Check Point provides hardware and software products for IT security, including network security, endpoint security, cloud security, mobile security, data security and security management. This integration allows you to send Check Point logs to your Logz.io SIEM account.

Configuration on Linux

Before you begin, you’ll need:

Configure Check Point Log Exporter

Configure your Check Point Log Exporter to send logs to your Filebeat server.

For complete details on configuring Log Exporter, see Check Point Log Export from Check Point.

Option 1: Export logs for all domains
cp_log_export add name logzio_filebeat_exporter \
target-server <<FILEBEAT-IP-ADDRESS>> \
target-port 514 \
protocol udp \
format syslog \
--apply-now
Option 2: Export logs for a specific domain
cp_log_export add name logzio_filebeat_exporter \
domain-server <<YOUR-DOMAIN>> \
target-server <<FILEBEAT-IP-ADDRESS>> \
target-port 514 \
protocol udp \
format syslog \
--apply-now

If you restart the management server, you’ll need to run cp_log_export again to restart the exporter.

Download the Logz.io public certificate to your credentials server

For HTTPS shipping, download the Logz.io public certificate to your certificate authority folder.

sudo curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/logzio/public-certificates/master/AAACertificateServices.crt --create-dirs -o /etc/pki/tls/certs/COMODORSADomainValidationSecureServerCA.crt
Add UDP traffic as an input

In the Filebeat configuration file (/etc/filebeat/filebeat.yml), add UDP to the filebeat.inputs section.

Replace <<LOG-SHIPPING-TOKEN>> with the token of the account you want to ship to.

Filebeat requires a file extension specified for the log input.

# ...
filebeat.inputs:
- type: udp
  max_message_size: 10MiB
  host: "0.0.0.0:514"

  fields:
    logzio_codec: plain

    # Your Logz.io account token. You can find your token at
    #  https://app.logz.io/#/dashboard/settings/manage-accounts
    token: <<LOG-SHIPPING-TOKEN>>
    type: checkpoint
  fields_under_root: true
  encoding: utf-8
  ignore_older: 3h

If you’re running Filebeat 7, paste this code block. Otherwise, you can leave it out.

# ... For Filebeat 7 only ...
filebeat.registry.path: /var/lib/filebeat
processors:
- rename:
    fields:
    - from: "agent"
      to: "filebeat_agent"
    ignore_missing: true
- rename:
    fields:
    - from: "log.file.path"
      to: "source"
    ignore_missing: true

If you’re running Filebeat 6, paste this code block.

# ... For Filebeat 6 only ...
registry_file: /var/lib/filebeat/registry
Set Logz.io as the output

If Logz.io is not an output, add it now. Remove all other outputs.

Replace <<LISTENER-HOST>> with the host for your region. For example, listener.logz.io if your account is hosted on AWS US East, or listener-nl.logz.io if hosted on Azure West Europe. The required port depends whether HTTP or HTTPS is used: HTTP = 8070, HTTPS = 8071.

# ...
output.logstash:
  hosts: ["<<LISTENER-HOST>>:5015"]
  ssl:
    certificate_authorities: ['/etc/pki/tls/certs/COMODORSADomainValidationSecureServerCA.crt']
Start Filebeat

Start or restart Filebeat for the changes to take effect.

Check Logz.io for your logs

Give your logs some time to get from your system to ours, and then open Open Search Dashboards.

If you still don’t see your logs, see Filebeat troubleshooting.

Configuration on Windows

Before you begin, you’ll need:

Configure Check Point Log Exporter

Configure your Check Point Log Exporter to send logs to your Filebeat server.

For complete details on configuring Log Exporter, see Check Point Log Export from Check Point.

Option 1: Export logs for all domains
cp_log_export add name logzio_filebeat_exporter \
target-server <<FILEBEAT-IP-ADDRESS>> \
target-port 514 \
protocol udp \
format syslog \
--apply-now
Option 2: Export logs for a specific domain
cp_log_export add name logzio_filebeat_exporter \
domain-server <<YOUR-DOMAIN>> \
target-server <<FILEBEAT-IP-ADDRESS>> \
target-port 514 \
protocol udp \
format syslog \
--apply-now

If you restart the management server, you’ll need to run cp_log_export again to restart the exporter.

