Firewall

SweetSecurity – Raspberry Pi Network Security Monitoring

Scripts to setup and install Bro IDS, Elasticsearch, Logstash, Kibana, and Critical Stack on any device.

Installation:

  • sudo python setup.py
  • Follow prompts to enter appropriate information for chosen installation type

 

Installation Types

  1. Full Install:
    This will install Bro IDS, Critical Stack (optional), Logstash, Elasticsearch, Kibana, Apache, and Sweet Security Client/Server. Choose this option ONLY if you have 2GB of memory or more.
  2. Sensor Only:
    This will install Bro IDS, Critical Stack (optional), Logstash, and Sweet Security Client
  3. Web Server Only:
    This will install Elasticsearch, Kibana, Apache, and Sweet Security Server

 

New Functionality:

  • Modularized Installation – Choose to deploy all the tools on one device, or split among multiple for better performance.
    • Full Install – Deploy Bro IDS, Critical Stack, Elasticsearch, Logstash, Kibana, Apache, and Sweet Security
    • Sensor Install – Deploy Bro IDS, Critical Stack, Logstash, and Sweet Security
    • Web Admin Install – Deploy Elasticsearch, Kibana, and Apache
  • ARP Spoofing – Full code to monitor all network traffic out of the box without network changes.
  • Complete Bro Log Support – All Bro log files are now normalized by Logstash
  • Kibana Content – Searches, Visualizations, and Dashboards are now included
  • Architecture Support – Now supports installing on non ARM architectures
  • Custom NMAP Pre-Fix – updated NMAP pre-fixes based on the IEEE OUI list
  • Web Administration – apache/flask based web administration to manage known devices and system health

 

Supported Operating Systems

  • Raspbian Jessie
  • Debian Jessie
  • Ubuntu 16.04

 

Supported Hardware

  • RaspberryPi 3
  • x86
  • x86_64

 

System Requirements

  • ARM, x86, or x86_64 CPU
  • 2GB RAM
  • 8GB Disk Storage
  • 100 MB NIC (Recommended 1GB) Note: 2GB of storage is required while the Raspberry Pi 3 only has 1GB. The code can be split to run on two devices, such as two Raspberry Pi’s or a Raspberry Pi and AWS.

 

 

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