each line from the standard  output  of
              <cmdline> becomes a synthetic event and will be treated like a line from input file
              (see the event action for more information).  If  the  --intcontexts  command  line
              option  is  given, internal context _INTERNAL_EVENT is set up before each synthetic
              event is processed (see INTERNAL EVENTS AND CONTEXTS section for more information).

       cspawn <name> <cmdline>
              Similar to the spawn action, except that if the --intcontexts command  line  option
              is given, internal context <name> is set up for each synthetic event.

       pipe '[<string>]' [<cmdline>]
              Fork  a  process  for  executing command line <cmdline>. The string <string> with a
              terminating newline is written to the standard input of  <cmdline>  (single  quotes
              are  used  for  disambiguating  <string>  from  <cmdline>).   If  <string> contains
              semicolons,  <string>  must  be  enclosed  in  parentheses  (e.g.,  pipe  '($1;$2)'
              /bin/cat).  Default value for <string> is %s.  If <cmdline> is omitted, <string> is
              written  to  standard  output.   For  additional  information,   see   INTERPROCESS
              COMMUNICATION section.

       create [<name> [<time> [<action list>] ] ]
              Create  a context with the name <name>, lifetime of <time> seconds, and empty event
              store. The <name> parameter may not contain whitespace  and  defaults  to  %s.  The
              <time> parameter must evaluate to an unsigned integer at runtime.  Specifying 0 for
              <time> or omitting the value means infinite lifetime.  If <action list>  is  given,
              it  will  be  executed when the context expires.  If <action list> contains several
              actions, the list must be enclosed in parentheses. In <action list>,  the  internal
              context  name  _THIS may be used for referring to the current context (see INTERNAL
              EVENTS AND CONTEXTS section for a detailed discussion).   If  an  already  existing
              context  is recreated with create, its remaining lifetime is set to <time> seconds,
              its action list is reinitialized, and its event store is emptied.

       delete [<name>]
              Delete the context <name>. The <name> parameter  may  not  contain  whitespace  and
              defaults to %s.

       obsolete [<name>]
              Similar to the delete action, except that the action list of the context <name> (if
              present) is executed before deletion.

       set <name> <time> [<action list>]
              Change settings for the context <name>. The creation time of the context is set  to
              the current time, and the lifetime of the context is set to <time> seconds.  If the
              <action list> parameter is given, the context action list is set to <action  list>.
              The  <name>  parameter  may  not contain whitespace and defaults to %s.  The <time>
              parameter  must  evaluate  to  an  unsigned  integer  or  hyphen  (-)  at  runtime.
              Specifying  0  for  <time>  means  infinite  lifetime.   If <time> equals to -, the
              creation time and lifetime of the  context  are  not  changed.   If  <action  list>
              contains  several  actions,  the  list  must be enclosed in parentheses. In <action
              list>, the internal context name _THIS may be used for  referring  to  the  current
              context (see INTERNAL EVENTS AND CONTEXTS section for a detailed discussion).

       alias <name> [<alias>]
              Create  an  alias name <alias> for the context <name>. After creation, both <alias>
              and <name> will point to the same context data structure,  and  can  thus  be  used
              interchangeably  for  referring  to the context.  The <name> and <alias> parameters
              may not contain whitespace, and <alias> defaults to %s.  If the context <name> does
              not  exist,  the alias name is not created.  If the delete action is called for one
              of the context names, the context data structure  is  destroyed,  and  all  context
              names (which are now pointers to unallocated memory) cease to exist. Also note that
              when the context expires, its action list is executed only once, no matter how many
              names the context has.

       unalias [<alias>]
              Drop  an  existing  context  name  <alias>,  so  that  it can no longer be used for
              referring to the given context. The <alias> parameter may  not  contain  whitespace
              and  defaults to %s.  If the name <alias> is the last reference to the context, the
              unalias action is identical to delete.

       add <name> [<string>]
              String <string> is appended to the end of the event store of  the  context  <name>.
              The  <name>  parameter  may  not  contain  whitespace,  and  the <string> parameter
              defaults to %s.  If the context <name> does not exist, the context is created  with
              an  infinite  lifetime,  empty  action  list  and empty event store (as with create
              <name>) before adding the string to event  store.   If  <string>  is  a  multi-line
              string  (i.e.,  it  contains  newlines),  it  is split into lines, and each line is
              appended to the event store separately.

       prepend <name> [<string>]
              Similar to the add action, except that the string  <string>  is  prepended  to  the
              beginning of the event store of context <name>.

       fill <name> [<string>]
              Similar  to  the  add  action, except that the event store of the context <name> is
              emptied before <string> is added.

       report <name> [<cmdline>]
              Fork a process for executing command line <cmdline>, and  write  strings  from  the
              event  store of the context <name> to the standard input of <cmdline>.  Strings are
              written in the order they appear in the event store,  with  a  terminating  newline
              appended  to  each string.  If the context <name> does not exist or its event store
              is empty, <cmdline>  is  not  executed.   The  <name>  parameter  may  not  contain
              whitespace,  and  if  <cmdline> is omitted, strings are written to standard output.
              For additional information, see INTERPROCESS COMMUNICATION section.

       copy <name> %<var>
              Strings s1,...,sn from the event store of the context  <name>  are  joined  into  a
              multi-line  string  "s1<NEWLINE>...<NEWLINE>sn", and this string is assigned to the
              action list variable %<var>.  If the context <name> does not exist,  the  value  of
              %<var> does not change.

       empty <name> [%<var>]
              Similar  to the copy action, except that the event store of the context <name> will
              be emptied after the assignment. If %<var> is omitted, the  content  of  the  event
              store is dropped without an assignment.

       pop <name> %<var>
              Remove the last string from the event store of context <name>, and assign it to the
              action list variable %<var>. If the event store is empty, %<var> is  set  to  empty
              string.  If the context <name> does not exist, the value of %<var> does not change.

       shift <name> %<var>
              Remove  the  first  string from the event store of context <name>, and assign it to
              the action list variable %<var>. If the event store is  empty,  %<var>  is  set  to
              empty  string.   If the context <name> does not exist, the value of %<var> does not
              change.

       exists %<var> <name>
              If the context <name> exists, set the action list variable %<var> to  1,  otherwise
              set %<var> to 0.

       getsize %<var> <name>
              Find  the  number  of strings in the event store of context <name>, and assign this
              number to the action list variable %<var>.  If the context <name> does  not  exist,
              %<var> is set to Perl undefined value.

       getaliases %<var> <name>
              Find  all  alias  names for context <name>, join the names into a multi-line string
              "alias1<NEWLINE>...<NEWLINE>aliasn", and assign this  string  to  the  action  list
              variable  %<var>.   If  the context <name> does not exist, the value of %<var> does
              not change.

       getltime %<var> <name>
              Find the lifetime of context <name>, and assign this  number  to  the  action  list
              variable  %<var>.   If  the context <name> does not exist, the value of %<var> does
              not change.

       getctime %<var> <name>
              Find the creation time of context <name>, and assign this number to the action list
              variable  %<var>.   If  the context <name> does not exist, the value of %<var> does
              not change.

       setctime <time> <name>
              Set the creation time of context <name>  to  <time>.   The  <time>  parameter  must
              evaluate  to seconds since Epoch (as reported by the time(2) system call), and must
              reflect a time moment between the previous creation time and the current time (both
              endpoints included).

       event [<time>] [<string>]
              After  <time>  seconds, create a synthetic event <string>.  If <string> is a multi-
              line string (i.e., it contains newlines), it is split into  lines,  and  from  each
              line  a  separate  synthetic event is created.  SEC will treat each synthetic event
              like a line from an input file -- the event will be matched against  rules  and  it
              might  trigger further actions.  If the --intcontexts command line option is given,
              internal context _INTERNAL_EVENT is set up for  synthetic  event(s)  (see  INTERNAL
              EVENTS  AND  CONTEXTS  section  for  more information).  The <time> parameter is an
              integer constant. Specifying 0 for  <time>  or  omitting  the  value  means  "now".
              Default value for <string> is %s.

       tevent <time> [<string>]
              Similar to the event action, except that the <time> parameter may contain variables
              and must evaluate to an unsigned integer at runtime.

       cevent <name> <time> [<string>]
              Similar to the tevent action, except that if the --intcontexts command line  option
              is given, internal context <name> is set up for synthetic event(s).

       reset [<offset>] [<string>]
              Terminate  event  correlation  operation(s)  with  the operation description string
              <string>. Note that the reset action works only for  operations  started  from  the
              same  configuration  file.   The  <offset> parameter is used to refer to a specific
              rule in the configuration file. If <offset> is given, the operation started by  the
              given  rule is terminated (if it exists).  If <offset> is an unsigned integer N, it
              refers to the N-th rule in the configuration file. If <offset> is 0, it  refers  to
              the  current  rule.  If  <offset>  begins  with  the plus (+) or minus (-) sign, it
              specifies an offset from the current rule (e.g., -1 denotes the previous and +1 the
              next  rule).   Note  that since Options rules are only processed when configuration
              files are loaded and they are not applied at runtime, Options  rules  are  excluded
              when calculating <offset>.  If <offset> is not given, SEC checks for each rule from
              the current configuration file if an operation with <string> has  been  started  by
              this  rule,  and  the  operation  is  terminated  if  it exists.  Default value for
              <string> is %s.  For  additional  information,  see  EVENT  CORRELATION  OPERATIONS
              section.

       getwpos %<var> <offset> [<string>]
              Find  the  beginning  of  the  event  correlation  window  for an event correlation
              operation, and set the action list variable %<var> to this  timestamp.   The  value
              assigned  to  %<var> is measured in seconds since Epoch (as reported by the time(2)
              system call). As  with  the  reset  action,  the  event  correlation  operation  is
              identified  by  the  operation  description  string  <string>  and  the rule offset
              <offset>.  If the operation does not exist, the value of %<var>  does  not  change.
              Default   value  for  <string>  is  %s.   For  additional  information,  see  EVENT
              CORRELATION OPERATIONS section.

       setwpos <time> <offset> [<string>]
              Set the  beginning  of  the  event  correlation  window  to  <time>  for  an  event
              correlation operation (if it exists). The <time> parameter must evaluate to seconds
              since Epoch (as reported by the time(2) system  call),  and  must  reflect  a  time
              moment  between  the  previous window position and the current time (both endpoints
              included). As with the reset action, the event correlation operation is  identified
              by the operation description string <string> and the rule offset <offset>.  Default
              value for <string> is  %s.   For  additional  information,  see  EVENT  CORRELATION
              OPERATIONS section.

       assign %<var> [<string>]
              Assign  string  <string>  to  the  action  list variable %<var>.  Default value for
              <string> is %s.

       assignsq %<var> [<string>]
              Similar to the assign action, except that <string> is  quoted  with  single  quotes
              before  assigning it to %<var>. If <string> contains single quotes, they are masked
              with backslashes (e.g., if the match variable $1 holds the value  abc'123'xyz,  the
              action  assignsq %myvar $1 assigns the value 'abc'\''123'\''xyz' to the action list
              variable %myvar).  This action is useful for disabling shell intepretation for  the
              values  of  action  list  variables  that  appear in command lines executed by SEC.
              Default value for <string> is %s.

       free %<var>
              Unset the action list variable %<var>.

       eval %<var> <code>
              The parameter <code> is a Perl miniprogram that is compiled and executed by calling
              the  Perl  eval()  function in the Perl list context.  If the miniprogram returns a
              single value, it is assigned to the action list variable %<var>. If the miniprogram
              returns  several  values  s1,...,sn,  they  are  joined  into  a  multi-line string
              "s1<NEWLINE>...<NEWLINE>sn", and this string is assigned to %<var>.  If no value is
              returned,  %<var>  is  set  to  Perl undefined value. If eval() fails, the value of
              %<var> does not change.  Since most Perl programs contain semicolons which are also
              employed  by  SEC  as  action  separators,  it is recommended to enclose the <code>
              parameter in  parentheses,  in  order  to  mask  the  semicolons  in  <code>.   For
              additional information, see PERL INTEGRATION section.

       call %<var> %<ref> [<paramlist>]
              Call  the  precompiled Perl function referenced by the action list variable %<ref>,
              and assign the result to the action list variable  %<var>.   The  %<ref>  parameter
              must be a code reference that has been previously created with the eval action. The
              <paramlist> parameter (if given) is a string which  specifies  parameters  for  the
              function. The parameters must be separated by whitespace in the <paramlist> string.
              If the function returns a single value, it is assigned to %<var>.  If the  function
              returns  several  values  s1,...,sn,  they  are  joined  into  a  multi-line string
              "s1<NEWLINE>...<NEWLINE>sn", and this string is assigned to %<var>. If no value  is
              returned,  %<var>  is  set  to  Perl undefined value.  If the function encounters a
              fatal runtime error or %<ref> is not a code reference, the value of %<var> does not
              change.  For additional information, see PERL INTEGRATION section.

       lcall %<var> [<paramlist>] -> <code>
              Call  the precompiled Perl function <code> and assign the result to the action list
              variable %<var>.  The <code> parameter must be a  valid  Perl  function  definition
              that  is  compiled  at  SEC  startup with the Perl eval() function, and eval() must
              return a code reference.  The <paramlist> parameter (if given) is  a  string  which
              specifies  parameters  for  the  function.  The  parameters  must  be  separated by
              whitespace in the <paramlist> string.  If the function returns a single  value,  it
              is  assigned to %<var>.  If the function returns several values s1,...,sn, they are
              joined into a multi-line string "s1<NEWLINE>...<NEWLINE>sn",  and  this  string  is
              assigned to %<var>. If no value is returned, %<var> is set to Perl undefined value.
              If the function encounters a fatal runtime error, the  value  of  %<var>  does  not
              change.   Since  most  Perl functions contain semicolons which are also employed by
              SEC as action separators, it is recommended to  enclose  the  <code>  parameter  in
              parentheses,   in   order  to  mask  the  semicolons  in  <code>.   For  additional
              information, see PERL INTEGRATION section.

       rewrite <lnum> [<string>]
              Replace last <lnum> lines  in  the  input  buffer  with  string  <string>.  If  the
              --nojointbuf  option was specified and the action is triggered by a matching event,
              the action modifies the buffer which holds this event. If the  --nojointbuf  option
              was  specified and the action is triggered by the system clock (e.g., the action is
              executed from the Calendar rule), the action modifies the buffer  which  holds  the
              last already processed event.  With the --jointbuf option, the content of the joint
              input buffer is rewritten. The  <lnum>  parameter  must  evaluate  to  an  unsigned
              integer  at  runtime.  If  <lnum>  evaluates to 0, <lnum> is reset to the number of
              lines in <string>.  If the value of <lnum> is  greater  than  the  buffer  size  N,
              <lnum>  is  reset to N.  If <string> contains less than <lnum> lines, <string> will
              be padded with leading empty lines. If <string> contains more  than  <lnum>  lines,
              only leading <lnum> lines from <string> are written into the buffer.  Default value
              for <string> is %s.  For additional information, see INPUT  PROCESSING  AND  TIMING
              section.

       if %<var> ( <action list> ) [ else ( <action list2> ) ]
              If  the  action  list  variable  %<var>  evaluates true in the Perl boolean context
              (i.e., it holds a defined value which is neither 0 nor empty string),  execute  the
              action  list  <action list>. If the second action list <action list2> is given with
              the optional else-statement, it is executed if %<var>  either  does  not  exist  or
              evaluates false (i.e., %<var> holds 0, empty string or Perl undefined value).

       while %<var> ( <action list> )
              Execute  the  action  list  <action  list>  repeatedly  as  long as the action list
              variable %<var> evaluates true in the  Perl  boolean  context  (i.e.,  it  holds  a
              defined value which is neither 0 nor empty string).

       break  If  used  inside  a  while-loop, terminates its execution; otherwise terminates the
              execution of the entire action list.

       continue
              If used inside a while-loop, starts the  next  iteration  of  the  loop;  otherwise
              terminates the execution of the entire action list.