Download the Logz.io public certificate to your credentials server

For HTTPS shipping, download the Logz.io public certificate to your certificate authority folder.

sudo curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/logzio/public-certificates/master/AAACertificateServices.crt --create-dirs -o /etc/pki/tls/certs/COMODORSADomainValidationSecureServerCA.crt
Download the Logz.io public certificate

For HTTPS shipping, download the Logz.io public certificate to your certificate authority folder.

Download the Logz.io public certificate to C:\ProgramData\Filebeat\Logzio.crt on your machine.

Configure Filebeat using the dedicated Logz.io configuration wizard

Filebeat requires a file extension specified for the log input.

Log into your Logz.io account, and go to the Filebeat log shipping page to use the dedicated Logz.io Filebeat configuration wizard. It’s the simplest way to configure Filebeat for your use case.

Adding log sources to the configuration file

For each of the log types you plan to send to Logz.io, fill in the following:

  • Select your operating system - Linux or Windows.
  • Specify the full Path to the logs.
  • Select a log Type from the list or select Other and give it a name of your choice to specify a custom log type.
    • If you select a log type from the list, the logs will be automatically parsed and analyzed. List of types available for parsing by default.
    • If you select Other, contact support to request custom parsing assistance. Don’t be shy, it’s included in your plan!
  • Select the log format - Plaintext or Json.
  • (Optional) Enable the Multiline option if your log messages span multiple lines. You’ll need to give a regex that identifies the beginning line of each log.
  • (Optional) Add a custom field. Click + Add a field to add additional fields.

If you’re running Filebeat 8.1+, the type of the filebeat.inputs is filestream instead of logs:

filebeat.inputs:
- type: filestream
  paths:
    - /var/log/*.log
Add additional sources (Optional)

The wizard makes it simple to add multiple log types to a single configuration file. Click + Add a log type to fill in the details for another log type. Repeat as necessary.

Download and validate the file

When you’re done adding your sources, click Make the config file to download it.

You can compare it to our sample configuration if you have questions.

If you’ve edited the file manually, it’s a good idea to run it through a YAML validator to rule out indentation errors, clean up extra characters, and check if your yml file is valid. (Yamllint.com is a great choice.)

Move the configuration file to the Filebeat folder

Move the configuration file to C:\Program Files\Filebeat\filebeat.yml.

Add UDP traffic as an input

In the Filebeat configuration file (/etc/filebeat/filebeat.yml), add UDP to the filebeat.inputs section.

Replace <<LOG-SHIPPING-TOKEN>> with the token of the account you want to ship to.

Filebeat requires a file extension specified for the log input.

# ...
filebeat.inputs:
- type: udp
  max_message_size: 10MiB
  host: "0.0.0.0:514"

  fields:
    logzio_codec: plain

    # Your Logz.io account token. You can find your token at
    #  https://app.logz.io/#/dashboard/settings/manage-accounts
    token: <<LOG-SHIPPING-TOKEN>>
    type: checkpoint
  fields_under_root: true
  encoding: utf-8
  ignore_older: 3h

If you’re running Filebeat 7, paste this code block. Otherwise, you can leave it out.

# ... For Filebeat 7 only ...
filebeat.registry.path: C:\ProgramData\filebeat\registry
processors:
- rename:
    fields:
    - from: "agent"
      to: "filebeat_agent"
    ignore_missing: true
- rename:
    fields:
    - from: "log.file.path"
      to: "source"
    ignore_missing: true

If you’re running Filebeat 6, paste this code block.

# ... For Filebeat 6 only ...
registry_file: C:\ProgramData\filebeat\registry
Set Logz.io as the output

If Logz.io is not an output, add it now. Remove all other outputs.

Replace <<LISTENER-HOST>> with the host for your region. For example, listener.logz.io if your account is hosted on AWS US East, or listener-nl.logz.io if hosted on Azure West Europe. The required port depends whether HTTP or HTTPS is used: HTTP = 8070, HTTPS = 8071.

# ...
output.logstash:
  hosts: ["<<LISTENER-HOST>>:5015"]
  ssl:
    certificate_authorities: ['C:\ProgramData\Filebeat\Logzio.crt']
Restart Filebeat
PS C:\Program Files\Filebeat> Restart-Service filebeat
Check Logz.io for your logs

Give your logs some time to get from your system to ours, and then open Open Search Dashboards.

If you still don’t see your logs, see Filebeat’s troubleshooting guide.