Configuring Duo Security Connectors

This connector allows Stellar Cyber to collect data from external sources and add the records to the data lake.

Integrating Duo with Stellar Cyber provides advanced identity and access management capabilities, enabling organizations to manage user access and security policies across their network, and providing enhanced security controls and compliance features. By combining Duo's multi-factor authentication with Stellar Cyber's advanced security analytics and machine learning algorithms, organizations can effectively defend against cyber threats.

Note that the API for Duo Security is not supported for deployments configured to communicate through an HTTP proxy.

Stellar Cyber connectors with the Collect function (collectors) may skip collecting some data when the ingestion volume is large, which potentially can lead to data loss. This can happen when the processing capacity of the collector is exceeded.

Connector Overview: Duo Security

Capabilities

  • Collect: Yes

  • Respond: No

  • Native Alerts Mapped: No

  • Runs on: DP

  • Interval: Configurable

Collected Data

Content Type

Index

Locating Records

Administrator

Authentication

Telephony

Trust Monitor

Syslog

 

msg_class:

duosecurity_administrator

duosecurity_authentication

duosecurity_telephony

duosecurity_trust_monitor

msg_origin.source:

duosecurity

msg_origin.vendor

cisco

msg_origin.category:

endpoint

Domain

N/A

Response Actions

N/A

Third Party Native Alert Integration Details

N/A

Required Credentials

  • Hostname, Integration Key, and Security Key

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Adding a Duo Security Connector

To add a Duo Security connector:

  1. Configure Duo Security application protection
  2. Add the connector in Stellar Cyber
  3. Test the connector
  4. Verify ingestion

Configuring Duo Security Application Protection

To configure Duo Security application protection:

Use our example as a guideline, as you might be using a different software version.

  1. Log in to Duo.

  2. If you don't have the Admin API application available, contact Duo technical support and request access. When you get access, continue.

  3. Click Applications. The Application menu expands.

  4. Click Protect an Application. The Protect an Application page appears.

  5. Find Admin API. If you start typing in the search bar, the available applications narrow to match the text you type.

  6. Click Protect on the Admin API row. The Admin API page appears.

  7. Copy the Integration key, Secret key, and API hostname. You need all of these when configuring Stellar Cyber.

  8. Configure the Settings. At a minimum, select the following permissions: Grant read information, Grant read log, and Grant read resource.

  9. Click Save.

Adding the Connector in Stellar Cyber

To add a Duo Security connector in Stellar Cyber:

  1. Log in to Stellar Cyber.

  2. Click System | Integration | Connectors. The Connector Overview appears.

  3. Click Create. The General tab of the Add Connector screen appears. The information on this tab cannot be changed after you add the connector.

    The asterisk (*) indicates a required field.

  4. Choose IdP from the Category drop-down.

  5. Choose Duo Security from the Type drop-down.

  6. For this connector, the supported Function is Collect, which is enabled already.

  7. Enter a Name.

    Notes:
    • This field does not accept multibyte characters.
    • It is recommended that you follow a naming convention such as tenantname-connectortype.
  8. Choose a Tenant Name. The Interflow records created by this connector include this tenant name.

  9. Choose the device on which to run the connector.

  10. (Optional) When the Function is Collect, you can apply Log Filters. For information, see Managing Log Filters.

  11. Click Next. The Configuration tab appears.

    The asterisk (*) indicates a required field.

  12. Enter the Hostname. This is the Duo API hostname you copied earlier in Configuring Duo Security Application Protection.

    Do not include https in this field.

  13. Enter the Integration Key you copied earlier.

  14. Enter the Security Key you copied earlier.

  15. Choose the Interval (min). This is how often the logs are collected.  

    Note that default setting is 5 minutes, which is the minimum recommended interval for this connector type.

  16. Choose the Content Type you would like to collect. The logs for Administrator, Authentication, Telephony, and Trust Monitor are supported.

  17. Click Next. The final confirmation tab appears.

  18. Click Submit.

    To pull data, a connector must be added to a Data Analyzer profile if it is running on the Data Processor.

The new connector is immediately active.

Testing the Connector

When you add (or edit) a connector, we recommend that you run a test to validate the connectivity parameters you entered. (The test validates only the authentication / connectivity; it does not validate data flow).

For connectors running on a sensor, Stellar Cyber recommends that you allow 30-60 seconds for new or modified configuration details to be propagated to the sensor before performing a test.

  1. Click System | Integrations | Connectors. The Connector Overview appears.

  2. Locate the connector that you added, or modified, or that you want to test.

  3. Click Test at the right side of that row. The test runs immediately.

    Note that you may run only one test at a time.

Stellar Cyber conducts a basic connectivity test for the connector and reports a success or failure result. A successful test indicates that you entered all of the connector information correctly.

To aid troubleshooting your connector, the dialog remains open until you explicitly close it by using the X button. If the test fails, you can select the  button from the same row to review and correct issues.

The connector status is updated every five (5) minutes. A successful test clears the connector status, but if issues persist, the status reverts to failed after a minute.

Repeat the test as needed.

ClosedDisplay sample messages...

Success !

Failure with summary of issue:

Show More example detail:

If the test fails, the common HTTP status error codes are as follows:

HTTP Error Code HTTP Standard Error Name Explanation Recommendation
400 Bad Request This error occurs when there is an error in the connector configuration.

Did you configure the connector correctly?

401 Unauthorized

This error occurs when an authentication credential is invalid or when a user does not have sufficient privileges to access a specific API.

Did you enter your credentials correctly?

Are your credentials expired?

Are your credentials entitled or licensed for that specific resource?

403 Forbidden This error occurs when the permission or scope is not correct in a valid credential.

Did you enter your credentials correctly?

Do you have the required role or permissions for that credential?

404 Not Found This error occurs when a URL path does not resolve to an entity. Did you enter your API URL correctly?
429 Too Many Requests

This error occurs when the API server receives too much traffic or if a user’s license or entitlement quota is exceeded.

The server or user license/quota will eventually recover. The connector will periodically retry the query.

If this occurs unexpectedly or too often, work with your API provider to investigate the server limits, user licensing, or quotas.

For a full list of codes, refer to HTTP response status codes.

Verifying Ingestion

To verify ingestion:

  1. Click Investigate | Threat Hunting. The Interflow Search tab appears.
  2. Change the Indices to Syslog. The table immediately updates to show ingested Interflow records.