       Examples:

       Follow  the  /var/log/trapd.log  file and feed to SEC input all lines that are appended to
       the file:

       action=spawn /bin/tail -f /var/log/trapd.log

       Mail the timestamp and the value of the $0 variable to the local root:

       action=pipe '%t: $0' /bin/mail -s "alert message" root@localhost

       Add the value of the $0 variable to the event store of the context ftp_<the value of  $1>,
       and set the context to expire after 30 minutes.  When the context expires, its event store
       will be mailed to the local root:

       action=add ftp_$1 $0; \
              set ftp_$1 1800 (report ftp_$1 /bin/mail root@localhost)

       Create a subroutine for weeding out comment lines  from  the  input  list,  and  use  this
       subroutine for removing comment lines from the event store of the context C1:

       action=eval %funcptr ( sub { my(@buf) = split(/\n/, $_[0]); \
                   my(@ret) = grep(!/^#/, @buf); return @ret; } ); \
              copy C1 %in; call %out %funcptr %in; fill C1 %out

       The  following  action  list achieves the same goal as the previous action list with while
       and if actions:

       action=getsize %size C1; while %size ( shift C1 %event; \
              lcall %nocomment %event -> ( sub { $_[0] !~ /^#/ } ); \
              if %nocomment ( add C1 %event ); \
              lcall %size %size -> ( sub { $_[0]-1; } ) )

PARSING ISSUES

       As already noted, SEC context expressions and action lists may contain  parentheses  which
       are  used  for grouping and masking purposes. When SEC parses its configuration, it checks
       whether parentheses in context expressions and action lists are  balanced  (i.e.,  whether
       each  parenthesis  has  a  counterpart), since unbalanced parentheses introduce ambiguity.
       This can cause SEC to reject some legitimate constructs, e.g.,

       action=eval %o (print ")";)

       is considered an invalid action list (however, note that
       action=eval %o (print "()";)
       would be passed by SEC, since now parentheses are  balanced).   In  order  to  avoid  such
       parsing  errors,  each  parenthesis  without a counterpart must be masked with a backslash
       (the backslash will be removed by SEC during configuration file parsing). For example, the
       above action could be written as

       action=eval %o (print "\)";)

RULE TYPES

       This section provides a detailed discussion of SEC rule types.

   SINGLE RULE
       The  Single  rule  immediately executes an action list when an event has matched the rule.
       An event matches the rule if the pattern matches the event and the context expression  (if
       given) evaluates TRUE.

       The Single rule supports the following fields:

       type   fixed  to  Single  (value  is  case  insensitive,  so  single or sIngLe can be used
              instead).

       continue (optional)
              TakeNext, DontCont, EndMatch or GoTo <label> (apart from <label>, values  are  case
              insensitive).

       ptype  pattern type (value is case insensitive).

       pattern
              pattern.

       varmap (optional)
              variable map.

       context (optional)
              context expression.

       desc   operation description string.

       action action list.

       rem (optional, may appear more than once)
              remarks and comments.

       Note that match variables may be used in context, desc, and action fields.  Also note that
       this rule does not start an event correlation operation, and the desc field is merely used
       for setting the %s action list variable.

       Examples:

       type=single
       continue=takenext
       ptype=regexp
       pattern=ftpd\[(\d+)\]: \S+ \(ristov2.*FTP session opened
       desc=ftp session opened for ristov2 pid $1
       action=create ftp_$1

       type=single
       continue=takenext
       ptype=regexp
       pattern=ftpd\[(\d+)\]:
       context=ftp_$1
       desc=ftp session event for ristov2 pid $1
       action=add ftp_$1 $0; set ftp_$1 1800 \
                (report ftp_$1 /bin/mail root@localhost)

       type=single
       ptype=regexp
       pattern=ftpd\[(\d+)\]: \S+ \(ristov2.*FTP session closed
       desc=ftp session closed for ristov2 pid $1
       action=report ftp_$1 /bin/mail root@localhost; \
              delete ftp_$1

       This  ruleset  is  created  for  monitoring the ftpd log file.  The first rule creates the
       context ftp_<pid> when someone connects from host ristov2 over FTP and establishes  a  new
       ftp  session  (the  session is identified by the PID of the process which has been created
       for handling this session). The second rule adds  all  further  log  file  lines  for  the
       session  <pid> to the event store of the context ftp_<pid> (before adding a line, the rule
       checks if the context exists). After adding a line, the rule  extends  context's  lifetime
       for  30  minutes  and sets the action list that will be executed when the context expires.
       The third rule mails collected log file lines to root@localhost when the session <pid>  is
       closed.  Collected  lines will also be mailed when the session <pid> has been inactive for
       30 minutes (no log file lines observed for that session).

       Note that the log file line that has matched the first rule is also  matched  against  the
       second  rule  (since  the  first  rule has the continue field set to TakeNext).  Since the
       second rule always matches this line, it will become the first line in the event store  of
       ftp_<pid>.   The  second rule has also its continue field set to TakeNext, since otherwise
       no log file lines would reach the third rule.

   SINGLEWITHSCRIPT RULE
       The SingleWithScript rule forks a process for executing an external program when an  event
       has  matched  the  rule.   The names of all currently existing contexts are written to the
       standard input of the program.  After the program  has  been  forked,  the  rule  matching
       continues  immediately,  and  the  program  status  will be checked periodically until the
       program exits.  If the program returns 0 exit status,  the  action  list  defined  by  the
       action  field  is  executed;  otherwise  the  action  list defined by the action2 field is
       executed (if given).

       The SingleWithScript rule supports the following fields:

       type   fixed to SingleWithScript (value is case insensitive).

       continue (optional)
              TakeNext, DontCont, EndMatch or GoTo <label> (apart from <label>, values  are  case
              insensitive).

       ptype  pattern type (value is case insensitive).

       pattern
              pattern.

       varmap (optional)
              variable map.

       context (optional)
              context expression.

       script an external program.

       desc   operation description string.

       action action list.

       action2 (optional)
              action list.

       rem (optional, may appear more than once)
              remarks and comments.

       Note  that  match  variables  may  be  used  in context, script, desc, action, and action2
       fields.  Also note that this rule does not start an event correlation operation,  and  the
       desc field is merely used for setting the %s action list variable.

       Examples:

       type=SingleWithScript
       ptype=RegExp
       pattern=interface ([\d.]+) down
       script=/bin/ping -c 3 -q $1
       desc=Check if $1 responds to ping
       action=logonly Interface $1 reported down, but is pingable
       action2=pipe '%t: Interface $1 is down' /bin/mail root@localhost

       When  "interface  <ipaddress>  down" line appears in input, the rule checks if <ipaddress>
       responds to ping. If <ipaddress> is pingable, the message "Interface <ipaddress>  reported
       down,  but is pingable" is logged; otherwise an e-mail warning containing a human-readable
       timestamp is sent to root@localhost.

   SINGLEWITHSUPPRESS RULE
       The SingleWithSuppress rule runs  event  correlation  operations  for  filtering  repeated
       instances  of  the  same  event  during T seconds. The value of T is defined by the window
       field.

       When an event has matched the rule, SEC evaluates the operation description  string  given
       with  the  desc  field. If the operation for the given string and rule does not exist, SEC
       will create it with the lifetime of T seconds, and the operation immediately  executes  an
       action list. If the operation exists, it consumes the matching event without any action.

       The SingleWithSuppress rule supports the following fields:

       type   fixed to SingleWithSuppress (value is case insensitive).

       continue (optional)
              TakeNext,  DontCont,  EndMatch or GoTo <label> (apart from <label>, values are case
              insensitive).

       ptype  pattern type (value is case insensitive).

       pattern
              pattern.

       varmap (optional)
              variable map.

       context (optional)
              context expression.

       desc   operation description string.

       action action list.

       window event correlation window size (value is an integer constant).

       rem (optional, may appear more than once)
              remarks and comments.

       Note that match variables may be used in context, desc, and action fields.

       Examples:

       type=SingleWithSuppress
       ptype=RegExp
       pattern=(\S+): [fF]ile system full
       desc=File system $1 full
       action=pipe '%t: %s' /bin/mail root@localhost
       window=900

       This rule runs event correlation operations  for  processing  "file  system  full"  syslog
       messages, e.g.,

       Dec 16 14:26:09 test ufs: [ID 845546 kern.notice] NOTICE: alloc: /var: file system full

       When  the first message for a file system is observed, an operation is created which sends
       an e-mail warning about this file system to root@localhost.  The operation will  then  run
       for  900  seconds  and  silently  consume  further  messages  for  the *same* file system.
       However, if a message for a different file system is observed, another operation  will  be
       started  which  sends a warning to root@localhost again (since the desc field contains the
       $1 match variable which evaluates to the file system name).

   PAIR RULE
       The Pair rule runs event correlation  operations  for  processing  event  pairs  during  T
       seconds.  The  value  of  T is defined by the window field. Default value is 0 which means
       infinity.

       When an event has matched the conditions defined by the pattern  and  context  field,  SEC
       evaluates  the  operation  description string given with the desc field.  If the operation
       for the given string and rule exists, it consumes the matching event without  any  action.
       If  the  operation  does not exist, SEC will create it with the lifetime of T seconds, and
       the operation immediately executes an action list defined by the action  field.  SEC  will
       also  copy  the  match  conditions  given  with  the  pattern2 and context2 field into the
       operation, and substitute match variables with their values in copied conditions.

       If the event does not match conditions defined by the pattern and context field, SEC  will
       check  the  match  conditions  of  all operations started by the given rule. Each matching
       operation executes the action list given with the action2 field and finishes.

       If match variables are set when the operation matches an event, they are made available as
       $-prefixed  match variables in context2, desc2, and action2 fields of the rule definition.
       For example, if pattern2 field is a regular expression, then $1 in the desc2 field is  set
       by  pattern2.   In  order  to  access  match  variables  set  by pattern, %-prefixed match
       variables have to be used in context2, desc2, and action2 fields. For example, if  pattern
       and  pattern2  are regular expressions, then %1 in the desc2 field refers to the value set
       by the first capture group in pattern (i.e., it has the same  value  as  $1  in  the  desc
       field).

       The Pair rule supports the following fields:

       type   fixed to Pair (value is case insensitive).

       continue (optional)
              TakeNext,  DontCont,  EndMatch or GoTo <label> (apart from <label>, values are case
              insensitive). Specifies the point-of-continue after a match by pattern and context.

       ptype  pattern type for pattern (value is case insensitive).

       pattern
              pattern.

       varmap (optional)
              variable map for pattern.

       context (optional)
              context expression, evaluated together with pattern.

       desc   operation description string.

       action action list.

       continue2 (optional)
              TakeNext, DontCont, EndMatch or GoTo <label> (apart from <label>, values  are  case
              insensitive).  Specifies  the  point-of-continue  after  a  match  by  pattern2 and
              context2.

       ptype2 pattern type for pattern2 (value is case insensitive).

       pattern2
              pattern.

       varmap2 (optional)
              variable map for pattern2.

       context2 (optional)
              context expression, evaluated together with pattern2.

       desc2  format string that sets the %s variable for action2.

       action2
              action list.

       window (optional)
              event correlation window size (value is an integer constant).

       rem (optional, may appear more than once)
              remarks and comments.

       Note that match variables may be used in context, desc, action, pattern2, context2, desc2,
       and action2 fields.

       Examples:

       type=Pair
       ptype=RegExp
       pattern=kernel: nfs: server (\S+) not responding, still trying
       desc=Server $1 is not responding
       action=pipe '%t: %s' /bin/mail root@localhost
       ptype2=SubStr
       pattern2=kernel: nfs: server $1 OK
       desc2=Server $1 is responding again
       action2=logonly
       window=3600

       This rule runs event correlation operations for processing NFS "server not responding" and
       "server OK" syslog messages, e.g.,

       Dec 18 22:39:48 test kernel: nfs: server box1 not responding, still trying
       Dec 18 22:42:27 test kernel: nfs: server box1 OK

       When the "server not responding" message for an NFS server is observed,  an  operation  is
       created  for this server which sends an e-mail warning about the server to root@localhost.
       The operation will then run for 3600 seconds and  silently  consume  further  "server  not
       responding"  messages  for the same server. If this operation observes "server OK" message
       for the *same* server, it will log the message "Server <servername> is  responding  again"
       and finish.

       For example, if SEC observes the following event at 22:39:48

       Dec 18 22:39:48 test kernel: nfs: server box1 not responding, still trying

       an  event  correlation operation is created for server box1 which issues an e-mail warning
       about this server immediately. After that, the operation will run for 3600 seconds  (until
       23:39:48),  waiting  for  an  event which would contain the substring "kernel: nfs: server
       box1 OK" (because the pattern2 field contains the $1 match variable which evaluates to the
       server name).

       If  any  further  error messages appear for server box1 during the 3600 second lifetime of
       the operation, e.g.,

       Dec 18 22:40:28 test kernel: nfs: server box1 not responding, still trying
       Dec 18 22:41:09 test kernel: nfs: server box1 not responding, still trying

       these messages will be silently consumed by the operation.  If before its  expiration  the
       operation  observes  an event which contains the substring  "kernel: nfs: server box1 OK",
       e.g.,

       Dec 18 22:42:27 test kernel: nfs: server box1 OK

       the operation will log the  message  "Server  box1  is  responding  again"  and  terminate
       immediately.  If no such message appears during the 3600 second lifetime of the operation,
       the operation will expire without taking any action. Please note that if the window  field
       would  be  either  removed from the rule definition or set to 0, the operation would never
       silently expire, but would terminate only after observing  an  event  which  contains  the
       substring  "kernel: nfs: server box1 OK".

       If the above rule is modified in the following way

       type=Pair
       ptype=RegExp
       pattern=^([[:alnum:]: ]+) \S+ kernel: nfs: server (\S+) not responding, still trying
       desc=Server $2 is not responding
       action=logonly
       ptype2=RegExp
       pattern2=^([[:alnum:]: ]+) \S+ kernel: nfs: server $2 OK
       desc2=Server %2 was not accessible from %1 to $1
       action2=pipe '%s' /bin/mail root@localhost
       window=86400

       this  rule  will  run  event  correlation  operations  which report NFS server downtime to
       root@localhost via e-mail,  provided  that  downtime  does  not  exceed  24  hours  (86400
       seconds).

       For example, if SEC observes the following event

       Dec 18 23:01:17 test kernel: nfs: server box.test not responding, still trying

       then  the  rule  matches this event, sets $1 match variable to "Dec 18 23:01:17" and $2 to
       "box.test", and  creates  an  event  correlation  operation  for  server  box.test.   This
       operation  will start its work by logging the message "Server box.test is not responding",
       and will then run for 86400 seconds, waiting for an event which would  match  the  regular
       expression

       ^([[:alnum:]: ]+) \S+ kernel: nfs: server box\.test OK

       Note that this expression was created from the regular expression template in the pattern2
       field by substituting the match variable $2 with its  value.  However,  since  the  string
       "box.test" contains the dot (.) character which is a regular expression metacharacter, the
       dot is masked with the backslash in the regular expression.

       Suppose SEC will then observe the event

       Dec 18 23:09:54 test kernel: nfs: server box.test OK

       This event matches the above regular expression which is used by the operation running for
       server  box.test.  Also,  the  regular  expression  match  sets the $1 variable to "Dec 18
       23:09:54" and unsets the $2 variable. In order to refer to their original values when  the
       operation  was  created,  %1 and %2 match variables have to be used in the desc2 field (%1
       equals to "Dec 18 23:01:17" and %2 equals to "box.test"). Therefore,  the  operation  will
       send the e-mail message "Server box.test was not accessible from Dec 18 23:01:17 to Dec 18
       23:09:54" to root@localhost, and will terminate immediately.

   PAIRWITHWINDOW RULE
       The PairWithWindow rule runs event  correlation  operations  for  processing  event  pairs
       during T seconds. The value of T is defined by the window field.

       When  an  event  has  matched the conditions defined by the pattern and context field, SEC
       evaluates the operation description string given with the desc field.   If  the  operation
       for  the  given string and rule exists, it consumes the matching event without any action.
       If the operation does not exist, SEC will create it with the lifetime of T  seconds.   SEC
       will  also  copy  the match conditions given with the pattern2 and context2 field into the
       operation, and substitute match variables with their values in copied conditions.

       If the event does not match conditions defined by the pattern and context field, SEC  will
       check  the  match  conditions  of  all operations started by the given rule. Each matching
       operation executes the action list given with the action2  field  and  finishes.   If  the
       operation  has  not  observed a matching event by the end of its lifetime, it executes the
       action list given with the action field before finishing.

       If match variables are set when the operation matches an event, they are made available as
       $-prefixed  match variables in context2, desc2, and action2 fields of the rule definition.
       For example, if pattern2 field is a regular expression, then $1 in the desc2 field is  set
       by  pattern2.   In  order  to  access  match  variables  set  by pattern, %-prefixed match
       variables have to be used in context2, desc2, and action2 fields. For example, if  pattern
       and  pattern2  are regular expressions, then %1 in the desc2 field refers to the value set
       by the first capture group in pattern (i.e., it has the same  value  as  $1  in  the  desc
       field).

       The PairWithWindow rule supports the following fields:

       type   fixed to PairWithWindow (value is case insensitive).

       continue (optional)
              TakeNext,  DontCont,  EndMatch or GoTo <label> (apart from <label>, values are case
              insensitive). Specifies the point-of-continue after a match by pattern and context.

       ptype  pattern type for pattern (value is case insensitive).

       pattern
              pattern.

       varmap (optional)
              variable map for pattern.

       context (optional)
              context expression, evaluated together with pattern.

       desc   operation description string.

       action action list.

       continue2 (optional)
              TakeNext, DontCont, EndMatch or GoTo <label> (apart from <label>, values  are  case
              insensitive).  Specifies  the  point-of-continue  after  a  match  by  pattern2 and
              context2.

       ptype2 pattern type for pattern2 (value is case insensitive).

       pattern2
              pattern.

       varmap2 (optional)
              variable map for pattern2.

       context2 (optional)
              context expression, evaluated together with pattern2.

       desc2  format string that sets the %s variable for action2.

       action2
              action list.

       window event correlation window size (value is an integer constant).

       rem (optional, may appear more than once)
              remarks and comments.

       Note that match variables may be used in context, desc, action, pattern2, context2, desc2,
       and action2 fields.

       Examples:

       type=PairWithWindow
       ptype=RegExp
       pattern=sshd\[\d+\]: Failed .+ for (\S+) from ([\d.]+) port \d+ ssh2
       desc=User $1 has been unable to log in from $2 over SSH during 1 minute
       action=pipe '%t: %s' /bin/mail root@localhost
       ptype2=RegExp
       pattern2=sshd\[\d+\]: Accepted .+ for $1 from $2 port \d+ ssh2
       desc2=SSH login successful for %1 from %2 after initial failure
       action2=logonly
       window=60

       This rule runs event correlation operations for processing SSH login events, e.g.,

       Dec 27 19:00:24 test sshd[10526]: Failed password for risto from 10.1.2.7 port 52622 ssh2
       Dec  27  19:00:27  test  sshd[10526]: Accepted password for risto from 10.1.2.7 port 52622
       ssh2

       When an SSH login failure is observed for  a  user  name  and  a  source  IP  address,  an
       operation  is  created  for  this user name and IP address combination which will expect a
       successful login for the *same* user name and *same* IP address during 60 seconds.  If the
       user  will  not log in from the same IP address during 60 seconds, the operation will send
       an e-mail warning to root@localhost before finishing, otherwise it will  log  the  message
       "SSH login successful for <username> from <ipaddress> after initial failure" and finish.

       Suppose  the  following  events  are  generated by an SSH daemon, and each event timestamp
       reflects the time SEC observes the event:

       Dec 30 13:02:01 test sshd[30517]: Failed password for risto from 10.1.2.7 port 42172 ssh2
       Dec 30 13:02:30 test sshd[30810]: Failed password for root from 192.168.1.104  port  46125
       ssh2
       Dec 30 13:02:37 test sshd[30517]: Failed password for risto from 10.1.2.7 port 42172 ssh2
       Dec  30  13:02:59 test sshd[30810]: Failed password for root from 192.168.1.104 port 46125
       ssh2
       Dec 30 13:03:04 test sshd[30810]: Accepted password for root from 192.168.1.104 port 46125
       ssh2

       When  the  first event is observed at 13:02:01, an operation is started for user risto and
       IP address 10.1.2.7 which will expect a successful login  for  risto  from  10.1.2.7.  The
       operation  will  run  for  60  seconds, waiting for an event which would match the regular
       expression

       sshd\[\d+\]: Accepted .+ for risto from 10\.1\.2\.7 port \d+ ssh2

       Note that this expression was created from the regular expression template in the pattern2
       field  by  substituting  match  variables  $1 and $2 with their values. However, since the
       value of $2 contains the dot (.) characters which are regular  expression  metacharacters,
       each dot is masked with the backslash in the regular expression.

       When  the second event is observed at 13:02:30, another operation is started for user root
       and IP  address  192.168.1.104  which  will  expect  root  to  log  in  successfully  from
       192.168.1.104.  This  operation will run for 60 seconds, waiting for an event matching the
       regular expression

       sshd\[\d+\]: Accepted .+ for root from 192\.168\.1\.104 port \d+ ssh2

       The third event at 13:02:37 represents a second  login  failure  for  user  risto  and  IP
       address  10.1.2.7,  and  is silently consumed by the first operation. Likewise, the fourth
       event at 13:02:59 is silently consumed by the second operation.  The first operation  will
       run  until  13:03:01  and  then  expire  without  seeing a successful login for risto from
       10.1.2.7. Before terminating, the operation will send an e-mail warning to  root@localhost
       that  user  risto has not managed to log in from 10.1.2.7 during one minute.  At 13:03:04,
       the second operation will observe an event which matches its regular expression

       sshd\[\d+\]: Accepted .+ for root from 192\.168\.1\.104 port \d+ ssh2

       After seeing this event, the operation will log the message "SSH login successful for root
       from 192.168.1.104 after initial failure" and terminate immediately.  Please note that the
       match by the regular expression

       sshd\[\d+\]: Accepted .+ for root from 192\.168\.1\.104 port \d+ ssh2

       sets the $1 match variable to 1 and unsets $2. Therefore, the %1 and  %2  match  variables
       have  to be used in the desc2 field, in order to refer to the original values of $1 (root)
       and $2 (192.168.1.104) when the operation was created.

   SINGLEWITHTHRESHOLD RULE
       The SingleWithThreshold rule runs  event  correlation  operations  for  counting  repeated
       instances  of  the  same  event  during  T  seconds,  and taking an action if N events are
       observed.  The values of T and N are defined by the window and thresh field, respectively.

       When an event has matched the rule, SEC evaluates the operation description  string  given
       with  the  desc  field. If the operation for the given string and rule does not exist, SEC
       will create it with the lifetime of T seconds. The operation will memorize the  occurrence
       time  of  the event (current time as returned by the time(2) system call), and compare the
       number of memorized occurrence times with the threshold N. If the operation has observed N
       events,  it executes the action list defined by the action field, and consumes all further
       matching events without any action. If the rule has an optional action list  defined  with
       the  action2  field,  the  operation  will  execute it before finishing, provided that the
       action list given with action has been previously executed by the operation. Note that   a
       sliding window is employed for event counting -- if the operation has observed less than N
       events by the end of its lifetime, it drops  occurrence  times  which  are  older  than  T
       seconds,  and  extends  its  lifetime for T seconds from the earliest remaining occurrence
       time. If there are no remaining occurrence times, the operation finishes without executing
       an action list.

       The SingleWithThreshold rule supports the following fields:

       type   fixed to SingleWithThreshold (value is case insensitive).

       continue (optional)
              TakeNext,  DontCont,  EndMatch or GoTo <label> (apart from <label>, values are case
              insensitive).

       ptype  pattern type (value is case insensitive).

       pattern
              pattern.

       varmap (optional)
              variable map.

       context (optional)
              context expression.

       desc   operation description string.

       action action list.

       action2 (optional)
              action list.

       window event correlation window size (value is an integer constant).

       thresh counting threshold (value is an integer constant).

       rem (optional, may appear more than once)
              remarks and comments.

       Note that match variables may be used in context, desc, action, and action2 fields.

       Examples:

       type=SingleWithThreshold
       ptype=RegExp
       pattern=sshd\[\d+\]: Failed .+ for (\S+) from [\d.]+ port \d+ ssh2
       desc=Three SSH login failures within 1m for user $1
       action=pipe '%t: %s' /bin/mail root@localhost
       window=60
       thresh=3

       This rule runs event correlation operations for counting the number of SSH  login  failure
       events.  Each operation counts events for one user name, and if the operation has observed
       three login failures within 60 seconds, it sends an e-mail warning to root@localhost.

       Suppose the following events are generated by an SSH  daemon,  and  each  event  timestamp
       reflects the time SEC observes the event:

       Dec 28 01:42:21 test sshd[28132]: Failed password for risto from 10.1.2.7 port 42172 ssh2
       Dec 28 01:43:10 test sshd[28132]: Failed password for risto from 10.1.2.7 port 42172 ssh2
       Dec 28 01:43:29 test sshd[28132]: Failed password for risto from 10.1.2.7 port 42172 ssh2
       Dec 28 01:44:00 test sshd[28149]: Failed password for risto2 from 10.1.2.7 port 42176 ssh2
       Dec 28 01:44:03 test sshd[28211]: Failed password for risto from 10.1.2.7 port 42192 ssh2
       Dec 28 01:44:07 test sshd[28211]: Failed password for risto from 10.1.2.7 port 42192 ssh2

       When  the  first  event  is observed at 01:42:21, a counting operation is started for user
       risto, with its event correlation window ending at 01:43:21.  Since by  01:43:21  two  SSH
       login  failures  for user risto have occurred, the threshold condition remains unsatisfied
       for the operation.  Therefore, the beginning of its event correlation window will be moved
       to 01:43:10 (the occurrence time of the second event), leaving the first event outside the
       window.  At 01:44:00,  another  counting  operation  is  started  for  user  risto2.   The
       threshold  condition  for the first operation will become satisfied at 01:44:03 (since the
       operation has seen three login failure events for user risto within 60 seconds), and  thus
       an  e-mail  warning  will  be  issued.  Finally,  the  event occurring at 01:44:07 will be
       consumed silently by the first operation (the operation will run until  01:44:10).   Since
       there  will  be no further login failure events for user risto2, the second operation will
       exist until 01:45:00 without taking any action.

   SINGLEWITH2THRESHOLDS RULE
       The SingleWith2Thresholds rule runs event correlation operations which take action  if  N1
       events  have been observed in the window of T1 seconds, and then at most N2 events will be
       observed in the window of T2 seconds.  The values of T1, N1, T2, and N2 are defined by the
       window, thresh, window2, and thresh2 field, respectively.

       When  an  event has matched the rule, SEC evaluates the operation description string given
       with the desc field. If the operation for the given string and rule does  not  exist,  SEC
       will create it with the lifetime of T1 seconds. The operation will memorize the occurrence
       time of the event (current time as returned by the time(2) system call), and  compare  the
       number  of memorized occurrence times with the threshold N1. If the operation has observed
       N1 events, it executes the action list defined by the action  field,  and  starts  another
       counting round for T2 seconds.  If no more than N2 events have been observed by the end of
       the window, the operation executes the action  list  defined  by  the  action2  field  and
       finishes. Note that both windows are sliding -- the first window slides like the window of
       the SingleWithThreshold operation, while the beginning of the second window  is  moved  to
       the second earliest memorized event occurrence time when the threshold N2 is violated.

       The SingleWith2Thresholds rule supports the following fields:

       type   fixed to SingleWith2Thresholds (value is case insensitive).

       continue (optional)
              TakeNext,  DontCont,  EndMatch or GoTo <label> (apart from <label>, values are case
              insensitive).

       ptype  pattern type (value is case insensitive).

       pattern
              pattern.

       varmap (optional)
              variable map.

       context (optional)
              context expression.

       desc   operation description string.

       action action list.

       window event correlation window size (value is an integer constant).

       thresh counting threshold.

       desc2  format string that sets the %s variable for action2.

       action2
              action list.

       window2
              event correlation window size (value is an integer constant).

       thresh2
              counting threshold.

       rem (optional, may appear more than once)
              remarks and comments.

       Note that match variables may be used in context, desc, action, desc2, and action2 fields.

       Examples:

       type=SingleWith2Thresholds
       ptype=RegExp
       pattern=(\S+): %SYS-3-CPUHOG
       desc=Router $1 CPU overload
       action=pipe '%t: %s' /bin/mail root@localhost
       window=300
       thresh=2
       desc2=Router $1 CPU load has been normal for 1h
       action2=logonly
       window2=3600
       thresh2=0

       When a SYS-3-CPUHOG syslog message is received from a router, the rule starts  a  counting
       operation  for this router which sends an e-mail warning to root@localhost if another such
       message is received from the same router within 300 seconds. After  sending  the  warning,
       the  operation  will  continue  to  run  until  no  SYS-3-CPUHOG syslog messages have been
       received from the router for 3600 seconds. When  this  condition  becomes  satisfied,  the
       operation  will  log the message "Router <routername> CPU load has been normal for 1h" and
       finish.

       Suppose the following events are generated by a router, and each event timestamp  reflects
       the time SEC observes the event:

       Dec 30 12:23:25 router1.mydomain Router1: %SYS-3-CPUHOG: cpu is hogged
       Dec 30 12:25:38 router1.mydomain Router1: %SYS-3-CPUHOG: cpu is hogged
       Dec 30 12:28:53 router1.mydomain Router1: %SYS-3-CPUHOG: cpu is hogged

       When  the  first event is observed at 12:23:25, a counting operation is started for router
       Router1. The appearance of the second event at 12:25:38 fulfills the  threshold  condition
       given  with  the  thresh  and  window  fields  (two  events  have been observed within 300
       seconds). Therefore, the operation will send an e-mail warning about the CPU  overload  of
       Router1 to root@localhost.

       After  that,  the  operation  will  start  another  counting  round,  expecting  to see no
       SYS-3-CPUHOG events (since thresh2=0) for Router1 during the following 3600  seconds  (the
       beginning  of  the  operation's event correlation window will be moved to 12:25:38 for the
       second counting round).  Since the appearance of the third event at 12:28:53 violates  the
       threshold  condition given with the thresh2 and window2 fields, the beginning of the event
       correlation window will be moved to 12:28:53.  Since there will be no further SYS-3-CPUHOG
       messages  for  Router1, the operation will run until 13:28:53 and then expire, logging the
       message "Router Router1 CPU load has been normal for 1h" before finishing.

   EVENTGROUP RULE
       The EventGroup rule runs event correlation operations for counting repeated instances of N
       different  events e1,...,eN during T seconds, and taking an action if threshold conditions
       c1,...,cN for *all* events are satisfied (i.e., for each event eK there are  at  least  cK
       event  instances in the window).  Note that the event correlation window of the EventGroup
       operation is sliding like the window of the SingleWithThreshold operation.

       Event e1 is described with the pattern and context field, event e2 is described  with  the
       pattern2  and  context2  field,  etc.   The values for N and T are defined by the type and
       window field, respectively. The value for c1 is given with the thresh field, the value for
       c2 is given with the thresh2 field, etc.  Values for N and c1,...,cN default to 1.

       In  order to match an event with the rule, pattern and context fields are evaluated first.
       If they don't match the event, then pattern2 and context2 are evaluated,  etc.  If  all  N
       conditions are tried without a success, the event doesn't match the rule.

       When  an  event has matched the rule, SEC evaluates the operation description string given
       with the desc field. If the operation for the given string and rule does  not  exist,  SEC
       will  create it with the lifetime of T seconds. The operation will memorize the occurrence
       time of the event (current time as returned by the time(2) system call), and  compare  the
       number  of  memorized occurrence times for each eK with the threshold cK (i.e., the number
       of observed instances of eK  is  compared  with  the  threshold  cK).   If  all  threshold
       confitions  are  satisfied,  the  operation executes the action list defined by the action
       field, and consumes all further matching events without re-executing the  action  list  if
       the  multact field is set to No (this is the default).  However, if multact is set to Yes,
       the operation will re-evaluate the threshold conditions on every further  matching  event,
       re-executing  the action list given with the action field if all conditions are satisfied,
       and sliding the event correlation window forward when the window is about to expire (if no
       events remain in the window, the operation will finish).

       If the rule definition has an optional action list defined with the countK field for event
       eK, the operation executes it every time an instance of eK is observed (even if multact is
       set to No and the operation has already executed the action list given with action).

       If  the  rule  definition  has  an  optional  action list defined with the init field, the
       operation executes it immediately after the operation has been created.

       If the rule definition has an optional  action  list  defined  with  the  end  field,  the
       operation  executes  it  immediately before the operation finishes.  Note that this action
       list is *not* executed when the operation is terminated with the reset action.

       If the rule definition has an optional action list  defined  with  the  slide  field,  the
       operation  executes it immediately after the event correlation window has slidden forward.
       However, note that moving the window with  the  setwpos  action  will  *not*  trigger  the
       execution.

       The EventGroup rule supports the following fields:

       type   EventGroup[N] (value is case insensitive, N defaults to 1).

       continue (optional)
              TakeNext,  DontCont,  EndMatch or GoTo <label> (apart from <label>, values are case
              insensitive). Specifies the point-of-continue after a match by pattern and context.

       ptype  pattern type for pattern (value is case insensitive).

       pattern
              pattern.

       varmap (optional)
              variable map for pattern.

       context (optional)
              context expression, evaluated together with pattern.

       count (optional)
              action list for execution after a match by pattern and context.

       thresh (optional)
              counting threshold for events matched by pattern and context (value is  an  integer
              constant, default is 1).

       ...

       continueN (optional)
              TakeNext,  DontCont,  EndMatch or GoTo <label> (apart from <label>, values are case
              insensitive). Specifies  the  point-of-continue  after  a  match  by  patternN  and
              contextN.

       ptypeN pattern type for patternN (value is case insensitive).

       patternN
              pattern.

       varmapN (optional)
              variable map for patternN.

       contextN (optional)
              context expression, evaluated together with patternN.

       countN (optional)
              action list for execution after a match by patternN and contextN.

       threshN (optional)
              counting threshold for events matched by patternN and contextN (value is an integer
              constant, default is 1).

       desc   operation description string.

       action action list.

       init (optional)
              action list.

       end (optional)
              action list.

       slide (optional)
              action list.

       multact (optional)
              Yes or No (values are case insensitive, default is No).

       window event correlation window size (value is an integer constant).

       rem (optional, may appear more than once)
              remarks and comments.

       Note that match variables may be used in context*, count*, desc, action,  init,  end,  and
       slide fields.

       Examples:

       The  following example rule cross-correlates iptables events, Apache web server access log
       messages with 4xx response codes, and SSH login failure events:

       type=EventGroup3
       ptype=RegExp
       pattern=sshd\[\d+\]: Failed .+ for (?:invalid user )?\S+ from ([\d.]+) port \d+ ssh2
       thresh=2
       ptype2=RegExp
       pattern2=^([\d.]+) \S+ \S+ \[.+?\] ".+? HTTP\/[\d.]+" 4\d+
       thresh2=3
       ptype3=RegExp
       pattern3=kernel: iptables:.* SRC=([\d.]+)
       thresh3=5
       desc=Repeated probing from host $1
       action=pipe '%t: %s' /bin/mail root@localhost
       window=120

       The rule starts an event correlation operation for an IP  address  if  SSH  login  failure
       event,  iptables event, or Apache 4xx event is observed for that IP address. The operation
       sends an e-mail warning to root@localhost if within 120 seconds three threshold conditions
       are  satisfied  for  the IP address it tracks -- (1) at least two SSH login failure events
       have occurred for this client IP, (2) at least three Apache 4xx events  have  occured  for
       this client IP, (3) at least five iptables events have been observed for this source IP.

       Suppose  the  following  events  occur,  and  each  event  timestamp reflects the time SEC
       observes the event:

       192.168.1.104 - - [05/Jan/2014:01:11:22 +0200]  "GET  /test.html  HTTP/1.1"  404  286  "-"
       "Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Ubuntu; Linux i686; rv:26.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/26.0"
       Jan       5      01:12:52      localhost      kernel:      iptables:      IN=eth0     OUT=
       MAC=08:00:27:8e:a1:3a:00:1d:e0:7e:89:b1:08:00 SRC=192.168.1.104  DST=192.168.1.107  LEN=60
       TOS=0x10 PREC=0x00 TTL=64 ID=48422 DF PROTO=TCP SPT=46351 DPT=21 WINDOW=29200 RES=0x00 SYN
       URGP=0
       Jan      5      01:12:53      localhost      kernel:      iptables:      IN=eth0      OUT=
       MAC=08:00:27:8e:a1:3a:00:1d:e0:7e:89:b1:08:00  SRC=192.168.1.104  DST=192.168.1.107 LEN=60
       TOS=0x10 PREC=0x00 TTL=64 ID=48423 DF PROTO=TCP SPT=46351 DPT=21 WINDOW=29200 RES=0x00 SYN
       URGP=0
       Jan       5      01:13:01      localhost      kernel:      iptables:      IN=eth0     OUT=
       MAC=08:00:27:8e:a1:3a:00:1d:e0:7e:89:b1:08:00 SRC=192.168.1.104  DST=192.168.1.107  LEN=60
       TOS=0x10 PREC=0x00 TTL=64 ID=20048 DF PROTO=TCP SPT=44963 DPT=23 WINDOW=29200 RES=0x00 SYN
       URGP=0
       Jan      5      01:13:02      localhost      kernel:      iptables:      IN=eth0      OUT=
       MAC=08:00:27:8e:a1:3a:00:1d:e0:7e:89:b1:08:00  SRC=192.168.1.104  DST=192.168.1.107 LEN=60
       TOS=0x10 PREC=0x00 TTL=64 ID=20049 DF PROTO=TCP SPT=44963 DPT=23 WINDOW=29200 RES=0x00 SYN
       URGP=0
       Jan       5      01:13:08      localhost      kernel:      iptables:      IN=eth0     OUT=
       MAC=08:00:27:8e:a1:3a:00:1d:e0:7e:89:b1:08:00 SRC=192.168.1.104  DST=192.168.1.107  LEN=60
       TOS=0x10 PREC=0x00 TTL=64 ID=36362 DF PROTO=TCP SPT=56918 DPT=25 WINDOW=29200 RES=0x00 SYN
       URGP=0
       Jan      5      01:13:09      localhost      kernel:      iptables:      IN=eth0      OUT=
       MAC=08:00:27:8e:a1:3a:00:1d:e0:7e:89:b1:08:00  SRC=192.168.1.104  DST=192.168.1.107 LEN=60
       TOS=0x10 PREC=0x00 TTL=64 ID=36363 DF PROTO=TCP SPT=56918 DPT=25 WINDOW=29200 RES=0x00 SYN
       URGP=0
       192.168.1.104  -  -  [05/Jan/2014:01:13:51  +0200]  "GET  /test.html HTTP/1.1" 404 286 "-"
       "Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Ubuntu; Linux i686; rv:26.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/26.0"
       192.168.1.104 - - [05/Jan/2014:01:13:54 +0200]  "GET  /test.html  HTTP/1.1"  404  286  "-"
       "Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Ubuntu; Linux i686; rv:26.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/26.0"
       192.168.1.104  -  -  [05/Jan/2014:01:14:00  +0200]  "GET /login.html HTTP/1.1" 404 287 "-"
       "Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Ubuntu; Linux i686; rv:26.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/26.0"
       192.168.1.104 - - [05/Jan/2014:01:14:03 +0200] "GET  /login.html  HTTP/1.1"  404  287  "-"
       "Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Ubuntu; Linux i686; rv:26.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/26.0"
       192.168.1.104  -  -  [05/Jan/2014:01:14:03  +0200]  "GET /login.html HTTP/1.1" 404 287 "-"
       "Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Ubuntu; Linux i686; rv:26.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/26.0"
       Jan  5 01:14:11 localhost sshd[1810]: Failed password for  root  from  192.168.1.104  port
       46125 ssh2
       Jan   5  01:14:12  localhost  sshd[1810]: Failed password for root from 192.168.1.104 port
       46125 ssh2
       Jan  5 01:14:18 localhost sshd[1822]: Failed password for  root  from  192.168.1.104  port
       46126 ssh2
       Jan   5  01:14:19  localhost  sshd[1822]: Failed password for root from 192.168.1.104 port
       46126 ssh2
       192.168.1.104 - - [05/Jan/2014:01:14:34 +0200]  "GET  /test.html  HTTP/1.1"  404  286  "-"
       "Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Ubuntu; Linux i686; rv:26.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/26.0"

       The  Apache  4xx event at 01:11:22 starts an event correlation operation for 192.168.1.104
       which has the event correlation window of 120 seconds, thus ending at  01:13:22.   Between
       01:12:52 and 01:13:09, six iptables events appear for 192.168.1.104, and the appearance of
       the fifth event at 01:13:08 fulfills the third threshold condition (within 120 seconds, at
       least five iptables events have been observed).

       Since  by  01:13:22  (the  end  of the event correlation window) no additional events have
       occurred, the first and second threshold condition  remain  unsatisfied.   Therefore,  the
       beginning  of  the event correlation window will be moved to 01:12:52 (the occurrence time
       of the earliest event which is at most 120 seconds old).  As a  result,  the  end  of  the
       window  will  move  from  01:13:22  to 01:14:52.  The only event which is left outside the
       window is the Apache 4xx event at 01:11:22, and thus the threshold condition for  iptables
       events remains satisfied.

       Between  01:13:51  and  01:14:03,  five Apache 4xx events occur, and the appearance of the
       third event at 01:14:00 fulfills the second threshold condition (within  120  seconds,  at
       least  three Apache 4xx events have been observed).  These events are followed by four SSH
       login failure events which occur between 01:14:11 and  01:14:19.  The  appearance  of  the
       second  event  at  01:14:12 fulfills the first threshold condition (within 120 seconds, at
       least two SSH login failure events have been observed).  Since at this  particular  moment
       (01:14:12)  the  other  two  conditions  are also fulfilled, the operation sends an e-mail
       warning about  192.168.1.104  to  root@localhost.   After  that,  the  operation  silently
       consumes   all  further  matching  events  for  192.168.1.104  until  01:14:52,  and  then
       terminates.

       Please note that if the above rule definition would  contain  multact=yes  statement,  the
       operation  would  continue sending e-mails at each matching event after 01:14:12, provided
       that all threshold conditions are satisfied.  Therefore, the operation  would  send  three
       additional  e-mails  at  01:14:18,  01:14:19, and 01:14:34.  Also, the operation would not
       terminate after its window ends at 01:14:52, but would rather slide the window forward and
       expect  new  events.   At  the  occurence of any iptables, SSH login failure or Apache 4xx
       event for 192.168.1.104, the operation would produce a warning  e-mail  if  all  threshold
       conditions are fulfilled.

       The following example rule cross-correlates iptables events and SSH login events:

       type=EventGroup3
       ptype=regexp
       pattern=sshd\[\d+\]: Failed .+ for (\S+) from ([\d.]+) port \d+ ssh2
       varmap= user=1; ip=2
       count=alias OPER_$+{ip} LOGIN_FAILED_$+{user}_$+{ip}
       ptype2=regexp
       pattern2=sshd\[\d+\]: Accepted .+ for (\S+) from ([\d.]+) port \d+ ssh2
       varmap2= user=1; ip=2
       context2=LOGIN_FAILED_$+{user}_$+{ip}
       ptype3=regexp
       pattern3=kernel: iptables:.* SRC=([\d.]+)
       varmap3= ip=1
       desc=Client $+{ip} accessed a firewalled port and had difficulties with logging in
       action=pipe '%t: %s' /bin/mail root@localhost
       init=create OPER_$+{ip}
       slide=delete OPER_$+{ip}; reset 0
       end=delete OPER_$+{ip}
       window=120

       The  rule  starts an event correlation operation for an IP address if SSH login failure or
       iptables event was observed for that IP address. The  operation  exists  for  120  seconds
       (since  when  the event correlation window slides forward, the operation terminates itself
       with the reset action as specified with the slide field).  The operation sends  an  e-mail
       warning  to  root@localhost if within 120 seconds three threshold conditions are satisfied
       for the IP address it tracks -- (1) at least one iptables event has been observed for this
       source IP, (2) at least one SSH login failure has been observed for this client IP, (3) at
       least one successful SSH login has been observed for this client IP  and  for  some  user,
       provided that the operation has previously observed an SSH login failure for the same user
       and same client IP.

       Suppose the following events occur,  and  each  event  timestamp  reflects  the  time  SEC
       observes the event:

       Dec       27       19:00:06       test       kernel:      iptables:      IN=eth0      OUT=
       MAC=00:13:72:8a:83:d2:00:1b:25:07:e2:1b:08:00 SRC=10.1.2.7  DST=10.2.5.5  LEN=60  TOS=0x00
       PREC=0x00 TTL=62 ID=1881 DF PROTO=TCP SPT=34342 DPT=23 WINDOW=5840 RES=0x00 SYN URGP=0
       Dec 27 19:00:14 test sshd[10520]: Accepted password for root from 10.1.2.7 port 52609 ssh2
       Dec 27 19:00:24 test sshd[10526]: Failed password for risto from 10.1.2.7 port 52622 ssh2
       Dec  27  19:00:27  test  sshd[10526]: Accepted password for risto from 10.1.2.7 port 52622
       ssh2

       The iptables event at 19:00:06 starts an event correlation operation  for  10.1.2.7  which
       has the event correlation window of 120 seconds.  Immediately after the operation has been
       started, it creates the context OPER_10.1.2.7.  The second  event  at  19:00:14  does  not
       match  the  rule,  since the context LOGIN_FAILED_root_10.1.2.7 does not exist.  The third
       event at 19:00:24 matches the rule, and the operation which is running for  10.1.2.7  sets
       up the alias name LOGIN_FAILED_risto_10.1.2.7 for the context OPER_10.1.2.7.  Finally, the
       fourth event at 19:00:27 matches the rule, since the  context  LOGIN_FAILED_risto_10.1.2.7
       exists, and the event is therefore processed by the operation (the presence of the context
       indicates that the operation has previously observed a login failure for user  risto  from
       10.1.2.7).   At  this particular moment (19:00:27), all three threshold conditions for the
       operation are fulfilled, and therefore it  sends  an  e-mail  warning  about  10.1.2.7  to
       root@localhost.  After  that,  the operation silently consumes all further matching events
       for 10.1.2.7 until 19:02:06, and then terminates.   Immediately  before  termination,  the
       operation   deletes   the   context   OPER_10.1.2.7   which  also  drops  its  alias  name
       LOGIN_FAILED_risto_10.1.2.7.

   SUPPRESS RULE
       The Suppress rule takes no action when an event has matched the rule, and  keeps  matching
       events from being processed by later rules in the configuration file.

       The Suppress rule supports the following fields:

       type   fixed to Suppress (value is case insensitive).

       ptype  pattern type (value is case insensitive).

       pattern
              pattern.

       varmap (optional)
              variable map.

       context (optional)
              context expression.

       desc (optional)
              string for describing the rule.

       rem (optional, may appear more than once)
              remarks and comments.

       Note that match variables may be used in the context field.  Also note that this rule does
       not start an event correlation operation, and the optional desc field is merely  used  for
       describing the rule.

       Examples:

       type=Suppress
       ptype=RegExp
       pattern=sshd\[\d+\]: Failed .+ for \S+ from ([\d.]+) port \d+ ssh2
       context=SUPPRESS_IP_$1

       type=SingleWithThreshold
       ptype=RegExp
       pattern=sshd\[\d+\]: Failed .+ for (\S+) from ([\d.]+) port \d+ ssh2
       desc=Three SSH login failures within 1m for user $1 from $2
       action=pipe '%t: %s' /bin/mail root@localhost; \
              create SUPPRESS_IP_$2 3600
       window=60
       thresh=3

       The  first  rule  filters  out  SSH login failure events for an already reported source IP
       address, so that they will not be matched against the  second  rule  during  3600  seconds
       after sending an e-mail warning.

   CALENDAR RULE
       The  Calendar  rule was designed for executing actions at specific times. Unlike all other
       rules, this rule reacts only to the system clock, ignoring other input.  The Calendar rule
       executes  the  action  list  given  with  the action field if the current time matches all
       conditions of the time specification given  with  the  time  field.  The  action  list  is
       executed only once for any matching minute.

       The  rule  employs  a time specification which closely resembles the crontab(1) style, but
       there are some subtle differences.   The  time  specification  consists  of  five  or  six
       conditions  separated  by  whitespace. The first condition matches minutes (allowed values
       are 0-59), the second condition  matches  hours  (allowed  values  are  0-23),  the  third
       condition  days  (allowed values are 0-31, with 0 denoting the last day of the month), the
       fourth condition months (allowed values  are  1-12),  and  the  fifth  condition  weekdays
       (allowed  values  are  0-7, with 0 and 7 denoting Sunday). The sixth condition is optional
       and matches years (allowed values are 0-99 which denote the last two digits of the year).

       Asterisks (*), ranges of numbers (e.g., 8-11), and lists (e.g., 2,5,7-9)  are  allowed  as
       conditions.  Asterisks  and  ranges may be augmented with step values (e.g., 47-55/2 means
       47,49,51,53,55).

       Note that unlike crontab(1) time specification, the day and weekday conditions  are  *not*
       joined  with logical OR, but rather with logical AND.  Therefore, 0 1 25-31 10 7 means 1AM
       on last Sunday in October.  On the other hand,  with  crontab(1)  the  same  specification
       means 1AM in every last seven days or every Sunday in October.

       Also,  unlike  some  versions of cron(8), SEC is not restricted to take action only during
       the first second of the current minute. For example, if SEC is started at the 22th  second
       of a minute, the wildcard condition produces a match for this minute.  As another example,
       if the time specification matches the current minute but the context expression  evaluates
       FALSE  during the first half of the minute, the Calendar rule will execute the action list
       in the middle of this minute when the expression value becomes TRUE.

       The Calendar rule supports the following fields:

       type   fixed to Calendar (value is case insensitive).

       time   time specification.

       context (optional)
              context expression.

       desc   operation description string.

       action action list.

       rem (optional, may appear more than once)
              remarks and comments.

       Note that this rule does not start event correlation operation,  and  the  desc  field  is
       merely used for setting the %s action list variable.

       Examples:

       type=Calendar
       time=0 2 25-31 3,12 6
       desc=Check if backup is done on last Saturday of Q1 and Q4
       action=event WAITING_FOR_BACKUP

       type=Calendar
       time=0 2 24-30 6,9 6
       desc=Check if backup is done on last Saturday of Q2 and Q3
       action=event WAITING_FOR_BACKUP

       type=PairWithWindow
       ptype=SubStr
       pattern=WAITING_FOR_BACKUP
       desc=Quarterly backup not completed on time!
       action=pipe '%t: %s' /bin/mail root@localhost
       ptype2=SubStr
       pattern2=BACKUP READY
       desc2=Quarterly backup successfully completed
       action2=none
       window=1800

       The first two rules create a synthetic event WAITING_FOR_BACKUP at 2AM on last Saturday of
       March, June, September and December.  The third rule matches  this  event  and  starts  an
       event  correlation  operation  which waits for the BACKUP READY event for 1800 seconds. If
       this event  has  not  arrived  by  2:30AM,  the  operation  sends  an  e-mail  warning  to
       root@localhost.

   JUMP RULE
       The  Jump  rule  submits matching events to specific ruleset(s) for further processing. If
       the event matches the rule, SEC continues the search for matching rules  in  configuration
       file  set(s)  given  with the cfset field. Rules from every file are tried in the order of
       their appearance in the file.  Configuration file sets can be created from  Options  rules
       with  the  joincfset  field, with each set containing at least one configuration file.  If
       more that one set name is given with cfset, sets are  processed  from  left  to  right;  a
       matching  rule  in  one set doesn't prevent SEC from processing the following sets. If the
       constset field is set to Yes, set names are assumed  to  be  constants  and  will  not  be
       searched for match variables at runtime.

       The Jump rule supports the following fields:

       type   fixed to Jump (value is case insensitive).

       continue (optional)
              TakeNext,  DontCont,  EndMatch or GoTo <label> (apart from <label>, values are case
              insensitive).

       ptype  pattern type (value is case insensitive).

       pattern
              pattern.

       varmap (optional)
              variable map.

       context (optional)
              context expression.

       cfset (optional)
              configuration file set names that are separated by whitespace.

       constset (optional)
              Yes or No (values are case insensitive, default is Yes).

       desc (optional)
              string for describing the rule.

       rem (optional, may appear more than once)
              remarks and comments.

       Note that match variables may be used in the context field. They may also be used  in  the
       cfset field, provided that the constset field is set to No.  Also note that this rule does
       not start event correlation operations, and the optional desc field  is  merely  used  for
       describing the rule.

       Finally, if the cfset field is not present and the continue field is set to GoTo, the Jump
       rule can be used for skipping rules inside the current configuration file; if  both  cfset
       and continue are not present, Jump is identical to Suppress.

       Examples:

       type=Jump
       ptype=RegExp
       pattern=sshd\[\d+\]:
       cfset=sshd-rules auth-rules

       When  an  sshd  syslog message appears in input, rules from configuration files of the set
       sshd-rules are first used for matching the message, and then rules from the  configuration
       file set auth-rules are tried.

   OPTIONS RULE
       The  Options  rule  sets  processing  options for the ruleset in the current configuration
       file. If more than one Options rule  is  present  in  the  configuration  file,  the  last
       instance  overrides  all  previous ones. Note that the Options rule is only processed when
       SEC (re)starts and reads in the configuration file.  Since this rule  is  not  applied  at
       runtime,  it can never match events, react to the system clock, or start event correlation
       operations.

       The joincfset field lists the names of one  or  more  configuration  file  sets,  and  the
       current  configuration file will be added to each set.  If a set doesn't exist, it will be
       created and the current configuration file becomes its first  member.   If  the  procallin
       field  is set to No, the rules from the configuration file will be used for matching input
       from Jump rules only.

       The Options rule supports the following fields:

       type   fixed to Options (value is case insensitive).

       joincfset (optional)
              configuration file set names that are separated by whitespace.

       procallin (optional)
              Yes or No (values are case insensitive, default is Yes).

       rem (optional, may appear more than once)
              remarks and comments.

       Examples:

       The following rule adds the current configuration file to the set sshd-rules which is used
       for matching input from Jump rules only:

       type=Options
       joincfset=sshd-rules
       procallin=no

       The following rule adds the current configuration file to sets linux and solaris which are
       used for matching all input:

       type=Options
       joincfset=linux solaris

EVENT CORRELATION OPERATIONS

       Event correlation operations are dynamic entities created by  rules.   After  creating  an
       operation, the rule also feeds the operation with events that need to be correlated. Since
       each rule can create and feed many  operations  which  are  running  simultaneously,  each
       operation needs a unique ID.

       In  order  to  identify event correlation operations, SEC assigns an ID to every operation
       that is composed from the configuration file name, the  rule  number,  and  the  operation
       description  string  (defined by the desc field of the rule).  If there are N rules in the
       configuration file (excluding Options rules), the rule numbers belong to the range 0..N-1,
       and  the  number  of the k-th rule is k-1.  Since each Options rule is only processed when
       SEC reads in the configuration file and is not applied at runtime, the Options rules  will
       not receive rule numbers.  Note that since the configuration file name and rule number are
       part of the operation ID, different rules can have identical desc fields without a  danger
       of a clash between operations.

       For example, if the configuration file /etc/sec/my.conf contains only one rule

       type=SingleWithThreshold
       ptype=RegExp
       pattern=user (\S+) login failure on (\S+)
       desc=Repeated login failures for user $1 on $2
       action=pipe '%t: %s' /bin/mail root@localhost
       window=60
       thresh=3

       then  the  number  of  this  rule is 0.  When this rule matches an input event "user admin
       login failure on tty1", the desc field yields an  operation  description  string  Repeated
       login  failures  for  user  admin  on  tty1,  and  the  event will be directed for further
       processing to the operation with the following ID:

       /etc/sec/my.conf | 0 | Repeated login failures for user admin on tty1

       If the operation for this ID does not exist, the rule will create it.  The  newly  created
       operation has its event counter initialized to 1, and it expects to receive two additional
       "user admin login failure on tty1" events from the rule within the following  60  seconds.
       If  the  operation  receives  such  an event, its event counter is incremented, and if the
       counter reaches the value of 3, a warning e-mail is sent to root@localhost.

       By tuning the desc field of the rule, the scope of individual event correlation operations
       can be changed.  For instance, if the following events occur within 10 seconds

       user admin login failure on tty1
       user admin login failure on tty5
       user admin login failure on tty2

       the  above  rule starts three event correlation operations.  However, if the desc field of
       the rule is changed to Repeated login failures for user $1, these events are processed  by
       the  *same*  event  correlation  operation  (the  operation  sends  a  warning  e-mail  to
       root@localhost when it receives the third event).

       Since rules from the same configuration file are matched against input in the  order  they
       are  given,  the  rule  ordering  influences the creation and feeding of event correlation
       operations. Suppose the configuration file /etc/sec/my.conf contains the following rules:

       type=Suppress
       ptype=TValue
       pattern=TRUE
       context=MYCONTEXT

       type=SingleWithThreshold
       ptype=RegExp
       pattern=user (\S+) login failure on (\S+)
       desc=Repeated login failures for user $1 on $2
       action=pipe '%t: %s' /bin/mail root@localhost
       window=60
       thresh=3

       The second rule is able to create and feed event correlation operations  as  long  as  the
       context  MYCONTEXT  does  not  exist.  However, after MYCONTEXT has been created, no input
       event will reach the second rule, and the rule is thus unable to create new operations and
       feed existing ones with events.

       Note  that  Pair  and  PairWithWindow rules can feed the same event to several operations.
       Suppose the configuration file /etc/sec/my2.conf contains the following rules:

       type=Suppress
       ptype=SubStr
       pattern=test

       type=Pair
       ptype=RegExp
       pattern=database (\S+) down
       desc=Database $1 is down
       action=pipe '%t: %s' /bin/mail root@localhost
       ptype2=RegExp
       pattern2=database $1 up|all databases up
       desc2=Database %1 is up
       action2=pipe '%t: %s' /bin/mail root@localhost
       window=86400

       Since the following input events don't contain the substring "test"

       database mydb1 down
       database mydb2 down
       database mydb3 down

       they are matched by the second rule of type Pair which  creates  three  event  correlation
       operations. Each operation is running for one particular database name, and the operations
       have the following IDs:

       /etc/sec/my2.conf | 1 | Database mydb1 is down
       /etc/sec/my2.conf | 1 | Database mydb2 is down
       /etc/sec/my2.conf | 1 | Database mydb3 is down

       Each newly created operation sends an e-mail  notification  to  root@localhost  about  the
       "database  down"  condition, and will then wait for 86400 seconds (24 hours) for either of
       the following messages:
       (a) "database up" message for the given database,
       (b) "all databases up" message.

       The operation with the ID

       /etc/sec/my2.conf | 1 | Database mydb1 is down

       uses the following regular expression for matching expected messages:

       database mydb1 up|all databases up

       The operation with the ID

       /etc/sec/my2.conf | 1 | Database mydb2 is down

       employs the following regular expression for matching expected messages:

       database mydb2 up|all databases up

       Finally, the operation with the ID

       /etc/sec/my2.conf | 1 | Database mydb3 is down

       uses the following regular expression:

       database mydb3 up|all databases up

       If the following input events appear after 10 minutes

       database test up
       admin logged in
       database mydb3 up
       all databases up

       the first event "database test up" matches the first rule (Suppress) which does  not  pass
       the event further to the second rule (Pair).  However, all following events reach the Pair
       rule.  Since the messages don't match the pattern field of the rule, the rule  feeds  them
       to  all  currently  existing  operations  it has created, so that the operations can match
       these events with their regular expressions.  Because regular  expressions  of  all  three
       operations  don't  match the event "admin logged in", the operations will continue to run.
       In the case of the "database mydb3 up" event, the regular expression of the operation

       /etc/sec/my2.conf | 1 | Database mydb3 is down

       produces a match. Therefore, the operation will send  the  e-mail  notification  "Database
       mydb3 is up" to root@localhost and terminate.  However, the following event "all databases
       up" matches the regular  expressions  of  two  remaining  operations.  As  a  result,  the
       operations  will  send  e-mail notifications "Database mydb1 is up" and "Database mydb2 is
       up" to root@localhost and terminate.

       Each operation has an event correlation window which defines its scope in time.  The  size
       of  the  window  is  defined  by the window* field, and the beginning of the window can be
       obtained  with  the  getwpos  action.   SingleWithThreshold,   SingleWith2Thresholds   and
       EventGroup  operations can slide its window forward during event processing, while for all
       operations the window can also be moved explicitly with the setwpos action. Also, with the
       reset  action  event correlation operations can be terminated. Note that getwpos, setwpos,
       and  reset  actions  only  work  for  operations  started  by  the  rules  from  the  same
       configuration file.

       For  example,  consider  the  configuration  file  /etc/sec/sshd.rules  that  contains the
       following rules:

       type=SingleWithThreshold
       ptype=RegExp
       pattern=sshd\[\d+\]: Failed .+ for (\S+) from [\d.]+ port \d+ ssh2
       desc=Three SSH login failures within 1m for user $1
       action=pipe '%t: %s' /bin/mail root@localhost
       window=60
       thresh=3

       type=Single
       ptype=RegExp
       pattern=sshd\[\d+\]: Accepted .+ for (\S+) from [\d.]+ port \d+ ssh2
       desc=SSH login successful for user $1
       action=reset -1 Three SSH login failures within 1m for user $1

       Suppose the following events are generated by an SSH  daemon,  and  each  event  timestamp
       reflects the time SEC observes the event:

       Dec 29 15:00:03 test sshd[14129]: Failed password for risto from 10.1.2.7 port 31312 ssh2
       Dec 29 15:00:08 test sshd[14129]: Failed password for risto from 10.1.2.7 port 31312 ssh2
       Dec  29  15:00:17  test  sshd[14129]: Accepted password for risto from 10.1.2.7 port 31312
       ssh2
       Dec 29 15:00:52 test sshd[14142]: Failed password for risto from 10.1.1.2 port 17721 ssh2

       The first event at 15:00:03 starts an event correlation operation with the ID

       /etc/sec/sshd.rules | 0 | Three SSH login failures within 1m for user risto

       However, when the third  event  occurs  at  15:00:17,  the  second  rule  matches  it  and
       terminates the operation with the action

       reset -1 Three SSH login failures within 1m for user risto

       The  -1 parameter of reset restricts the action to operations started by the previous rule
       (i.e., the first rule that has a number 0), while the Three SSH login failures  within  1m
       for  user  risto  parameter  refers to the operation description string. Together with the
       current configuration file name (/etc/sec/sshd.rules), the parameters yield the  operation
       ID

       /etc/sec/sshd.rules | 0 | Three SSH login failures within 1m for user risto

       (If the operation with the given ID would not exist, reset would perform no operation.)

       As  a  consequence, the fourth event at 15:00:52 starts another operation with the same ID
       as the terminated operation had. Without the second rule, the operation that  was  started
       at  15:00:03 would not be terminated, and the appearance of the fourth event would trigger
       a warning e-mail from that operation.

INPUT PROCESSING AND TIMING

       SEC processes input data iteratively by reading one line at each iteration,  writing  this
       line  into  a  relevant  input buffer, and matching the content of the updated buffer with
       rules from configuration files.  If during the matching process an action list is executed
       which creates new input events (e.g., through the event action), they are *not* written to
       buffer(s) immediately, but rather consumed at following iterations.

       Note that when both synthetic events and  regular  input  are  available  for  processing,
       synthetic  events are always consumed first.  When all synthetic events have been consumed
       iteratively, SEC will start processing new data from input files.

       With the --jointbuf option, SEC employs a joint input buffer for all input  sources  which
       holds  N  last input lines (the value of N can be set with the --bufsize option). Updating
       the input buffer means that the new line becomes the first element of  the  buffer,  while
       the  last  element  (the  oldest  line)  is  removed from the end of the buffer.  With the
       --nojointbuf option, SEC maintains a buffer of N lines for each input  file,  and  if  the
       input  line  comes from file F, the buffer of F is updated as described previously.  There
       is also a separate buffer for synthetic and internal events.

       Suppose SEC is started with the following command line

       /usr/bin/sec --conf=/etc/sec/test-multiline.conf --jointbuf \
                    --input=/var/log/prog1.log --input=/var/log/prog2.log

       and the configuration file /etc/sec/test-multiline.conf has the following content:

       type=Single
       rem=this rule matches two consecutive lines where the first \
           line contains "test1" and the second line "test2", and \
           writes the matching lines to standard output
       ptype=RegExp2
       pattern=test1.*\n.*test2
       desc=two consecutive test lines
       action=write - $0

       When the following lines appear in input files /var/log/prog1.log and /var/log/prog2.log

       Dec 31 12:33:12 test prog1: test1 (file /var/log/prog1.log)
       Dec 31 12:34:09 test prog2: test1 (file /var/log/prog2.log)
       Dec 31 12:39:35 test prog1: test2 (file /var/log/prog1.log)
       Dec 31 12:41:53 test prog2: test2 (file /var/log/prog2.log)

       they are stored in a common input buffer. Therefore, rule fires after the third event  has
       appeared, and writes the following lines to standard output:

       Dec 31 12:34:09 test prog2: test1 (file /var/log/prog2.log)
       Dec 31 12:39:35 test prog1: test2 (file /var/log/prog1.log)

       However, if SEC is started with the --nojointbuf option, separate input buffers are set up
       for /var/log/prog1.log and /var/log/prog2.log.  Therefore, the rule fires after the  third
       event has occurred, and writes the following lines to standard output:

       Dec 31 12:33:12 test prog1: test1 (file /var/log/prog1.log)
       Dec 31 12:39:35 test prog1: test2 (file /var/log/prog1.log)

       The rule also fires after the fourth event has occurred, producing the following output:

       Dec 31 12:34:09 test prog2: test1 (file /var/log/prog2.log)
       Dec 31 12:41:53 test prog2: test2 (file /var/log/prog2.log)

       The  content  of  input buffers can be modified with the rewrite action, and modifications
       become visible immediately during ongoing event  processing  iteration.   Suppose  SEC  is
       started with the following command line

       /usr/bin/sec --conf=/etc/sec/test-rewrite.conf \
                    --input=- --nojointbuf

       and the configuration file /etc/sec/test-rewrite.conf has the following content:

       type=Single
       rem=this rule matches two consecutive lines where the first \
           line contains "test1" and the second line "test2", and \
           joins these lines in the input buffer
       ptype=RegExp2
       pattern=^(.*test1.*)\n(.*test2.*)$
       continue=TakeNext
       desc=join two test lines
       action=rewrite 2 Joined $1 and $2

       type=Single
       rem=this rule matches a line which begins with "Joined", \
           and writes this line to standard output
       ptype=RegExp
       pattern=^Joined
       desc=output joined lines
       action=write - $0

       When the following two lines appear in standard input

       This is a test1
       This is a test2

       they  are  matched by the first rule which uses the rewrite action for replacing those two
       lines in the input buffer with a new content.  The last line in the input buffer ("This is
       a  test2")  is  replaced  with  "Joined  This  is  a test1 and This is a test2", while the
       previous line in the input buffer ("This is a test1") is replaced with  an  empty  string.
       Since  the  rule  contains continue=TakeNext statement, the matching process will continue
       from the following rule.  This rule matches the last line in the input buffer if it begins
       with "Joined", and writes the line to standard output, producing

       Joined This is a test1 and This is a test2

       After  each  event  processing  iteration,  the  pattern match cache is cleared.  In other
       words, if a match is cached with the rule varmap* field, it is  available  during  ongoing
       iteration only.  Note that results from a successful pattern matching are also cached when
       the subsequent context expression  evaluation  yields  FALSE.   This  allows  for  reusing
       results  from  partial  rule  matches.   For example, the following rule creates the cache
       entry "ssh_failed_login" for any SSH failed login event, even if the  context  ALERTING_ON
       does not exist:

       type=Single
       ptype=RegExp
       pattern=sshd\[\d+\]: Failed .+ for (\S+) from ([\d.]+) port \d+ ssh2
       varmap=ssh_failed_login; user=1; ip=2
       context=ALERTING_ON
       desc=SSH login failure for user $1 from $2
       action=pipe '%s' /bin/mail -s 'SSH login alert' root@localhost

       However,  provided  the context expression does not contain match variables, enclosing the
       expression in square brackets (e.g.,  [ALERTING_ON])  forces  its  evaluation  before  the
       pattern  matching,  and will thus prevent the matching and the creation of the cache entry
       if the evaluation yields FALSE.

       Rules from the same configuration file are matched against the buffer content in the order
       they  are given in that file.  When multiple configuration files have been specified, rule
       sequences from all  files  are  matched  against  the  buffer  content  (unless  specified
       otherwise  with  Options  rules).   The  matching  order  is  determined  by  the order of
       configuration files in SEC command line.  For example, if the Perl glob() function returns
       filenames   in   ascending   ASCII  order,  and  configuration  files  /home/risto/A.conf,
       /home/risto/B.conf2, and /home/risto/C.conf are specified  with  --conf=/home/risto/*.conf
       --conf=/home/risto/*.conf2  in  SEC command line, then SEC first matches the input against
       the rule sequence from A.conf, then from C.conf, and finally  from  B.conf2.   Also,  note
       that  even  if  A.conf contains a Suppress rule for a particular event, the event is still
       processed by rulesets in C.conf and B.conf2. However, note that glob() might  return  file
       names  in different order if locale settings change.  If you want to enforce a fixed order
       for configuration file application in a portable way, it is recommended to create a unique
       set  for  each  file  with  the  Options  rule,  and employ the Jump rule for defining the
       processing order for sets, e.g.:

       # This rule appears in A.conf
       type=Options
       joincfset=FileA
       procallin=no

       # This rule appears in B.conf2
       type=Options
       joincfset=FileB
       procallin=no

       # This rule appears in C.conf
       type=Options
       joincfset=FileC
       procallin=no

       # This rule appears in main.conf
       type=Jump
       ptype=TValue
       pattern=TRUE
       cfset=FileA FileC FileB

       After the relevant input buffer has been updated and its content has been matched  by  the
       rules,  SEC  handles  caught  signals  and checks the status of child processes.  When the
       timeout specified with the --cleantime option has expired, SEC also checks the  status  of
       contexts  and  event  correlation operations. Therefore, relatively small values should be
       specified with the --cleantime option, in order  to  retain  the  accuracy  of  the  event
       correlation  process.  If the --cleantime option is set to 0, SEC checks event correlation
       operations and contexts after processing every input line,  but  this  consumes  more  CPU
       time.   If  the  --poll-timeout option value exceeds the value given with --cleantime, the
       --poll-timeout option value takes precedence (i.e., sleeps after unsuccessful  polls  will
       not be shortened).

       Finally,  note  that apart from the sleeps after unsuccessful polls, SEC measures all time
       intervals and occurrence times in seconds, and always uses the  time(2)  system  call  for
       obtaining the current time. Also, for input event occurrence time SEC always uses the time
       it observed the event, *not* the timestamp extracted from the event.

INTERNAL EVENTS AND CONTEXTS

       In the action list of a context, the context  can  also  be  referred  with  the  internal
       context name _THIS. The name _THIS is created and deleted dynamically by SEC and it points
       to the context only during its action list execution.  This feature  is  useful  when  the
       context  has had several names during its lifetime (created with the alias action), and it
       is hard to determine which names exist when the  context  expires.  For  example,  if  the
       context  is  created  with  create  A  60  (report  A /bin/mail root) which is immediately
       followed by alias A B and unalias A, the report action will  fail  since  the  name  A  no
       longer  refers  to  the  context.   However,  replacing  the first action with create A 60
       (report _THIS /bin/mail root) will produce the correct result.

       If the --intevents command line option is given, SEC will generate internal events when it
       is  started  up, when it receives certain signals, and when it terminates normally. Inside
       SEC, internal event is treated as if it was a line that was read from a  SEC  input  file.
       Specific  rules  can  be  written  to  match internal events, in order to take some action
       (e.g., start an external event correlation module with spawn  when  SEC  starts  up).  The
       following internal events are supported:

       SEC_STARTUP  -  generated  when  SEC is started (this event will always be the first event
       that SEC sees)

       SEC_PRE_RESTART - generated before processing of the SIGHUP signal (this event will be the
       last  event  that  SEC sees before clearing all internal data structures and reloading its
       configuration)

       SEC_RESTART - generated after processing of the SIGHUP signal  (this  event  will  be  the
       first  event  that  SEC sees after clearing all internal data structures and reloading its
       configuration)

       SEC_PRE_SOFTRESTART - generated before processing of the SIGABRT signal (this  event  will
       be the last event that SEC sees before reloading its configuration)

       SEC_SOFTRESTART - generated after processing of the SIGABRT signal (this event will be the
       first event that SEC sees after reloading its configuration)

       SEC_PRE_LOGROTATE - generated before processing of the SIGUSR2 signal (this event will  be
       the last event that SEC sees before reopening its log file and closing its outputs)

       SEC_LOGROTATE  -  generated after processing of the SIGUSR2 signal (this event will be the
       first event that SEC sees after reopening its log file and closing its outputs)

       SEC_SHUTDOWN - generated when SEC receives the SIGTERM signal, or  when  SEC  reaches  all
       EOFs  of  input  files  after being started with the --notail option. With the --childterm
       option, SEC sleeps for 3 seconds after  generating  SEC_SHUTDOWN  event,  and  then  sends
       SIGTERM  to  its  child  processes (if a child process was triggered by SEC_SHUTDOWN, this
       delay leaves the process enough time for setting a signal handler for SIGTERM).

       Before generating an internal event, SEC sets up a context  named  SEC_INTERNAL_EVENT,  in
       order  to disambiguate internal events from regular input.  The SEC_INTERNAL_EVENT context
       is deleted immediately after the internal event has been matched against all rules.

       If the --intcontexts command line option is given, or there is an --input  option  with  a
       context specified, SEC creates an internal context each time it reads a line from an input
       file or a synthetic event.  The internal context is deleted immediately after the line has
       been  matched against all rules. For all input files that have the context name explicitly
       set with --input=<file_pattern>=<context>, the name of the internal context is  <context>.
       If  the  line  was  read from the input file <filename> for which there is no context name
       set, the name of the internal context is _FILE_EVENT_<filename>.   For  synthetic  events,
       the  name  of  the  internal  context  defaults  to _INTERNAL_EVENT, but cspawn and cevent
       actions can be used for generating synthetic events with custom  internal  context  names.
       This  allows  for writing rules that match data from one particular input source only. For
       example, the rule

       type=Suppress
       ptype=TValue
       pattern=TRUE
       context=[!_FILE_EVENT_/dev/logpipe]

       passes only the lines that were read from /dev/logpipe, and  also  synthetic  events  that
       were  generated  with the _FILE_EVENT_/dev/logpipe internal context (e.g., with the action
       cevent _FILE_EVENT_/dev/logpipe 0 This is a test event).  As another example, if  SEC  has
       been started with the command line

       /usr/bin/sec --intevents --intcontexts --conf=/etc/sec/my.conf \
                    --input=/var/log/messages=MESSAGES \
                    --input=/var/log/secure=SECURE \
                    --input=/var/log/cron=CRON

       and the rule file /etc/sec/my.conf contains the following rules

       type=Single
       ptype=RegExp
       pattern=^(?:SEC_STARTUP|SEC_RESTART)$
       context=[SEC_INTERNAL_EVENT]
       desc=listen on 10514/tcp for incoming events
       action=cspawn MESSAGES /usr/bin/nc -l -k 10514

       type=Single
       ptype=RegExp
       pattern=.
       context=[MESSAGES]
       desc=echo everything from 10514/tcp and /var/log/messages
       action=write - $0

       then  SEC  will receive input lines from the log files /var/log/messages, /var/log/secure,
       and /var/log/cron, and will also run /usr/bin/nc for receiving input lines from  the  port
       10514/tcp.  All input lines from /var/log/messages and 10514/tcp are matched by the second
       rule and written to standard output.

INTERPROCESS COMMUNICATION

       The SingleWithScript rule and shellcmd, spawn, cspawn, pipe, and  report  actions  fork  a
       child  process  for  executing  an external program.  If the program command line contains
       shell metacharacters, the command line is first parsed by the shell which then starts  the
       program.   SEC  communicates  with  its  child  processes  through pipes (created with the
       pipe(2) system call).  When the child process is at the read end of the pipe, data have to
       be  written  to  the  pipe  in blocking mode which ensures reliable data transmission.  In
       order to avoid being blocked, SEC forks another child process for writing data to the pipe
       reliably.

       After  forking  an  external  program,  SEC  continues immediately, and checks the program
       status periodically until the program exits. The running time of a child  process  is  not
       limited in any way. With the --childterm option, SEC sends the SIGTERM signal to all child
       processes when it terminates.  If some special exit procedures need to be accomplished  in
       the  child  process (or the child wishes to ignore SIGTERM), then the child must install a
       handler for the SIGTERM signal.  Note that if the  program  command  line  contains  shell
       metacharacters,  the  parsing  shell  will  run  as  a child process of SEC and the parent
       process of the program. Therefore, the SIGTERM signal will be sent to the shell, *not* the
       program.  In  order to avoid this, the shell's builtin exec command can be used (see sh(1)
       for more information) which replaces the shell with the  program  without  forking  a  new
       process, e.g.,

       action=spawn exec /usr/local/bin/myscript.pl 2>/var/log/myscript.log

       Note  that  if  an  action  list  includes  two  actions which fork external programs, the
       execution order these programs is not determined by the order  of  actions  in  the  list,
       since  both  programs  are  running  asynchronously.   In order to address this issue, the
       execution order must be specified explicitly (e.g.,  instead  of  writing  action=shellcmd
       cmd1; shellcmd cmd2, use the shell && operator and write action=shellcmd cmd1 && cmd2).

       Sometimes  it  is  desireable  to  start an external program and provide it with data from
       several rules. In order to create such setup, named pipes can be harnessed.  For  example,
       if /var/log/pipe is a named pipe, then

       action=shellcmd /usr/bin/logger -f /var/log/pipe -p user.notice

       starts  the  /usr/bin/logger  utility which sends all lines read from /var/log/pipe to the
       local syslog daemon with the "user" facility and "notice" level. In order to  feed  events
       to  /usr/bin/logger,  the  write  action can be used (e.g., write /var/log/pipe This is my
       event).  Although SEC keeps the named pipe open across different write actions,  the  pipe
       will  be  closed on the reception of SIGHUP, SIGABRT and SIGUSR2 signals.  Since many UNIX
       tools terminate on receiving EOF from standard input,  they  need  restarting  after  such
       signals have arrived. For this purpose, the --intevents option and SEC internal events can
       be used. For example, the  following  rule  starts  the  /usr/bin/logger  utility  at  SEC
       startup, and also restarts it after the reception of relevant signals:

       type=Single
       ptype=RegExp
       pattern=^(?:SEC_STARTUP|SEC_RESTART|SEC_SOFTRESTART|SEC_LOGROTATE)$
       context=SEC_INTERNAL_EVENT
       desc=start the logger tool
       action=free %emptystring; owritecl /var/log/pipe %emptystring; \
              shellcmd /usr/bin/logger -f /var/log/pipe -p user.notice

       Note  that if /var/log/pipe is never opened for writing by a write action, /usr/bin/logger
       will never see EOF and will thus not terminate.  The  owritecl  action  opens  and  closes
       /var/log/pipe  without  writing  any bytes, in order to ensure the presence of EOF in such
       cases. This allows any previous  /usr/bin/logger  process  to  terminate  before  the  new
       process is started.

PERL INTEGRATION

       SEC  supports  patterns,  context expressions, and actions which involve calls to the Perl
       eval() function or the execution of precompiled Perl code. The use of  Perl  code  in  SEC
       patterns and context expressions allows for creating proper match conditions for scenarios
       which can't be handled by a simple regular expression match.  For  example,  consider  the
       following iptables syslog events:

       May       27       10:00:15       box1       kernel:      iptables:      IN=eth0      OUT=
       MAC=08:00:27:be:9e:2f:00:10:db:ff:20:03:08:00 SRC=10.6.4.14 DST=10.1.8.2  LEN=84  TOS=0x00
       PREC=0x00 TTL=251 ID=61426 PROTO=ICMP TYPE=8 CODE=0 ID=11670 SEQ=2
       May       27       10:02:22       box1       kernel:      iptables:      IN=eth0      OUT=
       MAC=08:00:27:be:9e:2f:00:10:db:ff:20:03:08:00 SRC=10.6.4.14 DST=10.1.8.2  LEN=52  TOS=0x00
       PREC=0x00 TTL=60 ID=61441 DF PROTO=TCP SPT=53125 DPT=23 WINDOW=49640 RES=0x00 SYN URGP=0

       Depending on the protocol and the nature of the traffic, events can have a wide variety of
       fields, and parsing out all event data with one  regular  expression  is  infeasible.  For
       addressing  this  issue, a PerlFunc pattern can be used which creates match variables from
       all fields of the matching event, stores them in one Perl hash, and returns a reference to
       this  hash.  Outside  the  PerlFunc pattern, match variables are initialized from the key-
       value pairs in the returned hash.  Suppose the following Jump rule with a PerlFunc pattern
       is defined in the main.rules rule file:

       type=Jump
       ptype=PerlFunc
       pattern=sub { my(%var); my($line) = $_[0]; \
               if ($line !~ /kernel: iptables:/g) { return 0; } \
               while ($line =~ /\G\s*([A-Z]+)(?:=(\S*))?/g) { \
                 $var{$1} = defined($2)?$2:1; \
               } return \%var; }
       varmap=IPTABLES
       desc=parse iptables event
       cfset=iptables

       For  example,  if  the  iptables event contains the fields SRC=10.6.4.14, DST=10.1.8.2 and
       SYN, the above PerlFunc pattern sets up match  variable  $+{SRC}  which  holds  10.6.4.14,
       match  variable  $+{DST}  which  holds 10.1.8.2, and match variable $+{SYN} which holds 1.
       The Jump rule caches all created match variables under the name IPTABLES, and submits  the
       matching event to iptables ruleset for further processing. Suppose the iptables ruleset is
       defined in the iptables.rules rule file:

       type=Options
       procallin=no
       joincfset=iptables

       type=SingleWithThreshold
       ptype=Cached
       pattern=IPTABLES
       context=IPTABLES :> ( sub { return $_[0]->{"PROTO"} eq "ICMP"; } )
       desc=ICMP flood type $+{TYPE} code $+{CODE} from host $+{SRC}
       action=logonly
       window=10
       thresh=100

       type=SingleWithThreshold
       ptype=Cached
       pattern=IPTABLES
       context=IPTABLES :> ( sub { return exists($_[0]->{"SYN"}) && \
                                          exists($_[0]->{"FIN"}) ; } )
       desc=SYN+FIN flood from host $+{SRC}
       action=logonly
       window=10
       thresh=100

       The two SingleWithThreshold rules employ Cached patterns for matching iptables  events  by
       looking  up  the IPTABLES entry in the pattern match cache (created by the above Jump rule
       for each iptables event).  In order to narrow down the match to specific iptables  events,
       the  rules  employ  precompiled Perl functions in context expressions.  The :> operator is
       used for speeding up the matching, providing the function with a  single  parameter  which
       refers to the hash of variable name-value pairs for the IPTABLES cache entry.

       The  first  SingleWithThreshold  rule  logs  a  warning  message  if within 10 seconds 100
       iptables events have been observed for ICMP packets with the same type, code,  and  source
       IP  address.   The  second  SingleWithThreshold  rule  logs a warning message if within 10
       seconds 100 iptables events have been observed for TCP packets coming from the same  host,
       and having both SYN and FIN flag set in each packet.

       Apart  from  using  action  list  variables for data sharing between rules, Perl variables
       created in Perl code can be employed for the same  purpose.  For  example,  when  SEC  has
       executed the following action

       action=eval %a ($b = 1)

       the variable $b and its value become visible in the following context expression

       context= =(++$b > 10)

       (with  that  expression  one  can implement event counting implicitly).  In order to avoid
       possible clashes with variables inside the SEC code  itself,  user-defined  Perl  code  is
       executed  in  the  main::SEC  namespace  (i.e., inside the special package main::SEC).  By
       using the main:: prefix, SEC data structures can be accessed and modified.   For  example,
       the  following  rules restore and save contexts on SEC startup and shutdown (SEC keeps all
       contexts in %main::context_list hash):

       type=Single
       ptype=SubStr
       pattern=SEC_STARTUP
       context=SEC_INTERNAL_EVENT
       continue=TakeNext
       desc=Load the Storable module and terminate if it is not found
       action=eval %ret (require Storable); \
              if %ret ( logonly Storabe loaded ) else ( eval %o exit(1) )

       type=Single
       ptype=SubStr
       pattern=SEC_STARTUP
       context=SEC_INTERNAL_EVENT
       desc=Restore all SEC contexts from /var/lib/sec/SEC_CONTEXTS on startup
       action=lcall %ret -> ( sub { \
              my $ptr = $main::context_list{"SEC_INTERNAL_EVENT"}; \
              %main::context_list = \
                %{Storable::retrieve("/var/lib/sec/SEC_CONTEXTS")}; \
              $main::context_list{"SEC_INTERNAL_EVENT"} = $ptr; } )

       type=Single
       ptype=SubStr
       pattern=SEC_SHUTDOWN
       context=SEC_INTERNAL_EVENT
       desc=Save all SEC contexts into /var/lib/sec/SEC_CONTEXTS on shutdown
       action=lcall %ret -> ( sub { \
              Storable::store(\%main::context_list, \
                              "/var/lib/sec/SEC_CONTEXTS"); } )

       However, note that modifying data structures within  SEC  code  is  recommended  only  for
       advanced users who have carefully studied relevant parts of the code.

       Finally,  sometimes  larger  chunks  of Perl code have to be used for event processing and
       correlation. However, writing many lines of code directly into a rule  is  cumbersome  and
       may  decrease its readability. In such cases it is recommended to separate the code into a
       custom Perl module which is loaded at SEC startup, and use the  code  through  the  module
       interface (see perlmod(1) for further details):

       type=Single
       ptype=SubStr
       pattern=SEC_STARTUP
       context=SEC_INTERNAL_EVENT
       desc=Load the SecStuff module
       action=eval %ret (require '/usr/local/sec/SecStuff.pm'); \
              if %ret ( none ) else ( eval %o exit(1) )

       type=Single
       ptype=PerlFunc
       pattern=sub { return SecStuff::my_match($_[0]); }
       desc=event '$0' was matched by my_match()
       action=write - %s

EXAMPLES

   Example 1 - a ruleset for Cisco events
       This  section presents an example rulebase for managing Cisco devices.  It is assumed that
       the managed devices have syslog logging enabled, and that all syslog messages are sent  to
       a central host and written to log file(s) that are monitored by SEC.

       # Set up contexts NIGHT and WEEKEND for nights
       # and weekends. The context NIGHT has a lifetime
       # of 8 hours and the context WEEKEND 2 days

       type=Calendar
       time=0 23 * * *
       desc=NIGHT
       action=create %s 28800

       type=Calendar
       time=0 0 * * 6
       desc=WEEKEND
       action=create %s 172800

       # If a router does not come up within 5 minutes
       # after it was rebooted, generate event
       # "<router> REBOOT FAILURE". The next rule matches
       # this event, checks the router with ping and sends
       # a notification if there is no response.

       type=PairWithWindow
       ptype=RegExp
       pattern=\s([\w.-]+) \d+: %SYS-5-RELOAD
       desc=$1 REBOOT FAILURE
       action=event %s
       ptype2=RegExp
       pattern2=\s$1 \d+: %SYS-5-RESTART
       desc2=%1 successful reboot
       action2=logonly
       window=300

       type=SingleWithScript
       ptype=RegExp
       pattern=^([\w.-]+) REBOOT FAILURE
       script=/bin/ping -c 3 -q $1
       desc=$1 did not come up after reboot
       action=logonly $1 is pingable after reboot
       action2=pipe '%t: %s' /bin/mail root@localhost

       # Send a notification if CPU load of a router is too
       # high (two CPUHOG messages are received within 5
       # minutes); send another notification if the load is
       # normal again (no CPUHOG messages within last 15
       # minutes). Rule is not active at night or weekend.

       type=SingleWith2Thresholds
       ptype=RegExp
       pattern=\s([\w.-]+) \d+: %SYS-3-CPUHOG
       context=!(NIGHT || WEEKEND)
       desc=$1 CPU overload
       action=pipe '%t: %s' /bin/mail root@localhost
       window=300
       thresh=2
       desc2=$1 CPU load normal
       action2=pipe '%t: %s' /bin/mail root@localhost
       window2=900
       thresh2=0

       # If a router interface is in down state for less
       # than 15 seconds, generate event
       # "<router> INTERFACE <interface> SHORT OUTAGE";
       # otherwise generate event
       # "<router> INTERFACE <interface> DOWN".

       type=PairWithWindow
       ptype=RegExp
       pattern=\s([\w.-]+) \d+: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface ([\w.-]+), changed state to down
       desc=$1 INTERFACE $2 DOWN
       action=event %s
       ptype2=RegExp
       pattern2=\s$1 \d+: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface $2, changed state to up
       desc2=%1 INTERFACE %2 SHORT OUTAGE
       action2=event %s
       window=15

       # If "<router> INTERFACE <interface> DOWN" event is
       # received, send a notification and wait for
       # "interface up" event from the same router interface
       # for the next 24 hours

       type=Pair
       ptype=RegExp
       pattern=^([\w.-]+) INTERFACE ([\w.-]+) DOWN
       desc=$1 interface $2 is down
       action=pipe '%t: %s' /bin/mail root@localhost
       ptype2=RegExp
       pattern2=\s$1 \d+: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface $2, changed state to up
       desc2=%1 interface %2 is up
       action2=pipe '%t: %s' /bin/mail root@localhost
       window=86400

       # If ten "short outage" events have been observed
       # in the window of 6 hours, send a notification

       type=SingleWithThreshold
       ptype=RegExp
       pattern=^([\w.-]+) INTERFACE ([\w.-]+) SHORT OUTAGE
       desc=Interface $2 at node $1 is unstable
       action=pipe '%t: %s' /bin/mail root@localhost
       window=21600
       thresh=10

   Example 2 - hierarchically organized rulesets for iptables and sshd events
       This  section  presents  an example of hierarchically organized rules for processing Linux
       iptables events from /var/log/messages and SSH login events from  /var/log/secure.  It  is
       assumed  that  all rule files reside in the /etc/sec directory and that the rule hierarchy
       has two levels.  The file /etc/sec/main.rules contains first-level Jump rules for matching
       and  parsing  events  from  input files and submitting them to proper rulesets for further
       processing. All other rule files in the  /etc/sec  directory  contain  second-level  rules
       which receive their input from first-level Jump rules.  Also, the example assumes that SEC
       is started with the following command line:

       /usr/bin/sec --conf=/etc/sec/*.rules --intcontexts \
                    --input=/var/log/messages --input=/var/log/secure

       #
       # the content of /etc/sec/main.rules
       #

       type=Jump
       context=[ _FILE_EVENT_/var/log/messages ]
       ptype=PerlFunc
       pattern=sub { my(%var); my($line) = $_[0]; \
               if ($line !~ /kernel: iptables:/g) { return 0; } \
               while ($line =~ /\G\s*([A-Z]+)(?:=(\S*))?/g) { \
                 $var{$1} = defined($2)?$2:1; \
               } return \%var; }
       varmap=IPTABLES
       desc=parse iptables events and direct to relevant ruleset
       cfset=iptables

       type=Jump
       context=[ _FILE_EVENT_/var/log/secure ]
       ptype=RegExp
       pattern=sshd\[(?<pid>\d+)\]: (?<status>Accepted|Failed) \
       (?<authmethod>[\w-]+) for (?<invuser>invalid user )?\
       (?<user>[\w-]+) from (?<srcip>[\d.]+) port (?<srcport>\d+) ssh2$
       varmap=SSH_LOGIN
       desc=parse SSH login events and direct to relevant ruleset
       cfset=ssh-login

       type=Jump
       context=[ SSH_EVENT ]
       ptype=TValue
       pattern=True
       desc=direct SSH synthetic events to relevant ruleset
       cfset=ssh-events

       #
       # the content of /etc/sec/iptables.rules
       #

       type=Options
       procallin=no
       joincfset=iptables

       type=SingleWithThreshold
       ptype=Cached
       pattern=IPTABLES
       context=IPTABLES :> ( sub { return exists($_[0]->{"SYN"}) && \
                                          exists($_[0]->{"FIN"}) ; } ) \
               && !SUPPRESS_IP_$+{SRC}
       desc=SYN+FIN flood from host $+{SRC}
       action=pipe '%t: %s' /bin/mail -s 'iptables alert' root@localhost; \
              create SUPPRESS_IP_$+{SRC} 3600
       window=10
       thresh=100

       type=SingleWithThreshold
       ptype=Cached
       pattern=IPTABLES
       context=IPTABLES :> ( sub { return exists($_[0]->{"SYN"}) && \
                                         !exists($_[0]->{"ACK"}) ; } ) \
               && !SUPPRESS_IP_$+{SRC}
       desc=SYN flood from host $+{SRC}
       action=pipe '%t: %s' /bin/mail -s 'iptables alert' root@localhost; \
              create SUPPRESS_IP_$+{SRC} 3600
       window=10
       thresh=100

       #
       # the content of /etc/sec/ssh-login.rules
       #

       type=Options
       procallin=no
       joincfset=ssh-login

       type=Single
       ptype=Cached
       pattern=SSH_LOGIN
       context=SSH_LOGIN :> ( sub { return $_[0]->{"status"} eq "Failed" && \
                                           $_[0]->{"srcport"} < 1024 && \
                                           defined($_[0]->{"invuser"}); } )
       continue=TakeNext
       desc=Probe of invalid user $+{user} from privileged port of $+{srcip}
       action=pipe '%t: %s' /bin/mail -s 'SSH alert' root@localhost

       type=SingleWithThreshold
       ptype=Cached
       pattern=SSH_LOGIN
       context=SSH_LOGIN :> ( sub { return $_[0]->{"status"} eq "Failed" && \
                                           defined($_[0]->{"invuser"}); } )
       desc=Ten login probes for invalid users from $+{srcip} within 60s
       action=pipe '%t: %s' /bin/mail -s 'SSH alert' root@localhost
       thresh=10
       window=60

       type=PairWithWindow
       ptype=Cached
       pattern=SSH_LOGIN
       context=SSH_LOGIN :> ( sub { return $_[0]->{"status"} eq "Failed"; } )
       desc=User $+{user} failed to log in from $+{srcip} within 60s
       action=cevent SSH_EVENT 0 %s
       ptype2=Cached
       pattern2=SSH_LOGIN
       context2=SSH_LOGIN :> \
                  ( sub { return $_[0]->{"status"} eq "Accepted"; } ) && \
                $+{user} %+{user} $+{srcip} %+{srcip} -> \
                  ( sub { return $_[0] eq $_[1]  &&  $_[2] eq $_[3]; }  )
       desc2=User $+{user} logged in successfully from $+{srcip} within 60s
       action2=logonly
       window=60

       #
       # the content of /etc/sec/ssh-events.rules
       #

       type=Options
       procallin=no
       joincfset=ssh-events

       type=SingleWithThreshold
       ptype=RegExp
       pattern=User ([\w-]+) failed to log in from [\d.]+ within 60s
       desc=Ten login failures for user $1 within 1h
       action=pipe '%t: %s' /bin/mail -s 'SSH alert' root@localhost
       thresh=10
       window=3600

ENVIRONMENT

       If the SECRC environment variable is set, SEC expects  it  to  contain  the  name  of  its
       resource file. Resource file lines which are empty or which begin with the number sign (#)
       are ignored (whitespace may precede #).  Each remaining line is appended to the argv array
       of  SEC  as  a  *single*  element.  Also, the lines are appended to argv in the order they
       appear in the resource file.  Therefore, if the SEC command line option has a  value,  the
       option  name  and  the  value must either be separated by the equal sign (=) or a newline.
       Here is a simple resource file example:

       # read events from standard input
       --input=-

       # rules are stored in /etc/sec/test.conf
       --conf
       /etc/sec/test.conf

       Note that although SEC rereads its resource file at the reception of the SIGHUP or SIGABRT
       signal,  adding  an  option  that  specifies  a  certain startup procedure (e.g., --pid or
       --detach) will not produce the desired effect at runtime. Also note that the resource file
       content is *not* parsed by shell, therefore shell metacharacters are passed to SEC as-is.

SIGNALS

       SIGHUP full  restart  --  SEC will reinterpret its command line and resource file options,
              reopen its log and input files, close its output files and sockets (these  will  be
              reopened  on  demand),  reload  its configuration, and drop *all* event correlation
              state (all event correlation operations will be terminated, all  contexts  will  be
              deleted,  all  action  list  variables  will be erased, etc.). With the --childterm
              option, SEC will also send the SIGTERM signal to its child processes.

       SIGABRT
              soft restart -- SEC will reinterpret its command line and  resource  file  options,
              reopen its log file, and close its output files and sockets (these will be reopened
              on demand). If the --keepopen option is specified, previously  opened  input  files
              will  remain  open across soft restart, otherwise all input files will be reopened.
              SEC will (re)load configuration from rule files  which  have  been  modified  (file
              modification  time  returned  by stat(2) has changed) or created after the previous
              configuration load.  SEC will also terminate event correlation  operations  started
              from rule files that have been modified or removed after the previous configuration
              load.  Other operations and previously loaded configuration  from  unmodified  rule
              files  will  remain  intact.   Note that on some systems SIGIOT is used in place of
              SIGABRT.

       SIGUSR1
              detailed information about the current state of SEC (performance and rule  matching
              statistics,  running  event correlation operations, created contexts, etc.) will be
              written to the SEC dump file.

       SIGUSR2
              SEC will reopen its log file (useful for log file rotation),  and  also  close  its
              output files and sockets which will be reopened on demand.

       SIGINT SEC  will  increase  its logging level by one; if the current level is 6, the level
              will be set back to 1. Please note this feature is available only if SEC is running
              non-interactively (e.g., in daemon mode).

       SIGTERM
              SEC will terminate gracefully. With the --childterm option, all SEC child processes
              will receive SIGTERM.

BUGS

       With some locale settings,  single  quotes  (')  in  this  man  page  might  be  displayed
       incorrectly. As a workaround, set the LANG environment variable to C when reading this man
       page (e.g., env LANG=C man sec).

AUTHOR

       Risto Vaarandi (ristov at users d0t s0urcef0rge d0t net)

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

       This work is supported by SEB.  The author  thanks  the  following  people  for  supplying
       software  patches,  documentation  fixes,  and  suggesting new features: Al Sorrell, Brian
       Mielke, David Lang, James Brown, Jon Frazier, Mark D. Nagel, Peter Eckel, Rick Casey,  and
       William Gertz.  Last but not least, the author expresses his profound gratitute to John P.
       Rouillard for many great ideas and creative discussions that have helped to develop SEC.

SEE ALSO

       cron(8), crontab(1), fork(2), mail(1), perl(1),  perlmod(1),  perlre(1),  pipe(2),  sh(1),
       snmptrap(1), stat(2), strftime(3), syslog(3), time(2), umask(2)